RE: Alpina past masters | Six of the Best
RE: Alpina past masters | Six of the Best
Today

Alpina past masters | Six of the Best

BMW has ordained a new era for Alpina - it has some mighty boots to fill...


Alpina Z8 Roadster, 2003, 2k, £275,000

So we finally have an idea of where BMW will take Alpina, now the brand is an in-house commodity. The good news is that the strategy does not want for ambition, with the space between high-end BMWs and Rolls-Royce targeted. Nevertheless, it’s a different approach to the one we’re accustomed to, meaning that modified versions of stock BMW models will be in short supply. That’s a shame, because Alpina traditionally adopted a different (often more interesting) approach to going fast. Take the softer-edged, auto-box’d Z8, a very rare sight in the UK but popular in the States, which is where this one heralds from. The size of the asking price, at least, suggests that BMW’s new masterplan has legs. 

See the original advert

Alpina B6 3.5 S, 1990, 84k, £185,000

If the Z8 is too rich for your blood, you could save yourself £100k and buy this, the fabled B6 3.5 S, a car that makes the E30 M3 seem as common as muck. Beyond its rarity, the S variant is significant for two reasons: one, it was actually based on the M3, a quirk that Alpina wouldn’t repeat for decades, and two, it had more power than the M car courtesy of its transplanted (and heavily modified) M30 straight-six. The result, as you might expect, has passed into legend among some E30 aficionados, and ranks as one of Alpina’s most sought-after models. This one has been in the UK since 1991 and is fully restored. Tingle. 

See the original advert

Alpina XD3, 2021, 23k, £55,000

Of course, you needn’t have unicorn money in the bank to enjoy the best of Alpina, nor sacrifice family-conveying practicality. Arguably the firm’s most admirable knack was making relatively humdrum BMWs seem all the more pleasant to drive. The XD3 is a terrific example; its 516lb ft of gravelly torque and breathed-on chassis making the equivalent X3 M seem like a try-hard headache in comparison. It was among the first properly fast diesel SUVs when it launched, too, and easily ranks among the best - which is why you’ll pay a premium to own a later version like this one. But it’s exactly the sort of thing which is unlikely to be repeated in Alpina’s new era. 

See the original advert

Alpina B5 S, 2008, 128k, PH Auction

Ditto something like the B5 S. Not because it’s beyond BMW to offer an alternative version of the 5 Series, but because it’s unlikely to go to such mind-bending lengths to differentiate the car from the flagship M5. Not only was the B5 based on the 545i, it also featured the H1 iteration of the 4.4-litre V8, an engine that Alpina insisted on supercharging to access the sort of performance it was after. By the time it came to the uprated S, the B5 was developing 530hp. This example, said to be one of only 12 that came to the UK, goes up for auction on Wednesday - expect the bidding to be brisk. 

See the original advert

Alpina D4, 2018, 63k, £34,850

Alternatively, if you’d prefer the sort of Alpina that no average passerby would look at twice, there’s always something like this D4. PH recalls being told by someone with intimate knowledge of the bottom line that Alpina’s three-door models were heavily outsold by those with four or more - but that fact simply makes the D4 a nice change of pace. Moreover, it fits the Q-car-ish cruise mould almost perfectly, underwritten not only by the 350hp you get from the ubiquitous (and superb) 3.0-litre straight six, but also the perfect compromise between comfort and control evoked by the overhauled chassis. And all for less than £35k. 

See the original advert

Alpina B12 5.0, 1991, 71k, £109,995

Finally, and partly as a nod to the kind of opulent, uber-rare standalone models that its new owner evidently has its eye on, we have the B12 - Alpina’s version of the E31 8 Series, a car originally intended to propel BMW into places unknown. That didn’t quite work out, though it remains a fascinating historical footnote thanks in part to its M70 V12. Predictably, the tuner proved itself more than up to the challenge of modifying even this mighty unit, extracting an additional 50hp. True, it eventually went one better with the bored-out 5.7-litre S70, but good luck finding one of those. Even this one is north of £100k, though expect that to be well south of next-generation Alpina’s starting point...

See the original advert

Author
Discussion

Alistair BCC

Original Poster:

16 posts

51 months

There is an orange E23 7 series Alpina in a hedge on a farm in South Wales. Shame

Billy_Whizzzz

2,576 posts

168 months

The M3 is perfection. I had an normal s54 one but lusted after a B6.

