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BMW M1

The BMW M1 (model code E26) is a mid-engined sports car produced by German automotive manufacturer BMW from 1978 until 1981.

BMW M1
Overview
ManufacturerKarosserie Baur, BMW M GmbH
Production1978–1981
453 produced
Assembly
  • Turin, Italy (initial assembly)
  • Munich, Germany (final assembly and inspection)
DesignerGiorgetto Giugiaro at Italdesign
Body and chassis
ClassSports car (S)
Body style2-door coupé
LayoutMid-engine, rear-wheel-drive
Powertrain
Engine3.5 L M88/1 I6[1]
Transmission5-speed manual
Dimensions
Wheelbase2,600 mm (102.4 in)[1]
Length4,361 mm (171.7 in)[1]
Width1,824 mm (71.8 in)[1]
Height1,140 mm (44.9 in)[1]
Curb weight1,300 kg (2,866 lb)
Chronology
PredecessorBMW Turbo
SuccessorBMW Nazca C2 (spiritual)

In the late 1970s, Italian automobile manufacturer Lamborghini entered into an agreement with BMW to build a production racing car in sufficient quantity for homologation, but conflicts arose that prompted BMW to produce the car themselves.[2][3] The resulting car was sold to the public, from 1978 until 1981, as the BMW M1.

It is the first mid-engine BMW automobile to be mass-produced; the second is the i8 plug-in hybrid sports car.

Overview

Development history

 
The M1 has a tubular steel space-frame chassis

The motorsport division of BMW headed by Jochen Neerpasch had been wanting to compete in motorsports using a car developed for competition racing in order to compete with arch rival Porsche in Group-5 racing, thus the development of the M1 was initiated. Neerpasch, who was head of the development program stressed that the car was to be strictly mid-engine in order to outclass its competitors. As BMW wasn't able to build 400 road going examples of the car in the required time period as stipulated by the rules, the company partnered with Lamborghini to work out the details of the car's chassis, assemble prototypes and manufacture the vehicles. The tubular steel space frame chassis was the work of Gianpaolo Dallara but soon Lamborghini's financial position and the possibility of the car's production by the Italian manufacturer became bleak and BMW reassumed control over the project in April 1978, after seven prototypes were built. The delay in production and the changes in Group 5 rules forced the company to compete in Group 4 racing with the car.[4]

The M1 coupé was hand-built between 1978 and 1981 under the motorsport division of BMW as a homologation special for sports car racing. The fibre glass body was designed by Giorgetto Giugiaro, taking inspiration from the 1972 BMW Turbo concept car. Since the engineering of the car was still incomplete, a group of former Lamborghini engineers had founded a company named Italengineering which offered to complete the car's design. Less than 10 miles away from the Lamborghini shop, the engineering for the M1 was finished.[5]

Engine and transmission

 
The 3.5-litre M88/1 inline-6 engine

The BMW M1 is the first car to be solely developed by BMW M and employs a 3,453 cc (3.5 L) M88/1 petrol six-cylinder engine with Kugelfischer-Bosch mechanical fuel injection and Magneti-Marelli ignition system. The engine was developed by Paul Rosche, who was also responsible for the S14 inline-4 engine and the S70/2 V12 engine. A version of this engine was later used in the South African version of the 745i, of which 209 examples were built between 1984 and 1986, as well as the E24 M6/M635CSi and E28 M5. The engine has six separate throttle bodies, twin-cams, 4 valves per cylinder, and generates a power output of 277 PS (204 kW; 273 hp) at 6,500 rpm and 330 N⋅m (243 lbf⋅ft) of torque at 5,000 rpm in the road version, giving the car a top speed of 265 km/h (165 mph). The engine was mated to a 5-speed manual transmission made by ZF Friedrichshafen equipped with a 40% locking limited slip differential.

Steering, suspension and brakes

The M1 has an unassisted rack and pinion steering, double-wishbone suspension system with adjustable coil springs and Bilstein gas filled dampers. The road car had softer suspension bushings to have better ride quality and tractability.[4]

The ventilated brakes of the car measured 300 mm (11.8 in) at the front and 297 mm (11.7 in) at the rear and were constructed from steel. The M1 used special Campagnolo alloy wheels measuring 7x16-inches at the front and 8x16-inches at the rear fitted with Pirelli P7 tyres (having sizes of 205/55 VR15 at the front and 225/50 VR15s at the rear).

Interior

 
Interior

The M1 has a half-leather and half-cloth interior. Its motorsport roots meant that the car had a basic interior layout with many parts sourced from other BMW models. The interior had amenities such as air conditioning, power windows and a stereo but had unadjustable seats and only had a left-hand-drive configuration.

Production

The fibre glass body of the M1 was manufactured by Italian firm Italiana Resina which was located in Modena, Italy. The chassis was manufactured by another Modenese firm, Marchesi. The body of the car was completed by Italdesign at their manufacturing facility located in Turin along with the interior.

