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| BMW 328 Article Sorry, no pictures, but enjoy... BMW 328 By Pieter Van Dien Most would agree BMW has been successful in establishing a brand image for producing performance automobiles. Currently, BMW’s model lineup provides a performance alternative for almost every type of automobile possible, from two seat roadsters, to stretch sedans to small SUVs. How did BMW successfully build its performance reputation? Many would point to the iconic 2002, the two door coupe of the early seventies that could out drive most sports cars of the day. Yet, the true beginnings lie further back in the company’s history. While never a big seller like the 2002, the BMW 328 built between 1936 and 1940 was BMW’s first true sporting automobile and it led the company to become what it is today. The BMW 328 began production in 1936, evolving from the company’s sedans of the early 1930s. While long a producer of well-regarded airplane engines and motorcycles, BMW’s first forays into manufacturing automobiles began in 1929. One of its early cars was the 303 sedan, the first BMW to utilize an inline six-cylinder engine and the now trademark twin-kidney front grill. With a small but smooth 1.2 liter engine, the 303 sold well to Germany’s middle class. The success of the 303 led to the development of larger and more powerful engines in the 309, 315 and later 319 which featured greater speed and performance. Profits from this early line of cars allowed for the development of a new sports roadster, the 315/1, which debuted in 1934 and would become the foundation for the 328. In creating the 328, BMW sought to combine a light and stiff chassis with a more powerful engine. The weight and stiffness were addressed by a tubular steel chassis adopted from the 319. The chassis utilized light gauge tubing but still provided high resistance to torsional twisting. A relatively supple suspension was employed using a controversial (for the time) independent front suspension under the belief that a softer setup would allow the tires to remain in contact with the road, a mantra still touted by BMW today. Aerodynamics were also addressed with integrated head lamps, attractive fenders and a fold-down windscreen resulting in a coefficient of drag of .54 for the street roadster (eventually lowered to .25Cd for the most highly evolved racing coupes). Further completing the sporting package were knock-off hubs for quick tire changes. The twin-kidney grill and blue and white roundel carried on from the 303 as they still do today. To power the 328, BMW continued the development of their straight six engine. While budget constraints prevented creating a new twincam motor, BMW designers invented a unique solution to allow for the preferred two-valves per cylinder design. A single camshaft was employed to operate the intake valves with the addition of transverse pushrods and rockers to operate the exhaust valves. This gave the benefits of twovalve hemispherical combustion chambers but saved the expense and extra weight of a second camshaft. Engine capacity was 1.9 liters with a compression ratio of 7.5:1. Three downdraft Solex carburetors on top provided the air and fuel. Turning to 4,500 rpm (6,000 rpm in final racing trim), the engine produced 80 horsepower. With a weight of just under 1800 pounds, the road car was capable of almost 100 mph in street trim through a four speed transmission. The 328 debuted in June of 1936 at the Eifel Races of the Nurburgring. BMW’s efforts in developing the new car paid off - it won the race. It was a stunning victory for a company that had been building cars for less than ten years. Subsequent victories were forthcoming by BMW supported teams as well as privateers. Of note, in 1937 a 328 was taken to Brooklands and ran over 100 miles in one hour. The following year brought one-two-three finishes in class at the Mille Miglia as well as wins at LeMans and the Spa 24 Hours. More specialized racing versions of the original car followed, including more highly developed and streamlined coupes, one of which won LeMans in 1939, followed by two 328 roadsters placing second and third in class. At the end of production, a 135 hp 328 coupe won the shortened 1940 Mille Miglia with over a fifteen minute lead, followed by three 328 roadsters finishing in third, fourth and fifth places. Jeremy Walton in Unbeatable BMW lists a total of 131 victories and 45 gold medals for the 328 between 1936 and 1940 and stated, “to put it bluntly, if you didn’t have a BMW [328] in