1st Generation
(2005 - 2008)
Technical specifications, versions, and history for the Alfa Romeo Brera.
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(2005 - 2008)
(2008 - 2011)
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The Alfa Romeo Brera, known by the internal project code Type 939, represents one of the most emblematic design and engineering milestones of the Italian automotive industry in the 2000s. The history of this model began in 2002 when the Italdesign studio, headed by renowned designer Giorgetto Giugiaro, revealed a homonymous concept car at the Geneva Motor Show. That original concept featured a striking carbon-fiber coupe body, rear-wheel drive, and a high-performance V8 engine supplied by Maserati. Due to the extremely positive reception from the public and brand enthusiasts, Alfa Romeo's management decided to adapt the concept's futuristic lines for commercial production.
The definitive production model debuted at the 2005 Geneva Motor Show with the mission of replacing the older Alfa Romeo GTV. However, to make the project commercially viable, the manufacturer opted to assemble the car on the Premium platform, developed jointly by Fiat and General Motors (GM), sharing this mechanical base directly with the Alfa Romeo 159 sedan. Final assembly of the coupe was outsourced to the traditional coachbuilder Pininfarina at their plant located in San Giorgio Canavese. This platform change, while ensuring excellent rigidity and high safety standards, brought challenges regarding weight and agility, defining the paths for the Brera's development in the following years.
Official manufacturing of the Alfa Romeo Brera extended from November 2005 to the end of 2010, although remaining dealership stock was sold until mid-2011. The first series vehicle left the factory on November 8, 2005, bearing the chassis number (VIN) ZAR93900005000001. The last example was produced on October 29, 2010, registered under chassis number ZAR93900005034194.
Throughout its entire five-year production cycle, exactly 21,786 units of the Brera coupe were manufactured. For market comparison purposes within the same Type 939 line, the convertible version, marketed as the Alfa Romeo Spider, recorded a total of 12,488 units produced. The annual manufacturing distribution of the coupe shows that the model concentrated its sales volume mainly in its first two full years on the market, suffering gradual declines in the following years.
Annual Production of the Alfa Romeo Brera
| Production Year | Units Manufactured (Coupe) |
|---|---|
| 2005 | 1,630 |
| 2006 | 8,248 |
| 2007 | 4,795 |
| 2008 | 3,770 |
| 2009 | 1,629 |
| 2010 | 1,589 |
| Total Annual Production | 21,661* |
*Note: The small difference of 125 units between the annual sum of 21,661 cars and the historical total of 21,786 homologated units is due to the assembly of development prototypes and internal test models by the factory that did not enter the standard annual sales flow.
The Alfa Romeo Brera did not have different generations throughout its existence, but it underwent two major restructurings that considerably improved its overall package. At its launch in 2005, the car featured the Medio and Sky View trim levels (the latter equipped with a large, dark-tinted panoramic glass sunroof integrated into the bodywork). However, the robust structure inherited from the 159 sedan made the car exhibit heavy behavior on winding stretches, which prompted the manufacturer to seek engineering solutions.
In late 2007, Alfa Romeo implemented the first modifications focused on interior comfort and mechanical efficiency. The vehicle's interior gained a more elegant look with the end of highly contrasting color options on the dashboard, such as blue with orange or red with beige, being replaced by a dark grey center console bezel with a refined finish. The factory leather seats were replaced by high-luxury upholstery supplied by the famous Italian designer brand Poltrona Frau (Pelle Frau). In addition, Alfa Romeo made available a front-wheel-drive (FWD) version for the 3.2 V6 JTS engine, which was previously restricted to the heavy Q4 all-wheel-drive (AWD) system, allowing customers to opt for a lighter and more direct drive.
The most significant technical facelift occurred in early 2008. Instead of focusing on drastic external changes that could detract from Giugiaro's beautiful, award-winning lines, Alfa Romeo engineers carried out a deep weight-reduction program. Steel in various parts of the chassis was replaced by high-strength cast aluminum. The front suspension mounts became aluminum, the anti-roll bar adopted a hollow tubular shape, and the 18-inch alloy wheels began to be manufactured by flow forming (spin forging) to reduce unsprung rotational weight (the weight of the wheels and suspension components). Models with four-cylinder engines also received aluminum monoblock front brake calipers. All this effort reduced the car's total weight by several kilograms.
Furthermore, the 2008 lineup began equipping all standard versions with the e-Q2 electronic differential. This electronic system acts on the front brakes to emulate a physical differential lock, pinching the inside wheel during hard acceleration to send engine power to the outside wheel, drastically reducing the car's tendency to understeer at high speeds. Inside, the Brera gained a redesigned steering wheel with a sporty shape and revised dual-zone air conditioning controls.
The Alfa Romeo Brera's engines were divided between direct-injection gasoline powerplants (JTS technology) and common-rail turbodiesels with variable geometry (JTDM technology).
