I have always been fascinated by Alfa Romeo 2600 Berlinas.
This is probably because they seem to exist almost exclusively in a hinterland of obscure European saloons that most of us have only seen in books or glimpsed in an old black and white film. In fact, if you spot a 2600 in a ’70s Italian crime flick, you can be nearly certain it’s about to be trashed.
Age and sheer rarity lend enchantment to the 2600 saloon, of which only two are thought to exist in the UK.
It was not a bad car as such, but one that suffered more in comparison to younger, smaller models in its own family, rather than its rivals: the increasing excellence of the four-cylinder Alfas during the 1960s made a nonsense of the 2600’s inflated price-tag and sense of self-importance.
Pre-war Alfa Romeo built its reputation on six- and eight-cylinder cars, and the notion of a six-cylinder version of its first all-new, post-war saloon, the 1900, never quite went away either.