the late 1930s and you wanted 2-liter competition success, you were wasting your time”.1 Pressed into war service for the German government, BMW ceased its racing activities in 1940, officially disbanding its racing department in 1941. BMW returned to the racing scene after the war with its 328 coupe taking the win at the first post-war race in Germany, the Ruhestein Hillclimb in 1946. Six years later, a 328 won the 1952 Alpine Rally, a two thousand mile event. Even after that, the 328 continued to be competitive in club and regional racing for some years. Over its entire production run from 1936 to 1940, four hundred and sixty four (464) 328s were constructed according to BMW. Of these, a fair number were imported to Britain and sold by H.J. Addington as Frazer Nash-BMWs. Mr. Addington, a competitive racer himself, was responsible for some early race victories by 328s in England, boosting the car’s image. Frazer Nash imported mostly complete cars but also received bare chassis for their own unique body work. After the war, a form of the 328 engine saw duty in the AC Ace, the forerunner to the AC Cobra. The 328 in the Collier Auto Museum bears serial number 85246, indicating it is the 246th car built out of the total run of 464. Looking at the car you are immediately taken by the aerodynamic efficiency of the vehicle and its graceful lines. Compared to its contemporaries, the 328 was certainly at the forefront of functional design. Rightly or wrongly, many credit the 328 as being the inspiration for the later Jaguar XK120 and the long line of curvaceous sports cars that followed. The cockpit is notably tight, sporting two independent seats, a large wheel and minimal foot well space. The spare wheel sits in a recess 1 Jeremy Walton, Unbeatable BMW (Cambridge, MA: Robert Bentley, 1998), 37. on the outside of the trunk lid, although this was not universal across the model line. In all, the 328 looks like it was made to be driven at high speed. Although I have never piloted a 328, I would expect it to have a bouncy, raucous ride, even if refined and “supple” for its day. That is apparently not the case. As observed by Klaus Schnitzer in a 1999 piece for Roundel Magazine, the monthly magazine of the BMW Car Club of America, “my expectations were not very high, but it [the 328] turned out to be an incredible ride: quick, sprightly, and feisty – the ultimate incarnation of motoring”.2 Jeremy Walton found the 328 to have well matched steering and brakes providing for easily controllable drifts such that “you think you are the finest driver on earth”.3 The sentiments are perhaps best summed up by Mick Walsh of Classic & Sportscar who in 1994 wrote “rarely have I experienced such a sweet, willing and easy car to drive”.4 Those impressions are consistent with the automotive press’s comments of the late 1930s, which found the 328 to deliver a smooth ride along with excellent grip, two traits that are often at odds with each other. Whether BMW would have gone on to become the company it is today without the 328 is impossible to say. Certainly the 328 launched BMW into sporting automobiles and provided an early and important taste for auto racing victory. The early domination of the 328 allowed the car to continue to be competitive even in the post-war years, giving BMW credibility in its most perilous times. In 1994 (1996 for the US), the 328 badge returned to BMW’s lineup, this time as part of a full range of 3-series cars offered in coupe, sedan, wagon and convertible forms. The name was not an exploitation of nostalgia, but a straightforward designation indicating a 3-series car with a 2.8 liter engine. Like its ancestor, the new 328 sported twin-kidney grills and a straight-six engine. It was also a darling of the automotive press which delighted in the car’s communicative steering, supple handling and power. Perhaps, then, despite all of the changes over the years, both the new and old 328 are not so different, which serves as great testament to BMW’s continued and consistent development of performance automobiles from the beginning to today. 2 David Haughter, “Living Legend”, Roundel Magazine, August, 1999: 35. Klaus Schnitzer contributing. 3 Walton, Unbeatable BMW, 28. 4 Walton, Unbeatable BMW, 28, quoting Mick Walsh, Classic & Sportscar, October, 1994. |
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| Re: BMW 328 Article Thanks drronh. Nice article, such a shame most people around here are not interested in classic cars. |
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