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mikeyb
11-18-2005, 11:03 AM
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Cataloging the Past: BMW Mobile Tradition builds an “original” 2002tii from its own parts book



MATT DAVIS (mdavis@crain.com)
Posted Date: 11/18/05
BMW has worked for more than a generation developing its “Ultimate Driving Machine” reputation. In 1959 its three-box body cars were the ones to have, and today the potent V10 M5 sedan carries on the tradition.

Back then, though, the most sought after by enthusiasts was the 2002tii, whose designation means “Touring International (with) Injection.” Of some 39,000 2002tiis sold between 1971 and 1975, 7500 came to the States between August 1971 and December 1974.

http://www.autoweek.com/files/weekart/2005/1121/buildbimmer_shop.jpg As you read this, BMW Mobile Tradition (the vintage caretakers of the marque) in Munich is holding a kind of living exhibit in its temporary museum facility. A huge new museum nearby should be completed by mid-2006. Here you can watch two craftsmen build a “1973 tii” from the tires up, using the Mobile Tradition’s catalogue of original parts.

Part publicity stunt, part marque preservation, the effort demonstrates that you can order practically any original part for your project Bimmer—nearly 90 percent of all 2002 parts are available. Not only is this a cool show, the completed car will be auctioned for charity in the spring.

http://www.autoweek.com/files/weekart/2005/1121/buildbimmer_engine.jpg On this project car, mechanics used an available 1974 body-in-white, and opted to modify it. They cut the ’74 rear trunk panel (with rectangular taillight sections) and replaced it with the classic, smaller, circular ’73 taillights. With perfect welds beneath new-original Colorado orange paint, who could have noticed the switch-out had chief mechanic Arthur Heimann not pointed it out?

This tii comes with an optional five-speed ZF manual gearbox and standard Kugelfischer mechanical fuel injection system. These account for added performance from the longitudinal 2.0-liter four-cylinder. This setup puts horsepower at 140 at 5800 rpm, torque at 130 lb-ft at 4500 rpm and a 0-to-60-mph time of 9.3 seconds.

http://www.autoweek.com/files/weekart/2005/1121/buildbimmer_pencil.jpg

On one hand, yes, this means you could do all this work at home yourself. On the other, you might choose to have a new catalog car built, but “…it’s not terribly practical in and of itself,” Heimann said. “I’d estimate [cost at] roughly e 80,000 ($97,000).”


source:http://www.autoweek.com/news.cms?newsId=103612

Roywhitep5
11-19-2005, 01:51 AM
i like the datsun 510 better!

BondoBob
11-19-2005, 02:28 AM
The BMW 2002Tii was a great car and is one of my favorite all-time cars (the BRE Datsun 510 is another). I wish BMW would build a bunch of these or restore them like Nissan did with the 240Z a few years back. BMW has gone way too far away from a driver's car with the new (and pig-ugly) designs, IMHO.