The origin of the JTS (Jet Thrust Stoichiometric) gasoline blocks traces back to the short-term industrial partnership between the Fiat Group and General Motors. The four-cylinder engines (1.9 JTS and 2.2 JTS) utilized blocks supplied by GM (from the Ecotec family) with chain-driven camshafts and continuous variation on the intake and exhaust shafts. Similarly, the 3.2 V6 JTS engine block was cast in Australia by Holden (a GM subsidiary at the time). However, Alfa Romeo's Italian engineers profoundly modified the 3.2-liter V6 engine. They created their own cylinder heads with direct gasoline injection, the TwinPhaser system for camshaft variation, and redesigned intake and exhaust manifolds to give the engine the rasping sound and sporty behavior typical of the brand's engineering.
In 2009, Alfa Romeo introduced the acclaimed 1750 TBi (1.75 Turbo) four-cylinder engine. With modern turbocharging, direct injection, and variable valve timing, this smaller engine managed to deliver 200 horsepower and an excellent peak torque of 320 Nm right at 1,400 rpm, surpassing and retiring the old naturally aspirated 2.2 JTS and considerably lightening the weight over the front axle. In the diesel lineup, the highlight was the 2.4 JTDM inline five-cylinder engine, which evolved from 200 horsepower to 210 horsepower and achieved an impressive 440 Nm of torque in its final years of production.
The detailed specifications of each powertrain can be compared directly in the following table:
Technical Specifications of Alfa Romeo Brera Engines
| Engine | Type | Displacement | Maximum Power | Maximum Torque | Production Years | Transmissions | Top Speed | Acceleration (0 to 100 km/h) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.75 TBi | I4 Turbo | 1,742 cc | 200 PS @ 5,000 rpm | 320 Nm @ 1,400 rpm | 2009 - 2010 | 6-spd Manual | 235 km/h | 7.7 s |
| 2.2 JTS | I4 Naturally Aspirated | 2,198 cc | 185 PS @ 6,500 rpm | 230 Nm @ 4,500 rpm | 2005 - 2010 | 6-spd Manual / 6-spd Selespeed | 222 km/h (Selespeed) / 224 km/h (Manual) | 8.6 s |
| 3.2 V6 JTS Q4 | V6 Naturally Aspirated (AWD) | 3,195 cc | 260 PS @ 6,300 rpm | 322 Nm @ 4,500 rpm | 2005 - 2010 | 6-spd Manual / 6-spd Q-Tronic | 240 km/h (Manual) / 244 km/h (Q-Tronic) | 6.8 s (Manual) / 7.0 s (Q-Tronic) |
| 3.2 V6 JTS FWD | V6 Naturally Aspirated (FWD) | 3,195 cc | 260 PS @ 6,300 rpm | 322 Nm @ 4,500 rpm | 2008 - 2010 | 6-spd Manual | 250 km/h | 7.0 s |
| 2.0 JTDM | I4 Turbo (Diesel) | 1,956 cc | 170 PS @ 4,000 rpm | 360 Nm @ 1,750 rpm | 2009 - 2010 | 6-spd Manual | 218 km/h | 8.8 s |
| 2.4 JTDM (200 PS) | I5 Turbo (Diesel) | 2,387 cc | 200 PS @ 4,000 rpm | 400 Nm @ 2,000 rpm | 2005 - 2006 | 6-spd Manual / 6-spd Q-Tronic | 228 km/h (Manual) / 225 km/h (Q-Tronic) | 8.1 s (Manual) / 8.3 s (Q-Tronic) |
| 2.4 JTDM (210 PS) | I5 Turbo (Diesel) | 2,387 cc | 210 PS @ 4,000 rpm | 400 Nm @ 1,500 rpm | 2007 - 2008 | 6-spd Manual | 230 km/h | 7.9 s |
| 2.4 JTDM (Evolved) | I5 Turbo (Diesel) | 2,387 cc | 210 PS @ 4,000 rpm | 440 Nm @ 1,500 rpm | 2009 - 2010 | 6-spd Manual | 250 km/h | 7.2 s |
The available transmissions adapted to each version's purpose. Besides the traditional 6-speed manual gearbox, the 2.2 JTS engine featured the automated robotic Selespeed option, which provided sequential shifts on the lever or via paddles behind the steering wheel, and a purely automatic mode with a sport button that reduced shift times by 20%. Meanwhile, the V6 engine and the 2.4 diesel line featured the conventional 6-speed Q-Tronic automatic transmission, which offered the comfort of smooth shifts and included specific "Sport" and "Winter" modes to aid in dynamic control on slippery surfaces.
