In 1968, Alfa's subsidiary
Autodelta developed an evolution model called T33/2. A road version, dubbed
Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale, was also introduced. At the
24 Hours of Daytona, the
Porsche 907 with 2.2L engines were dominating the overall race, but Alfa took the 2-litre class win, with
Udo Schütz and
Nino Vaccarella; after that the car was named "Daytona". The win was repeated at the
Targa Florio, where
Nanni Galli and
Ignazio Giunti also took second place overall, followed by teammates
Lucien Bianchi and Mario Casoni. Galli and Giunti then won the class at the Nürburgring 1000 km, where the
V8 version (named the
T33/2 Daytona 2.5 Litre) finished for the first time, fourth place in the 3.0 L class with Schütz and Bianchi. However, in most races, the Alfa drivers were outclassed by their Porsche rivals who used bigger engines. In 1968, the car was used mainly by
privateers, winning its class in the
1000km Monza, Targa Florio and Nürburgring races. At the end of season Alfa Romeo had finished third in the
1968 International Championship for Makes. A total of 28 cars were built during 1968, allowing the 33/2 to be homologated as a
Group 4 Sports Car for 1969. The V8 was also successful in Australian and International open wheel racing. Australian team
Alec Mildren Racing, run by Australia's then official Alfa Romeo importer
Alec Mildren who used his connections within the Autodelta to obtain the engines, ran the
V8 in both his
Brabham BT23E and the team's own
Mildren Mono. Driver
Kevin Bartlett won both the
1968 (Brabham) and
1969 (Mono)
Australian Drivers' Championships using the 2.5L
Tipo 33 V8 (in 1969 the Alfa V8 actually alternated
CAMS Gold Star meetings with an Australian designed and built 2.0L
4 cylinder Waggott engine. The Alfa was used on the power circuits while the smaller Waggott was used on tighter tracks). Bartlett and
Formula One driver
Frank Gardner also drove the Alfa V8s in the
1968 and
1969 Tasman Series. Bartlett used the Mildren Mono-Alfa Romeo to win the
1969 Macau Grand Prix run for
Formula Libre cars. It was the first Italian engine to win at
Macau and as of the
2024 race was the first of three wins for Alfa Romeo engines, the others being in
1988 and 2024. ==Alfa Romeo T33/3==