Sometimes a car spotter gets lucky… By sheer coincidence, I spot this classic BMW in a group of parked cars. Design by Karmann, this beauty is old school BMW brilliance! This four-seater coupé really looks the part, the detailing is superb and one would not call it a slow and dodgy car for its time either…thanks to the ‘New Six’ straight six engine. The BMW 3.0 CSL is a very collectable car, but I appreciate this version as well!
and I am especially pleased with this picture:
A car like this has a large fan base, naturally. A very nice website is this E9 coupé site, and if you can ignore the lay-out, enjoy this well-written review by a fan.
5 responses so far ↓
1 Jan // Jan 10, 2008 at 11:26
it’s a classic you can drive every day, I suppose.
2 Alpina_Power // Jan 10, 2008 at 16:13
It is in great condition lovely car. Good racing car back then too
I love the logo in the window sill, shame that they don’t do it more often (like on the Quattroporte from Maserati)
3 caliente // Jan 16, 2008 at 0:03
Poetry in motion (although it is parked LOL), what a lovely car. Most Top Gear generation petrolheads don’t appreciate cars like this enough, all are adoring Veyrons and the like because they saw nice BBC footage while a supercar is tested against a floating ducky or a bread car, but cars like these make my heart go fuzzy!!1 It is car history in the making very nice that you pay attention to it and make these nice pictures for all of us to enjoy!!! Thank you
Caliente
4 Reggae dreads // Jan 20, 2008 at 0:07
if it was legal,mI would f(*&ck a car like this. UK rules prevent us from having intimate relations with stuff like BMW’s. unfortunately. Hot mooma anyway!!!!!!
5 Jan // Jan 21, 2008 at 12:37
Nothing to do with TG Caliente. They do what it says on the tin. Test new cars and preferably fast cars.
I agree, this is more of a car then most plastic things of nowadays. But why give out on a younger generation who still has to find out these cars? I think if I was to talk about cars from the 30′s or 50′s you wouldn’t understand these. All a matter of perception. and age.
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