“New’ GTV and Spider
Buyers Guide
Chris Cousins looks at the pleasures and pitfalls
of owning these two closely related models
which were in production from 1995-2005
T
his article covers the Alfa Romeo GTV and
Spider models launched in 1995, which
remained in production until 2005. The
Pininfarina design was bold at the time and still
looks fresh today. Both models shared the same
front end and there was some mechanical part
commonality with the 155, which was based loosely
around Fiat Tempra underpinnings.
Although Alfa had produced front wheel drive
cars since the 1972 Alfasud, these were the first
coupe and spider models so equipped. With the
previous Alfetta GTV having been out of production
since 1986 and the Series 4 Spider since 1992 there
were no immediate predecessors to compare with.
However initial reaction was very favourable with
both models receiving tempered praise in the
motoring press (remember this was the time when
Alfa were still recovering and sales were very poor).
Press release shot of a
Twin Spark Spider.
(Photo: Alfa Romeo)
The 156 was still some years away and the
reputation still had some ground to make up.
The only engine available at launch was the twin
spark two litre that debuted on the 155. This was
not the classic all alloy twin cam that died with the
75, but rather an Alfa alloy head mated to a generic
Fiat cast iron block. Although this may have been a
disappointment for some Alfisti, in practice the
engine worked well and was powerful and reliable.
A two litre V6 turbo was offered in the rest of
Europe but not the UK. Initially only one
specification was available, which included 15" alloy
wheels, remote central locking, electric windows
with one touch operation on the driver’s side,
electric heated mirrors and an electric radio aerial.
Twin airbags and ABS were included too. The only
options available were metallic paint, an electric
sunroof and a Lusso pack which provided air
conditioning, leather trim and 16" alloys.
The glorious three litre V6 was introduced in
1998 for the GTV only in the UK although it was
available in the Spider as well on the continent (and
later in the UK too). Also in 1998 came the Phase 2
model, which had body coloured sills and lower
bumpers, a chrome grille surround and silver
highlights to the dashboard along with the climate
controls from the early 156. The final update was
made for the 2003 model year and introduced
traction control, the new 2.0 JTS engine in Lusso
models (although Turismo models continued with
the Twin Spark engine) and most obviously, styling
changes at the front end to introduce the bolder
Alfa Romeo shield and offset number plate. Satellite
navigation was also available from the options list
for the first time.
Side on shows that the GTV changed little
until the final series arrived in 2003.
(Photo: Alfa Romeo.)
Alfa Romeo Owners Club Magazine
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