Electric Alfa Romeo–Sensational, or Sacrilege?

Electric Alfa Romeo–Sensational, or Sacrilege?

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Alfa Romeo Junior
Dyed in the Wool Alfisti Struggle to Comprehend Elettrica

I’d like to believe that I’m a died in the wool Alfista. Before I was even a thing, my grandfather had one of the first Alfas in South Africa, a 1948 6C 2500 Cabriolet. He also entered all the Alfa Giuliettas and Sprint Veloces in the ’58 9 Hour, in essence the genesis of local saloon car racing. My old man raced Alfa Romeos, and I came back from the nursing home in dad’s Giulietta ti. And my first car was a Giulia ti… etcetera.

To me, an Alfa Romeo is always a very special car. History demands that. From the glorious days of the 1750s and 2300C Monzas winning the Millia Miglia and the rest in the 1920s and ‘30s, to the glorious 158 that Farina won the first ever Formula 1 Grand Prix, and World Championship with. Then after the war, Alfa Romeo led the world with the incredible little Giulietta and Giulia. Cars feared and revered even by V8 owners.

All along, all those and many more recent, great Alfa Romeos have had one thing in common. The led the world in developing the internal combustion engine and auto engineering in general. So, when Stellantis lost its marbles and decided to take Alfa all-electric four or five years ago, I was not alone in being alarmed. Disgusted. Sure, build an EV. But for the Cross and Biscione to be limited to glorified milk floats? No, that was just not acceptable.

Alfa Romeo Junior

We Must Still Test the Elettrica

Thank goodness that’s all changed. Former Stellantis CEO and electric architect Tavares has been exiled to some faraway planet and even the glorious Quadrifoglio biturbo V6 has now earned a stay of execution. Which means this car is the genesis of an ungodly but happily failed conspiracy to blemish this glorious brand forever. But here it is and test it we must.

First, however, a little extra info for you to digest on Junior. Initially launched as the Alfa Romeo Milano, it’s based on Stellantis’ Common Modular Platform shared with the Fiat 600 and Jeep Avenger. That the Milano was built in Poland did not go down too well. The Milanese basically rioted until the poor car was re-christened Junior. And because it’s built in Poland, it’s not available in the US thanks to tariffs imposed on Polish goods. Not a very good start!

Available only as the Elettrica in a more basic 156 HP model and this full cream 280 HP Veloce get-up in South Africa, there’s also a third-less expensive 136 HP Ibrida mild hybrid in other markets. Which 1.2 turbo petrol component is allegedly not compatible with our local fuel. Most interestingly, in markets where both are available, the hybrid outsells the electric car by ten to one. In Italy and Germany, its beyond twenty to one. Hold that thought for a minute…

Alfa Romeo Junior

A Driver Centered Elettrica Cockpit

Launched in here late last year at the equivalent $60,000, the remarkably short release tucks more into Junior’s Italian Alfa Romeo style than it does the brand’s sorry evolution toward electrification. Now we cannot argue about that style. It certainly looks the part, even in this farm truck white hue.

Those cartoon wheels and big red front calipers add to the effect. But the spindly rear discs look lost in those holes. The driver-focused cockpit is super cool too. Although perhaps a bit too plasticky versus its sixty grand tag. And it’s quite busy too. Versus the simplicity of say the Giulia.

Then the release tries to tell us that this car embodies a century of Alfa Romeo engineering excellence. Really? Pull the other one, guys! This Elettrica Veloce Junior has a 280 HP 255 lb.-ft single electric motor driving the front axle via a Torsen mechanical limited-slip differential for best traction, while its sports suspension is lowered an inch.

Elettrica

Sounds like a Playing Card in Bicycle Spokes

On the road, Veloce tries its best to pretend it’s a petrol. It makes a muted noise that’s neither a four nor a V6. Sounds more like when we were kids and used to peg a playing card or three to our bicycle forks to make a racket in the spokes. So, we could pretend that it had an engine. Like my old bicycle, this Junior does not have the real thing.

That said, we did beat Alfa’s pretty quick acceleration claim by two tenths. Interestingly Veloce delivered the identical zero to 60 that the GR Corolla 8AT did in the same week. But to achieve that performance just slaughters one of this car’s already glaring electric motoring weak points.

While any EV is a challenge, Junior Elettrica Veloce’s inexcusably short driving range compounds the issue even further. They claim you can drive it just over 240 miles, while. The WTLP says around 200 miles, which is already way too short. But if you want to listen to that piped card on spokes noise, you’ll likely not make 150 miles. That’s useless. Especially considering the Ibrida will probably go beyond 500 miles on a tank.

Elettrica

The Italians and Germans Seem to Agree

Packing a 54-kWh lithium-ion battery, the 400-volt 18.6 kWh/100 km system supports up to 100 kW DC charging to reach 80% capacity in under half an hour. But try find a vacant public charger that will do anything near 100 kW in South Africa. 11 kW AC on-board charging takes under six hours, so easy at home overnight. Just don’t travel too far, or too fast without studying the EV charger map in great detail first.

Getting back to that thought I asked you to hold, it seems that the Italians and Germans appear to agree for once. That only one in twenty of them want to buy this car versus its combustion assisted sister in countries fully geared towards electric motoring, tells a story on its own. Like the World Rally Championship so successfully binned electrification, and Formula 1 now sees certain to kick its batteries firmly into touch, is there any reason for an Electric Alfa Romeo?

We think certainly not. If anything, all this albeit beautiful Junior Elettrica Veloce will probably stand as testament that no matter how clever your marketing team is, you simply cannot force anything on a market that does not care for it. Like believing the world wants an electric Alfa Romeo. Would that make this car more valuable in the long run? Nope, we seriously doubt that too.

ROAD TESTED: Alfa Romeo Junior Elettrica Veloce
Motor: 280 HP 255 lb.-ft
Drive: Direct FWD
Battery: 500V 54 kWh lithium-ion
TESTED:
0-40 mph:     3.03 sec
0-60 mph:     5.73 sec
0-80 mph:     7.61 sec
0-100 mph:    12.92sec
¼-mile:       13.9 sec @ 104 mph
50-75 mph:    3.37 sec
75-100 mph:   5.31 sec
CLAIMED:
VMax:         125 mph
Energy:       18.6 kWh/100 km
Range:        210 miles 
LIST PRICE:   $60,000 in South Africa

 

Images: Giordano Lupini

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Once a handy engine and chassis tuner, and a combative racer and rally driver, Michele took up the pen to express his passion for cars, racing and motoring over 30 years ago. He published South Africa’s go-to enthusiast motor magazines Cars in Action and Bakkie — some say against all odds — for a quarter century. In that time, Michele had a hand in nurturing many of South Africa's motoring media leaders. Today Michele keeps himself busy with his a range of international motoring media duties alongside his own theauto.page. And a little racing on the side.


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