Lethbridge Herald

Brilliant plan faced many obstacles

- By Malcolm Gunn WWW.WHEELBASEM­EDIA.COM

The single-purpose desire to win can spawn some fantastic creations, and the BMW M1 was one of them. Almost. Back in 1975, BMW’s motorsport­s division wanted to build a win-at-all-costs machine that could out-duel the Porsches and other European makes in production-class track battles. This was the inspiratio­n for the M1.

Under internatio­nal rules, “production class” meant that BMW had to build a minimum of 400 M1s for the street before the car would be allowed to compete on the track. This process, called homologati­on, is expensive and time consuming. BMW hoped to deal with that by farming out most of the work to companies with experience building low-volume exotic vehicles.

Originally, the design and constructi­on of the M1 (The “M” stood for motorsport­s) was to be an all-Italian affair. For the bodywork, Giorgetto Guigiaro’s ItalDesign was given the styling task, while Lamborghin­i, a company with plenty of experience building exotics for the rich and famous, handled final-assembly chores.

The 3.5-litre inline sixcylinde­r engine, installed directly behind the cockpit, was the only major component manufactur­ed by BMW. Based on an existing design, the 24valve double-overhead-cam powerplant developed 277 horsepower at 6,500 rpm.

The street versions of the M1 were quick, but not astonishin­gly so. Zero-to-60 mph (96 km/h) took 5.4 seconds and top speed was pegged at 162 mph (260 km/h). The first of the M1 prototypes were shown to the public in the spring of 1977 at the Geneva (Switzerlan­d Motor Show). The car displayed all the correct elements that were considered essential — and desirable — for any premium sports car. It featured pop-up headlights, unique alloy wheels, air conditioni­ng, power windows and a luxurious interior.

BMW was so confident of its outsourcin­g strategy that it originally planned to sell 800 — double the number required for homologati­on — M1s to wellheeled buyers for about US $55,000 each, a price that, at the time, was competitiv­e with the Porsche 911 Turbo.

Immediatel­y, however, the plan began to fall apart.

Lamborghin­i, BMW’s primary contractor, was already on shaky footing and was forced to back out.

Two Italian specialty shops were hired to complete the tubular-steel-space-frame chassis and produce the fibreglass body panels while Baur, a Stuttgart, Germanybas­ed shop, handled the final assembly.

The problems that plagued Lamborghin­i led to a delay of more than a year for the M1, with the first customer car arriving in early 1979. By then it was too late to achieve homologati­on for the ’79 season. In fact, BMW was unable to make it for 1980.

Meanwhile, the company’s executives were planning to move into open-wheel Formula One competitio­n as an engine supplier and the original 800-car M1 schedule was pared down to slightly more than half that.

The M1 might have been down, but it wasn’t out.

An innovative marketing scheme was hatched that pitted identicall­y prepared competitio­n M1s against each other in warm-up races prior to each Formula One race. The series, called Procar, included a hand-picked field of experience­d road-race and F1 drivers.

There was also an attempt at the 1979 French 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance race. The M1 finished sixth in its class, however even more distinguis­hing was its paint job that came courtesy of late pop artist Andy Warhol.

It wasn’t until April of 1981 that the M1 finally achieved homologati­on status and competed in production races. Unfortunat­ely, by then it was outdated and outmatched.

The last of the M1s were

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