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Dec 24 2001, 03:53
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#1
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Member Posts: 18,501 Joined: December 99 |
Hello strangers (i used to post here) ... I thought you'd like this. I have a MONUTAIN of pics from the Alfa Museum in milan during a reent trip to Europe ...if anyone wants more than the three I have here just mail me.
Read 'em and weep fellas! Yes folks, this is Fangio's CC winning 158 Tipo .... the little supercharged Alfetta. Despite the "Don't touch or we ring the mafia" signs I managed to "steal a drive". HOW GOOD IS THAT!
Ahh and the Brabham
and the Turbo LeMans car for good measure
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Dec 24 2001, 09:59
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#2
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Member Posts: 18,501 Joined: December 99 |
Honestly .. i dead set give up. These pics worked fine when i posted them ... now they're buggered. Bira, i have gone back to image station and the pics i have linked to this thread have all changed to this japanese symbol .... the others are fine.
Lemmie guess, it's a default "safety" mechanism to stop people linking directly to the images?? People wonder why i get cheesed off with PC's/net. |
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Dec 24 2001, 11:15
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#3
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Member Posts: 4,650 Joined: May 00 |
This sux fisti, I think you need to throw your pc out the window it's stuffed
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Dec 24 2001, 21:34
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#4
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Member Posts: 2,403 Joined: March 99 |
I'd be interested to know what the Japenese says! You'ld think they would want a link to their site. For some it's still a Small Narrow Web.
Anyway I hope and trust you had a great time. Didn't go to the Nuvolari Museum? |
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Dec 25 2001, 06:23
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#5
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Member Posts: 2,570 Joined: May 99 |
I can only tell the first two words mean "image" as they are the same words as Chinese.
is there any mid 80s Alfa Romeo F1 cars in the museum? |
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Dec 25 2001, 10:01
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#6
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![]() Member Posts: 39,079 Joined: December 99 |
Originally posted by Alfisti
Honestly .. i dead set give up. These pics worked fine when i posted them ... now they're buggered. Bira, i have gone back to image station and the pics i have linked to this thread have all changed to this japanese symbol .... the others are fine. Lemmie guess, it's a default "safety" mechanism to stop people linking directly to the images??. This is just like Geocities did to mine, though bira rightly pointed out that it was in their rules that they shouldn't be used this way... Homestead do allow it, though, with 15 megs still free... you have to pay for more than that. |
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Dec 25 2001, 10:18
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#7
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Member Posts: 8,372 Joined: April 01 |
Fisti
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Oct 11 2007, 21:16
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#8
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Member Posts: 1,476 Joined: July 02 |
Wednesday I had time to visit the Alfa Romeo Museum in Arese. It is on the premises of the former Alfa works in Arese. And housed besides the former top management offices. A great museum. Also entry is free, so a great visit when you are near Milan in Italy.
An 8C 2900B Lungo from 1938
A Tipo 33 TT 12 endurance at the main entrance.
The collection houses 3x a 159 F1 and one 158 F1. One 159 is displayed 'nuda' to give a good view of the cars construction.
Engines are plenty available to see up close.
Maybe the most famous of all classic grand prix cars: Tipo B or P3.
The 1934 Tipo B Aerodinamica
The Tipo A 1931 BiMotore has two engines sitting next to each other.
The 158 Alfetta.
The 1935 Bimotore has perspex engine covers to show the engines. Only car in the collection to sport Ferrari badges.
The mighty P2, as some other cars from the collection a recent Goodwood visitor!
The 6C 2500 Super Sport Corsa from 1939.
Giulia TZ2 from 1965.
The 1923 RL Targa Florio.
The selection modern monopostos is not only F1, but also CART and F3.
Vittorio Brambilla's 1979 Alfa-Alfa.
One rare non BE owned Brabham is this BT45. Chassis plate said BT45 001.
The prettiest ever? The 33 Stradale.
Abortive prototype racer.
Alfa's boxer.
One of the many what if's in racing
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Oct 13 2007, 12:31
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#9
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Member Posts: 471 Joined: December 04 |
Thanks for sharing, Arjan
Some thought-provoking photos. Justin |
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Oct 13 2007, 13:48
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#10
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![]() Member Posts: 39,079 Joined: December 99 |
Yes, very nice...
And I wonder if 'fisti could re-post his now? |
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Oct 13 2007, 15:11
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#11
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Member Posts: 1,453 Joined: April 03 |
Arjan, wonderful pictures. The tipo B is in fact a 8C2300 (or 2600) Monza.
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Oct 13 2007, 19:13
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#12
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Member Posts: 1,476 Joined: July 02 |
It was a pleasure to do. In fact I thought the collection wouldn't be so large as it really is. Also I am not an Alfisti as such, still the collection grabbed me.
A part of the collection is also undeground and leads to the former management buildings. Before I knew it I was wandering through the empty hallways. Very sad to see the abandoned offices that sometimes even looked like if evacuated for a bomb alert.
