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Alfa Romeo · Featured · Reviews · Road Tests

Falling in love with the Alfa Giulietta

  • by Mike Torpey
  • November 8, 2016

THE arguments for and against the Alfa Giulietta are familiar ones.

A bit like the lean towards fashionable footwear as opposed to stout, sensible shoes.

One option hurts like hell but makes you feel good, the other soft as a slipper but just plain boring.

If you’re wondering where the Giulietta fits into the equation, well for starters it’s one of the most attractive looking small cars on the road – with even cooler looks thanks to some cosmetic tucks and new headlamps introduced earlier this year.

Run it round sweeping country lanes and the Alfa feels glued to the road; move to the motorway and it holds its own in the outside lane.

alfagiulietta3new

There’s a shedload of feelgood factor from a car that drips with Italian style both inside and out.

What you may not appreciate is being regularly stuck in traffic, in the six-speed manual models at least, because the clutch is snatchy and the pedals are too close together.

Stay behind the wheel for a couple of hours or more and lower backache can set in.

Thankfully that’s about the full extent of the bad news because otherwise the Giulietta is a triumph.

The tested 1.6-litre diesel version not only outperforms its capacity but is also good for an official average fuel figure of 74.3 miles per gallon, even if my own return was closer to 65mpg – still decent by any standard.

alfagiulietta4

Tailpipe emissions are also low at 99g/km, meaning there’s no road tax to pay.

And while the the Giulietta looks like a three-door coupe due to smartly concealed rear door handles, it is actually a five-door model.

It’s ideal for two rear passengers, though you can fit in three at a squeeze, and if you need to cart kids around there are Isofix mounting points for booster seats.

The boot looks on the small side but is actually better than average for the category at 350 litres, which expands to 1,045 litres with the back seats folded down.

alfagiulietta5Inside, you get a simple, attractive dash with carbon-effect finish, a large flat-bottomed sports steering wheel and fabric/Alcantara seats with the Alfa Romeo logo embossed into the headrests.

There’s also Alfa’s D.N.A. system, altered via a rocker switch, for flicking between Dynamic, Natural, and All-weather driving modes, and the transmission looks the business with its alloy billiard ball-style gearknob.

Standard kit on every model – the range starts at £18,700 – includes 16-inch alloy wheels, a Uconnect info set-up with a five-inch touchscreen, Bluetooth, DAB radio and smartphone connectivity and Live services for internet access.

  • SPEC CHECK

  • MAKE Alfa Romeo.
  • MODEL Giulietta 1.6 JTDM-2 Super. 
  • ENGINE 1,598cc, 4-cyl diesel.
  • POWER 120bhp at 3,750rpm.
  • PERFORMANCE 0-62 in 10.0 secs, top speed 121mph.
  • ECONOMY 60.1mpg Urban, 88.3 Extra Urban, 74.3 Combined.
  • CO2 EMISSIONS 99g/km.
  • BiK RATING 19%.
  • INSURANCE Group 16 (1-50).
  • PRICE £20,900 on the road.

  • WHAT’S HOT

  • Style, economy, dynamics, image.
  • WHAT’S NOT
  • Uncomfortable over long journeys.
  • RATINGS  {Out of 5}
  • LOOKS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
  • EQUIPMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4
  • RIDE AND HANDLING . . . . .4
  • PERFORMANCE . . . . . . . . . . .4
  • VALUE FOR MONEY . . . . . . . 4

alfagiulietta2

 

Tags: AlfaAlfa RomeodieselGiuliettaJTDM-2road testSuper

— Mike Torpey

Mike Torpey is freelance Motoring Editor of the Liverpool Echo, past Racing Editor and also a travel/golf writer, music reviewer and rock music nut. Tweet @michaeltorpey1

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