Also would love a twin turbo E12 B7S like this:

Edited by Billy_Whizzzz on Saturday 23 May 05:46

Its Just Adz

18,182 posts

234 months

The 8 series is such a good looking car. That would be my choice this week.
Although I bet getting parts for it would be a struggle.

barrycoupe

71 posts

110 months

I had a B10, which was great fun, but the other Alpina I had was really quite rare. Only 4 delivered in the UK via Sytner’s, out of a total of 50 built, and that was a Z1 Alpina fitted with a 2.7 litre engine. Finished in Top Red if my memory serves me right. I remember going to pick it up one Saturday morning. I’d told the salesman I would be arriving in Nottingham early by train at 9.00am, because I had to get back to Cambridge for an important appointment. I arrived on the dot, and told Frank Sytner had asked all salesmen in for an unexpected meeting lasting until 10.00am. I made it clear I must take delivery of the Z1 now, as arranged. No. I was told to wait! I then went up to where the meeting was taking place, politely knocked on the door, then walked in and explained why I was there. Frank Sytner told me to get out, and wait until he had finished! Ummmm, to which I respectfully informed a rude and arrogant Sytner, he needs to understand who his customers are! After being treated like a naughty schoolboy, I eventually managed to get the salesman to release my Z1! Great car……but I would never ever by another car from Frank Sytner.

SR

595 posts

230 months

As a serial buyer of E30’s the B6 would be my choice, lovely!

BricktopST205

2,322 posts

159 months

For me as an everyday type car. It would have to be the B10 3.3 touring with a manual. Being 6 cylinder you got the rack n pinion steering and with the tuned engine. Plenty of power.

Jte3397

812 posts

121 months

I was looking forward to this six of the best but it's a slightly underwhelming selection. I suppose they have to be in the ads. E30 or E31 for me from those or the B3 GT in the ads but inexplicably left out here in favour of diesels. I'd love an E36 one day, especially a B8, or E38 B12 6.0.

Robertb

3,611 posts

263 months

Jte3397 said:
I was looking forward to this six of the best but it's a slightly underwhelming selection. I suppose they have to be in the ads. E30 or E31 for me from those or the B3 GT in the ads but inexplicably left out here in favour of diesels. I'd love an E36 one day, especially a B8, or E38 B12 6.0.
They featured the GT as a ‘spotted’ not too long ago. Wasn’t universally liked surprisingly.

E30M3SE

8,489 posts

221 months

B6 3.5s on collecting cars at moment

https://collectingcars.com/for-sale/1989-bmw-alpin...

Tiglon

627 posts

67 months

I want them all. Can't choose, sorry.

birdcage

2,913 posts

230 months



I've just come back from a two hour morning drive in this, since I got it the 911 has stayed in the garage. The turbo's are very addictive!

LotusOmega375D

9,134 posts

178 months

Wasn’t the Alpina Z8 worse than the standard BMW version? Softer, auto only and less powerful, so ultimately less of a driver’s car.

stickylabels

923 posts

117 months

I'll just leave this here;



Mine for the last 5 years which is unusual for me, V8 soundtrack so 1/2 hot rod, 1/2 limo, more chuckable than you'd ever believe and it'll waft in a way that your missus will appreciate too!thumbup

Tiglon

627 posts

67 months

LotusOmega375D said:
Wasn t the Alpina Z8 worse than the standard BMW version? Softer, auto only and less powerful, so ultimately less of a driver s car.
As I understand it, the Z8 was a sort-of drivers' car that was too soft. The Alpina was a cruising/wafting car that did the job perfectly.

Mafioso

2,409 posts

239 months

The XD3 link sends you to an Alfa advert!?

Wills2

28,601 posts

200 months


The Z8 is such a cool looking car and despite what was probably described as a bit of a pastiche design at launch, now looks so fresh.


Black S2K

1,838 posts

274 months

Billy_Whizzzz said:
The M3 is perfection. I had an normal s54 one but lusted after a B6.

Also would love a twin turbo E12 B7S like this:

Edited by Billy_Whizzzz on Saturday 23 May 05:46
That B6bis rather an interesting proposition indeed.

That dizzy makes accessing a Mini's look easy - the engine bay was clearly designed for 91mm bore spacing and not 100mm! Best not to crash it, really...

Black S2K

1,838 posts

274 months

stickylabels said:
I'll just leave this here;



Mine for the last 5 years which is unusual for me, V8 soundtrack so 1/2 hot rod, 1/2 limo, more chuckable than you'd ever believe and it'll waft in a way that your missus will appreciate too!thumbup
You can park it here, if you like...

Right E-Nr, right colour etc.

Black S2K

1,838 posts

274 months

Tiglon said:
LotusOmega375D said:
Wasn t the Alpina Z8 worse than the standard BMW version? Softer, auto only and less powerful, so ultimately less of a driver s car.
As I understand it, the Z8 was a sort-of drivers' car that was too soft. The Alpina was a cruising/wafting car that did the job perfectly.
That was my understanding, too. As usual, Alpina took a half-baked good idea and perfected it.

biggbn

31,040 posts

245 months

LotusOmega375D said:
Wasn t the Alpina Z8 worse than the standard BMW version? Softer, auto only and less powerful, so ultimately less of a driver s car.
It was all those things, but I remember tests saying it was a nicer car to drive