The Arese plant, (left) middle part (main assembly lines) has already been demolished. Bottom right shows management buildings and museum.
Left overs of what must have been crowded offices.
The archives are also still there. |
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Oct 14 2007, 11:04
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#13
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![]() Member Posts: 3,899 Joined: December 00 |
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Oct 14 2007, 14:39
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#14
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Member Posts: 2,974 Joined: May 02 |
I solved a few some 10 years ago, when Elvira was still there. At that time, they were actually think about doing reprints of all the Alfa Corse magazines 1938-1943 and making them available to the public. Sadly, never happened
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Oct 14 2007, 14:41
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#15
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Member Posts: 2,974 Joined: May 02 |
I solved a few some 10 years ago, when Elvira was still there, but became a bit frustrated about there not being anything to help solve other questions, such as not finding much of anything on the Tipo 412s (sports cars with 8c2900A chassis and12c37 motors....one of my pesonal obsessions)
At that time, they were actually think about doing reprints of all the Alfa Corse magazines 1938-1943 and making them available to the public. Sadly, never happened |
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Oct 25 2007, 06:35
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#16
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Member Posts: 1,160 Joined: March 05 |
I just got a Brumm model of the 1932 Mille Miglia winning Alfa. I found the following webpage in another link of photos from the Alfa Museum. Is this car still at the Museum? Is it the Mille Miglia winner? It looks like it, with the three headlights across the front:
http://www.gregor-g.de/alfa/arese/ar8c2300.htm Vince H. |
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Oct 25 2007, 12:31
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#17
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![]() Member Posts: 412 Joined: December 00 |
Originally posted by raceannouncer2003
I just got a Brumm model of the 1932 Mille Miglia winning Alfa. I found the following webpage in another link of photos from the Alfa Museum. Is this car still at the Museum? Is it the Mille Miglia winner? It looks like it, with the three headlights across the front: http://www.gregor-g.de/alfa/arese/ar8c2300.htm Vince H. No, since the 8C2300 displayed at the museum wasn't a 8C2300 first! I wass rebuilt during the 60s by Luigi Fusi using some genuine 2.3 parts, but from a modified 6C1750 frame. It is still there indeed, but is a non-runner. I cannot quote the VIN of the actual MM winner, it's in Simon Moore's "Legendary 2.3" which I have not at hand here. Note also that, while the Brumm model has too widely spaced headlights, the museum car has the opposite inconvenient, since the fitting of the main headlights is not the original one. The third headlight was a common addition on long-run racing Alfas at the time. |
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Oct 25 2007, 20:49
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#18
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![]() Member Posts: 2,806 Joined: June 02 |
For Alfa 6C and 8C material I recommend Angela Cherrett's books on each model, published by Veloce, with her superb access to the Alfa archives and Zagari ,IIRC, photos.
Roger Lund. |
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Oct 26 2007, 09:04
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#19
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Member Posts: 466 Joined: September 01 |
Originally posted by Arjan de Roos
Wednesday I had time to visit the Alfa Romeo Museum in Arese. It is on the premises of the former Alfa works in Arese. And housed besides the former top management offices. A great museum. Also entry is free, so a great visit when you are near Milan in Italy. Do you have pictures of Alfa Romeo F1 cars 182 and 183 from 1982 and 1983? Forza Andrea, |
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Oct 26 2007, 10:12
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#20
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Member Posts: 1,490 Joined: October 03 |
@Andrea: Why quote the whole of Arjan's post (including pics) only to ask one question (not even related to any of the pics)?
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Oct 26 2007, 10:57
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#21
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![]() Member Posts: 3,899 Joined: December 00 |
Originally posted by Arjan de Roos
Could this be the car that used to be in the Donington Museum? BE still owned that one but Bob Salisbury and I were unable to find a number on it when we stripped it one afternoon in the middle of the museum hall. Bob was sure nobody would mind!
One rare non BE owned Brabham is this BT45. Chassis plate said BT45 001. Allen |
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Oct 26 2007, 12:59
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#22
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Member Posts: 1,476 Joined: July 02 |
Originally posted by andrea
Do you have pictures of Alfa Romeo F1 cars 182 and 183 from 1982 and 1983? Forza Andrea, Sorry Andrea, but these cars are not in the Alfa Romeo Collection. Originally posted by Allen Brown
".....but Bob Salisbury and I were unable to find a number on it when we stripped it one afternoon in the middle of the museum hall....." Allen I watched to see a chassis plate of MRD of some sort. You know the more professional ones, sometimes even colored. However the only plate I could discover was soldered to the flank of the seat (to the right upper leg of the driver). A rather crude piece of metal with large characters stamped in. It said BT45001. However in the 179 I saw a very similar plate. Which made me wonder. Has the Brab a genuine plate, or was it soldered on, or, or ... is the whole chassis a remake? |
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