Sexy, very clever, Italian and honest to the point of being brutal.
Meet eco:Drive, your personal driving coach that comes with Alfa Romeo's latest baby, the MiTo Sport. The eco:Drive function is part of the windows-based Blue and Me telematics system pioneered by Fiat and now finding its way into the range-topping model of the little MiTo 3-door ‘super mini’ from Alfa Romeo. When prompted the eco:Drive software will store key features of a driver's style including throttle application, gear changes, clutch behaviour and more over a minimum five-day period.
"Essentially the onboard software is a data-gatherer which you can then download to a memory stick and transfer that to a computer," Alfa Romeo Australia's Edward Rowe says. "The software at the eco:Drive website will analyse that data and make recommendations of how to adjust your driving style to be more economical."
Rowe says that aggregated information collected from drivers using the software shows that the average savings over more than 10,000 users has been 10 per cent. "While there is nothing especially new about the driving tips what the software can do for you is benchmark your starting point and then coach you over time so that you can see an actual return from the changes you make."
While Blue and Me and eco:Drive are only a small part of the MiTo whole, the techno-clever systems are just part of the net Alfa Romeo has cast in search of new and younger buyers.
Pricing
Priced from $31,490 for the entry level model and $37,490 for the MiTo Sport, the little Alfa is aimed squarely at BMW's legion of Mini faithful with dreams of drawing the young and well-heeled away from the German manufacturer and across the border to Italy.
"I am comfortable with our prediction that 80 per cent of MiTo buyers will be new to Alfa Romeo while 45 per cent of buyers will be under 30 years of age (currently only 5 per cent of Alfa buyers fall into that demographic)," Alfa Romeo Australia general manager Edward Butler says. "We have to accept that there will be some Alfa owners moving from the 147, in particular, but most buyers will be new to the brand."
Alfa is also hoping to swell its ranks of female buyers from the current 12 per cent, but Butler concedes that is unlikely to happen until the arrival of the robotised manual (DSG-style) automatic next year. "At the moment we are calling around 35 sales a month but when that gearbox is available, early next year, I wouldn't be surprised to see that double," Butler says.
Drivetrains
From launch the MiTo is available in two trims, both running a turbo-charged 1.4-litre four-cylinder engine, with the base car producing 88kW and 206Nm while the Sport is boosted to deliver 114kW and 230Nm.
Both cars have the same MacPherson independent front, and torsion-beam rear, suspension set-up. But MiTo drives the front wheels through a 5-speed manual while the Sport gets a slicker 6-speed box.
Alfa Romeo is claiming a combined fuel efficiency of 6.1-litres per 100km for the less powerful engine and 6.5 on the same combined cycle for the Sport. From the launch drive experience it is not unreasonable to assume that with careful management they are achievable numbers.
Driving
On the road the MiTo twins are two very different cars. The Sport is as it suggests, a sharper and more aggressive character with a willingness to spin up towards the 6000rpm peak before getting breathless. The car has good, strong mid-range torque and a nice rorty note when booted and Alfa claims a 0-100km/h sprint of 8 seconds — not that impressive on paper but it feels nice and aggressive on the road..
There is good feedback from the steering, even if at times there is a little too much of the road surface imperfections transferred to the steering wheel. The front suspension is a little nervous and can be unsettled by broken surfaces but not to any alarming degree.
At the entry level the engine is still a willing worker, if a little less athletic (8.8 seconds for the 0-100km rush), but the softer suspension settings take away a degree of the sportier car's directness and steering feel.
The ride quality from both cars is surprisingly good for what is a small car with very short wheelbase. Less pleasing are the seats which are not up to Alfa's normally high quality. There is little bolstering on both the squab and the back and the fiddly back angle adjustment is an annoyance, although the presence of an anti-whiplash headrest system is a plus.
Alfa's take on selectable driving modes is the quaintly-named DNA (Dynamic, Normal, All-weather) settings which act on the engine mapping, steering, suspension and gearbox to match the driving aggression to conditions and the driver's preferences. The system works well and combined with the rather trick Q2 program: a torque and brakeforce distribution protocol that mimics the presence of a self-locking differential provides a comforting surety of drive through the front wheels.
Equipment levels in both cars are good, naturally enough better in the Sport, though trim materials in both show evidence of cost cutting with hard-touch surfaces abundant. One area in which there has been no cost cutting is safety, with seven airbags standard, an early crash sensor to ensure fast inflation of the two-stage front bags, VDC (stability control), cornering brake control and anti-lock brakes with electronic brakeforce distribution.
Boot space in the MiTo is commensurate with the size of the car and while not expansive it is useful. Less so the rear seats which, in line with most cars in the sub-compact segment, are not somewhere any fully-grown and fully-limbed adult will want to spend much time.
Alfa Romeo Mito 2009: Sport
| Engine Type | Turbo 4, 1.4L |
|---|---|
| Fuel Type | Premium Unleaded Petrol |
| Fuel Efficiency | 6.5L/100km (combined) |
| Seating | 5 |
| Price From | $4,840 - $7,040 |
| Safety Rating |
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Range and Specs
| Vehicle | Specs | Price* |
|---|---|---|
| Base | 1.4L, Premium Unleaded Petrol, 5 SPEED MANUAL | $4,070 - $5,940 |
| Sport | 1.4L, Premium Unleaded Petrol, 6 SPEED MANUAL | $4,840 - $7,040 |