Currently reading: Best cars of 2013: Alfa Romeo 4C

The 4C has the potential to be a truly great car, even if at the moment it only feels 95 per cent finished

Before you slide behind the wheel to drive, you’re inclined to speculate too much about the central purpose of Alfa Romeo’s terrific new mid-engined, fixed-head coupé, the 4C.

Everyone knows that Alfa urgently needs to sell more cars and has been having tough times sorting the mid-sized Giulia on which its much-ballyhooed return to the US market squarely depends. The 4C isn’t ever going to sell more than 3500 units in total per year, so why does it matter? Best way to find out is to start the engine and get driving. 

By the time you’re installed behind the wheel, you’ll know that this is a Lotus Exige-sized coupé with a heavily revised 1750 turbo engine – now with a 22kg lighter alloy block – located transversely behind you and driving through a six-speed paddle-shift gearbox (no stick shift is contemplated).

The whole thing rides on an independently suspended carbonfibre chassis that weighs just 65kg and is handmade by artisans in Naples, Italy. Ready to go, a 4C weights 960kg at the kerb and costs £45,000, splitting the difference between the basic Cayman and Boxster Porsches.

People insist on comparing the car with a Porsche, but a quick scan around the cabin soon shows big differences. This is a sparse interior, with the bare essentials required for comfort. There’s a race car feel. The minimal leather pull handles on the doors remind you powerfully of other Italian lightweights.

You can even ask Alfa to leave out the audio system and air-con if your 4C is intended for track-day use, but don’t expect a refund. Fire the engine and blip it and the rasp confirms that this is no drive-to-work all-rounder. You can drive to work, of course, but your 4C will always be happier away from the grind of life.

Let in the clutch and as the car rolls, you instantly feel the lightness. It gets going briskly almost before you’ve thought of it, one good reason why 0-62mph acceleration takes just 4.5sec. Another is the zesty performance of an engine that, although small, produces 237bhp at 6000rpm and 258lb ft of torque between 2100rpm and 4000rpm. Flat out, a 4C will reach 155mph. In fuel-sipping mode, it’ll yield 41.5mpg on the combined cycle.

Naturally, the 4C really handles. Its low centre of gravity, working with near-ideal weight distribution and low mass, means that it grips like a leech without the need for cumbersome gumball tyres and it remains neutral in corners long after side forces have taken occupants beyond the threshold of discomfort. When it ‘goes’, you get understeer, but this could hardly be called breakaway. Ease the throttle and the 4C grips and steers just as before. 

The Alfa’s finest characteristic 
is its ability to ensure that you 
enjoy every mile. The ride never intrudes, the seats are great, the cockpit is snug, the engine rasp is lovely, the steering sends you unmissable messages from the 
road, the brakes are sure and all is right with the world. Which brings us to the car’s mission.

Back to top

As Alfa struggles, the 4C aims to remind us how well it builds driver’s cars. At this, it’s a towering success.

Log on to Autocar.co.uk again tomorrow where we'll be continuing our rundown of the best cars of 2013.

Steve Cropley

Steve Cropley Autocar
Title: Editor-in-chief

Steve Cropley is the oldest of Autocar’s editorial team, or the most experienced if you want to be polite about it. He joined over 30 years ago, and has driven many cars and interviewed many people in half a century in the business. 

Cropley, who regards himself as the magazine’s “long stop”, has seen many changes since Autocar was a print-only affair, but claims that in such a fast moving environment he has little appetite for looking back. 

He has been surprised and delighted by the generous reception afforded the My Week In Cars podcast he makes with long suffering colleague Matt Prior, and calls it the most enjoyable part of his working week.

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GQV1750 25 December 2013

WOW

What a fantastic DRIVERS CAR.

This is a beaut.

Chaps, negativity, chill..

If you have driven a 4C, pls feel free to express your experience.
Have you seen 1 in the skin???
The 4C aside...

If you have not owned an Alfa Romeo, you wouldn't have a clue what they are all about.

But Im sure, somewhere, someone, say a friends fathers friends other friends brothers uncles sister once owned an AR ages ago and said it was trash, and so the message is with you.

I say. To know an Alfa Romeo is to own 1, 2 or more. They have heart, soul and personality. and this is what Alfa drivers come to manifest in.
Which you rarely find in another marque.

Overdrive 24 December 2013

The 4C

I know we're all supposed to go weak-kneed and heap praise on the styling of every Alfa, but the 4C, fun drive that it might be, just doesn't do it for me looks wise.

To my eyes the stance just looks wrong that, especially from the 3/4 view the way the roofline blends with the rear so awkwardly, and that portruding snout looks like Gonzo from the Muppets.

Myk 24 December 2013

Urgh!

Did you really say "stick shift" instead of "manual"?
Flatus senex 24 December 2013

Double Urgh!

Myk wrote:

Did you really say "stick shift" instead of "manual"?

"Race car" rather than "Racing car" as well.