The general dimensions of the vehicle and the gross weight variation by version are detailed in the charts below, illustrating the impact of the different mechanical blocks and traction systems on the Type 939 body:
Dimensions and Physical Capacities of the Brera
| Dimension / Parameter | Official Measurement |
|---|---|
| Length | 4,410 mm to 4,415 mm |
| Width | 1,830 mm |
| Height | 1,341 mm to 1,380 mm |
| Wheelbase | 2,528 mm to 2,530 mm |
| Trunk Capacity | 300 to 610 liters (with seats folded) |
| Fuel Tank Capacity | 70 liters (or 69 liters on the V6 version) |
Weight Comparison (Curb Weight)
| Powertrain and Drivetrain Version | Official Weight |
|---|---|
| 1.75 TBi FWD | 1,420 kg |
| 2.2 JTS FWD | 1,445 kg (Manual) / 1,440 kg (Automatic) |
| 3.2 V6 JTS FWD | 1,515 kg |
| 3.2 V6 JTS Q4 (AWD) | 1,605 kg (Manual) / 1,625 kg (Automatic) |
| 3.2 V6 JTS Q4 (Japanese Homologation Weight) | 1,770 kg |
The Alfa Romeo Brera's exterior color palette played a vital role in its aesthetic presentation of luxury. Below are the main colors offered throughout its production years:
| Factory Code | Color Name | Initial Availability |
|---|---|---|
| 289/A | Rosso Alfa (Classic Solid Red) | 2005 |
| 601 | Nero Luxor (Solid Black) | 2005 |
| 203/B | Blu Montecarlo Met. (Metallic Blue) | 2005 |
| 565/A | Argento Alfa Met. (Metallic Silver) | 2005 |
| 583/A | Rosso Rubino Met. (Metallic Ruby Red) | 2005 (Discontinued in 2007) |
| 585/A | Grigio Touring Met. (Metallic Grey) | 2005 |
| 586/A | Blu Misano Met. (Metallic Bright Blue) | 2005 |
| 588/A | Oro Soave Met. (Metallic Gold) | 2005 |
| 696/A | Grigio Diamante Met. (Metallic Dark Grey) | 2005 (Discontinued in 2007) |
| 876/B | Nero Carbonio Met. (Metallic Carbon Black) | 2005 |
| 296 | Ghiaccio White (Solid White) | Added in 2007 |
| 702/B | Titan Matt (Matte Titanium Grey) | Added in 2007 |
Alfa Romeo took advantage of the Brera's strong image appeal to launch some exclusive special series aimed at local markets or partner lifestyle brands.
Developed in partnership with the renowned British engineering firm Prodrive, this exclusive version was created to answer criticisms regarding the original Brera's heavy behavior on winding UK roads.
Developed jointly with the Italian lifestyle brand headed by Lapo Elkann, this special edition focused on a futuristic, high-fashion visual appeal.
Launched in December 2008 in a very restricted manner, this version was destined solely for the Japanese market. The coupe stood out for its special white paint combined with high-performance brake calipers painted in bright red. Under the hood, it carried the top-of-the-line 3.2 V6 engine mated to the Q-Tronic automatic transmission.
For brand enthusiasts who considered the performance of the original engines below expectations for a sports coupe, the independent English tuning company Autodelta designed and sold high-performance modification packages based on the use of centrifugal superchargers.
Based on the model equipped with the 3.2 V6 engine, this project adopted the Rotrex C38 centrifugal mechanical supercharger. The tuning raised the maximum power from the factory 260 horsepower to an impressive 348 horsepower (capable of reaching 370 horsepower in extreme front-wheel-drive projects). In the all-wheel-drive version, the Brera J5 accelerated from 0 to 100 km/h in 5.3 seconds and reached a top speed of 260 km/h. The aesthetic package included a redesigned front bumper with larger air intakes to feed the supercharger's oil cooler and a stainless steel rear air extractor. The price for the complete installation of this supercharger kit a la carte exceeded 7,000 British pounds.
The J4 package was developed specifically for the 2.2-liter four-cylinder engine. The main technical justification for this kit was the fact that the 2.2-liter engine was about 150 kg lighter than the heavy 3.2-liter V6 block, giving the Brera a much more balanced dynamic behavior in corners. With the installation of the Rotrex C30-74 centrifugal supercharger operating at 0.65 bar of pressure, the engine's power jumped from a factory 185 horsepower to 245 horsepower, with maximum torque rising from 230 Nm to 290 Nm.
To ensure mechanical reliability, Autodelta replaced the original plastic intake manifold with a custom cast aluminum piece and recalibrated the variable valve timing system to optimize torque delivery from low revs. As a front traction aid, the tuner sold a mechanical limited-slip differential (LSD) for the 2.2 JTS engine's front axle for 894 British pounds, which improved the sports car's grip on wet asphalt or tight corners.
Despite its undeniable visual appeal — which guaranteed the model the reputation of a classic that has aged extremely well —, the Alfa Romeo Brera received harsh criticism from the automotive press and owners throughout its marketing period. The main weak point noted was the severely limited rear visibility, aggravated by the wide rear support pillars and the abrupt drop of the roof, creating large side blind spots during maneuvers.
Another highly criticized element was the integrated entertainment system and center console trip computer, considered visually antiquated for its segment. In addition, the internal space arrangement of the rear seats was extremely cramped, so that the coupe acted as a sports car with a practical 2+2 configuration, where the back seats served primarily to transport additional luggage or small children on short urban trips.
The vehicle's high weight, as a result of the robust Premium platform shared with the 159 model, also took its toll on fuel consumption, especially in the versions with Q4 all-wheel drive. Still, the structural evolutions adopted from 2008 onwards and the purist character of the specially tuned chassis editions, such as the Brera S, ensured the vehicle a striking legacy of style and automotive passion.
Images of the Alfa Romeo Brera