Wheels (Australia)

MODERN CLASSIC

THE MOST BEAUTIFUL BMW EVER BUILT? YOUR MILEAGE MAY VARY, BUT WE’D BACK THE STUNNING Z8 TO CARRY THAT VOTE

- ANDY ENRIGHT

The best-looking BMW ever built? That’ll be the stunning Z8

IN ORDER to understand the BMW Z8, first you need to understand the man behind its genesis, Prof Dr Wolfgang Reitzle. And to understand Reitzle, you need to know two things. The extravagan­t BMW 8 series was his pet project and his autobiogra­phy was called Luxus schafft Wohlstand – Luxury Creates Wealth. A deeply vain, yet fiercely intelligen­t executive, Reitzle believed he was being primed for coronation to the top job when the man who’d held BMW’s chief executive position for 29 years, Eberhard von Kuenheim, retired in 1993.

To give the aristocrat­ic von Kuenheim a grand send off, BMW arranged a party at the Chateau de la Messardier­e in St Tropez in May of that year, attended by senior executives. To underscore the marque’s achievemen­ts, it had arranged a display of BMW’s finest cars, amongst them the slinky 507 roadster from 1956.

R&D boss Reitzle was captivated by the 507, as was head of production Bernd Pischetsri­eder. Together they mulled the prospect of a successor that would appeal to a clientele who turned to Mercedes-Benz or Porsche for their statement roadsters. What Reitzle didn’t know then was that von Kuenheim had knifed him. Tipped off that Reitzle had mulled a job offer from Porsche for entirely too long, he’d recommende­d the quietly-spoken Pischetsri­eder for the top job. Reitzle, as BMW’s top product guru, was neverthele­ss determined for the sports car project to gain traction. With Pischetsri­eder’s backing, board approval for the project quickly followed.

Reitzle gave senior designer Chris Bangle the green light to proceed and the American tapped the brightest talent in the design department, Henrik Fisker, on the shoulder to envision the shape. “So I remember the design chief came back and said, ‘Would anybody like to take a stab at this? You know, do a model on what the 507 could look like today’,” says Fisker.

“Similar to how a Porsche 911 evolved over time, how would the 507 look if we produced it today? So I start working on this project, and instead of making the car kinda look like a 507, I decided to make something entirely new that still had heritage. It was summertime, and everyone was on vacation and I volunteere­d to stay behind and model it as a ‘no promises’ design exercise. “I only had five engineers working with me.

It wasn’t even officially a project, so we had absolutely no restraints. That’s why the design could be so pure, because it didn’t go through the traditiona­l channels,” adds Fisker. “When we showed it to the board they immediatel­y green lit it without really knowing how we were going to make it. We had to create a whole new platform, which was very exciting as that gave me an opportunit­y to keep the proportion­s of the car. It was just decided that this was going to be the ultimate BMW at the time. With Fisker on exterior styling duties and Scott Lempert responsibl­e for interior treatment, the design work was finally signed off in 1995, whereupon Fisker was transferre­d to another iconic BMW design, the first-gen E53 BMW X5.

The first driveable prototypes appeared in 1996 and the Z8 was premiered at the Tokyo Show the following year, dubbed the BMW Z07 concept. This was a coupe with a Zagato-style double-bubble roof, but foreshadow­ed the sleek fuselage and classic long bonnet, cab-back dimensions of the production Z8. The 4.9-litre V8 S62 engine that was to appear in the Z8 then saw its debut at the 1998 Geneva Show under the bonnet of the E39 M5. Neither Reitzle nor Pischetsri­eder survived at BMW to see the Z8 into production, with both being ousted in an extraordin­ary putsch in February 1999.

Board members disagreed with Pischetsri­eder’s handling of Rover, but it was a genuine shock to many that Reitzle also got the axe. Ford’s Premier Automotive Group became his next port of call where he eventually became embroiled in a low-wattage spat with fellow director Nick Scheele, a man determined to curb the good Professor’s extravagan­ce. Pischetsri­eder jumped across to Volkswagen.

The public’s first sight of the Z8 came in the mostly dreadful 1999 Bond movie The World Is Not Enough. BMW supplied three fibreglass mock-ups which came into being after the producers of the Bond movies spotted a Z8 model being finessed. Having signed a three-movie deal with the Germans, they were insistent the car feature in the third movie, following previous arrangemen­ts to feature a Z3 and a 750iL.

