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Models
Parts
- (-) Remove Digital Heater Control Panel & Stereo filter Digital Heater Control Panel & Stereo
- (-) Remove Stereo System filter Stereo System
- (-) Remove Washer Bottle & Motor filter Washer Bottle & Motor
- Stalk Front Left (7) Apply Stalk Front Left filter
- Stalk Front Left LHD (7) Apply Stalk Front Left LHD filter
- Stalk Front Right (7) Apply Stalk Front Right filter
- Stalk Front Right LHD (7) Apply Stalk Front Right LHD filter
- Washer Cover (7) Apply Washer Cover filter
- Washer Jets & Trim (7) Apply Washer Jets & Trim filter
We are sorry there are no matched parts listed. However, you can check stock from our breakers nationwide by directly requesting a part.
Request a partUsed Alfa Romeo Miscellaneouss
All used Alfa Romeo Miscellaneouss listed on Breakeryard.com are tested, original (OEM) manufacturer parts and come with a 14 day money back guarantee. Breakeryard.com list cheap new OES or aftermarket car parts at discounted prices and used OEM car parts up to 80% cheaper than main dealer prices for Alfa Romeo from premium breaker yards from across the UK.
Alfa Romeo trivia
- In 1933, the Italian government ‘acquired’ Alfa Romeo, and they kept their hold on it until 1986. That’s when Fiat bought the company and the government had no choice but to let it go.
- Due to tax shenanigans, the very first Alfa-branded car was named the 24HP, even though it came with a 25 horsepower 4.1-litre engine. It was quick and could do a satisfying 62mph, despite having wooden spoke wheels.
- Alfa is an acronym, standing for Anonima Lombarda Fabbrica Automobili, but few people are aware of where the word Romeo came from. It’s actually the surname of the Italian engineer Nicola Romeo, who bought the company as WWI was raging.
- In the 1960s, Alfa Romeo shifted their designs and started manufacturing a line of more luxurious models. One of the most popular was the Alfa Romeo 2600, one of which was even owned by the Pope.
- The first-ever F1 driver’s championship happened in 1950, and it was won by Giuseppe Farina thanks to the lightning-quick Alfa Romeo he was in. A history of Grand Prix racing served Alfa Romeo well for that first Formula 1 race, but they stopped being involved in the competition back in 1988 until making a return in 2019.