| Vintage
BMW 507
It was a stunning triumph. Despite
the fact that almost every tangible part of BMW was
destroyed or confiscated during World War II, the tenacious
manufacturer was up and running again by the end of
the 1940s. And just 11 years after the war, it was producing
one of the most beautiful cars ever.
As one of the larger German industrial
concerns in the 1930s and '40s, BMW was invaluable to
its home country's military efforts during the war.
But this, of course, also made it a prime target for
allied air raids. As a result, there wasn't much left
of BMW's manufacturing capability after the fighting
was over. The firm had literally been bombed into nonexistence
-- at least physically.
Making matters worse, of the little
that had survived the relentless attacks, much of it
ended up in the new Soviet satellite nation East Germany,
under a firm called Eisenach.
Despite
such monumental setbacks, BMW was nonetheless
determined to resume automobile production. After putting
out a trickle of motorcycles and small cars in the late
1940s, the firm for 1952 introduced a hefty sedan called
the 501. For 1954, BMW introduced the 502, basically
the 501 powered by an all-new 100-hp 2.6-liter V8.
Around that same time, famed American
sports car importer Max Hoffman was encouraging the
German firm to come up with a sports car for the well-to-do
U.S. market. And why not? Hoffman had proven that Americans
were hungry for exotic, foreign sporting machinery,
and before the war BMW had built a fine reputation for
high-performance cars.
Encouraged by Hoffman, BMW commissioned
American industrial designer Count Albrecht Goertz to
design a pair of sporty models, resulting in a 2+2 grand
tourer called the 503 and a sleek two-seat sports car,
the 507.
The 503 was certainly stylish and
pleasing to look at. But it was nowhere near as striking
as the enduring, masterful design of the 507, which
appeared more like the charismatic machines of storied
italian marques than the work of a struggling German
manufacturer.
Under its skin, however, BMW's
new sports car wasn't quite as sophisticated and potent
as its exterior implied -- not surprising given the
extremely limited development resources of its parent
company. Many of the 507's mechanical components were
off-the-shelf items from the 502 sedan -- steering,
suspension, and V8 engine (albeit tuned for 50 more
hp).
Reportedly, the 507 was no slouch.
But its performance was nonetheless hampered by all-drum
brakes and a somewhat high 2935-lb curb weight.
In the end, however, it wasn't
any technical or performance deficiencies that doomed
the 507. After all, many of the best sports cars of
that era hadn't yet adopted disc brakes, and the 507's
curb weight was about the same as that of a Jaguar XK140
or Mercedes-Benz 300SL. What's more, the 507 had a then-impressive
top speed of more than 120 mph.
Rather, what hurt the 507's sales
the most in its intended market was simply its price.
Selling for just under $9000, BMW's sleek two-seater
cost enough to buy an Aston Martin DB Mk III and
a Ford sedan.
BMW kept at it from 1956-59, but
the 507 nonetheless found only 253 buyers.
That however, certainly doesn't
make this fine car a failure. To the contrary -- in
an era when many people around the world still associated
Germany with WWII and the ruin that resulted from it,
the 507 announced boldly that Teutonic industry was
becoming increasingly vibrant, and was looking confidently
to the future.
In doing that, the 507 played a
key role in reestablishing BMW's reputation for well-engineered,
exceptionally refined performance cars, an identity
it maintains to this day.
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