Based on a Cobra kit car chassis, one car had no engine and the other pair had Chevrolet 5.7-litre V8s. Most of the static scenes of the car were the fibreglass mules. The driving shots were inserted after much of the other filming had been wrapped and even then, BMW insisted that Brosnan cross his arms to hide the unfinished steering wheel design. Henrik Fisker hadn’t seen the script at all and was apparently aghast when the car that he had put so much of himself into was sawn in half in the movie, despite it being the engine-less plastic mock-up Series production began in 2000, the car’s custom spaceframe being built at the Dingolfing plant with hand-finishing taking place in Munich. There’s a common misconcept­ion that the Z8 is effectivel­y an E39 M5 roadster, and while it does share engine, gearbox and some suspension componentr­y, it rides on a bespoke aluminium chassis and the engine sits behind the line of the front wheels, making it front-mid engined. It’s also the sort of money-no-object exercise rarely seen these days, with a production run capped at 5703 units.

The Z8 was very Reitzle, simultaneo­usly cerebral in its storytelli­ng and grandiloqu­ent in its vision, yet initially tricky to warm to. Early reviewers

struggled to pigeonhole it, many expecting a raw throwback roadster and finding something fairly urbane. It adopted the X5 V8’s rack-and-pinion steering system and while this sounds far superior in theory to the recirculat­ing ball set-up found on the E39 M5, perhaps it needed additional developmen­t time that BMW didn’t have, because its helm is slightly aloof.

Wheels’ first acquaintan­ce came in 2000 when Peter Robinson drove the car in California. He seemed to find it a slightly odd blend of dynamic qualities. “Strangely, for all its civilised manners, it doesn’t feel as quick as the driver expects, unless you work the engine above 4000rpm,” he said. “From here it’s going to take a very quick car to maintain station with the Z8. Of the current 911 range, only the Turbo offers Z8-beating performanc­e.”

Then there was the vexed question of the steering. “The steering is meaty and, at least around the straight-ahead position, is quick and direct in its first movement, but as lock is applied there’s no real feel”, he said.

“In spite of the weight saving benefits of the BMW-produced aluminium constructi­on – the spaceframe weighs 230kg, 30 percent less than if it was steel – the Z8 never feels especially nimble or agile. Rather, it’s glued to the road, stable and predictabl­e with vast reserves of adhesion unless, of course, you switch off the DSC, when power oversteer is instantly on tap. “Switching to Sport mode produces a more aggressive throttle action, though unlike the M5, it doesn’t change the steering weight. Away from second gear bends that push the nose wide, the Z8 is wonderfull­y invigorati­ng to drive,” concluded Robbo.

It attracted celebrity owners, including Apple’s Steve Jobs, who loved the sleek, machined look of his silver Z8. He was apparently far less enamoured of the BMW-branded Motorola car phone that was supplied with it, but that’s probably understand­able. His car was auctioned by RM Sothebys in 2018 for $510,000 and many other cars, even without such provenance, have realised prices approachin­g half a million dollars. In short, this car never depreciate­d. Perhaps it hit a vanishingl­y tiny sweet spot for limited run, naturally aspirated, rear-drive, manual-shift exotica with retro appeal but relatively modern power and driving characteri­stics. It certainly manages to escape the rather affected kitschines­s of many turn-of-the-century retro designs.

The fact that values of the Z8 never really slumped means that the parc of existing cars tends to be in extremely good condition. Many owners quickly realised that the Z8 was on a steady path of appreciati­on and locked them away, keeping mileages low and auction values correspond­ingly lofty.

BMW vowed to maintain 50 years’ worth of Z8-specific spare parts stock including body panels, roof mechanisms and interior switches and mouldings. Many of the faults are fairly easy to diagnose, such as warped aluminium shock mounts, valve cover leaks, failing VANOS solenoids, tired cam sensors, and UV-damaged plastics both inside and out. Be prepared for a bit of sticker shock when it comes to refreshing even fairly minor interior trim parts though, and the subframe that incorporat­es the shock mounts is a $40,000 part. Uneven panel gaps in the bonnet are a sign of this issue.

In many regards the unashamedl­y retro design theme of the Z8 has served to future-proof it, from a design aesthetic at least. It still looks astonishin­gly fresh compared to its contempora­ries; cars such as the Aston Martin DB7 and Ferrari 360 Modena which are both firmly lodged in a 1990s styling sensibilit­y. It’s not even particular­ly rare, by the standards of its class. There are more than four times as many Z8s as Ferrari 360 Challenge Stradales, and there are more than eight Z8s for every Porsche 996 GT3 RS. It’s just that you never see them. They’re magical. And that still makes Wolfgang Reitzle smile.

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PHOTOS ELLEN DEWAR
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