The partly finished cars were then delivered to German specialist manufacturer Baur where final assembly took place by hand.[6] The hand-built M88/1 engines were supplied by BMW from Munich to be installed in the cars. The completed cars were shipped to BMW Motorsport in Munich for final inspection and delivery. Only 453 production cars were built, making it one of BMW's rarest models. Out of the 453, 399 were road going units while 53 were made for motorsport.[4][5]

Accolades

 
Rear 3/4 view

The M1 had various successes in motorsports. In 2004, Sports Car International placed the car at number ten on their list of top sports cars of the 1970s.

Motorsport

 
A BMW M1 Procar being driven by Nelson Piquet in 1980 at the Nürburgring

In 1979 the head of BMW Motorsport, Jochen Neerpasch, devised a one-make championship using racing modified M1s. The series was created to aid BMW in building enough cars to enter the group 4 classification in the World Championship for Makes. The new series, known as the "Procar BMW M1 Championship", served as a support series for Formula One, and included many Formula One drivers in identical cars.

The series ran for two years, with Niki Lauda winning the 1979 season, and Nelson Piquet the 1980 season. After BMW met the standards for group 4, the Procars were used by various teams in the world championship as well as other national series.

The M1 was also campaigned at the 24 Hours of Le Mans from 1981 to 1986 where it proved competitive.[4] The car was classified as a Group B car for Le Mans purposes, as Group B was also planned for GT class for road races, but were instead eclipsed by Group C prototypes.

A M1 Pro Car was also converted to Group B rally spec by BMW France for the 1982 season. The car was campaigned for the 1983 season as well before the car was entered solely by the Motul privateer racing team for the 1984 season. The 1984 season proved to be the most successful for the M1 as former ERC champion Bernard Béguin won back-to-back at Rallye de La Baule and Rallye de Lorraine that season, and even claimed an outright ERC podium at Rally d’Antibes four months later. The car was not campaigned further after 1984.[7]

Commemorative cars and spiritual successor

M1 Homage concept

 
 
BMW M1 Homage concept

In April 2008, BMW unveiled the M1 Homage concept, to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the M1. The concept vehicle uses a mid-engine layout that borrows styling cues from both the original M1 and the BMW Turbo show car.[8]

The M1 Homage concept was first shown to the public at the Concorso d'Eleganza Villa d'Este of 2008. The design was penned by BMW's in-house design team, inspired by both the original M1 and the BMW Turbo concept designed by Paul Bracq.[9] The BMW Turbo had many technical and advanced innovations from BMW that were part of the inspiration of the M1 Homage concept.[10] The front of the car differs the most from the other parts of the car. The front sports double head lights which are not the same as pop-up type that are on the original M1, but the usual trademark of the kidney grilles is present. The M1 Homage also incorporates the double badge on the back of the car like the original M1. There are no photos of the interior of the car or of the car in action, nor have the specifications of the car been released as the car was meant only to be a design exercise.

Vision EfficientDynamics concept and the BMW i8

 
Vision EfficientDynamics concept at the 2010 Paris Motor Show
 
BMW i8 frontal view (production model)

After the M1, BMW designed some mid engined concept cars but none of them inspired a production car until 2013, when the Vision EfficientDynamics concept led to the production of the i8. The BMW i8 is based on the Vision EfficientDynamics concept, which is a range-extender electric car with a three-cylinder turbocharged petrol engine.[11] The production car was designed by Benoit Jacob.[12] Series production of customer vehicles began in April 2014.[13] It is also the first mass-produced mid-engine BMW automobile since the M1.[14]

Vision M Next concept

The Vision M Next is a plug-in hybrid concept sports car that was showcased in June 2019. The design is partially inspired from the M1, such as louvered rear windows and BMW roundels positioned inside the taillamps. It is powered by the Power PHEV drivetrain system that offers the choice between all-wheel-drive and rear-wheel-drive, with either all-electric propulsion or the power of a turbocharged four-cylinder petrol engine. The total system output is claimed at 441 kW (591 hp; 600 PS). It also has a claimed 0 to 100 km/h (62 mph) acceleration time of 3 seconds and top speed of 300 km/h (186 mph). The maximum range when driving in all-electric mode is claimed to be 100 km (62 mi).[15][16][17][18]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Norbye, Jan P. (1984). "BMW Goes Racing: Motorsport, Engines, Adventures". BMW - Bavaria's Driving Machines. Skokie, IL USA: Publications International. pp. 186–189. ISBN 0-517-42464-9.
  2. ^ New and Used Cars. "BMW M1 (1978-1981) CAR HISTORY". Is-it-a-lemon.com. Retrieved 2010-10-03.
  3. ^ . Qv500.com. Archived from the original on 2010-02-28. Retrieved 2010-10-03.
  4. ^ a b c d Harper, Bob (2018-01-28). "BMW M1: history, reviews and specs of an icon". Evo. Retrieved 2019-02-03.
  5. ^ a b Webster, Larry (June 2014). "BMW M1 Procar". Road & Track. 65 (9): 66–69.
  6. ^ "BMW M1". www.classicandsportscar.com. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
  7. ^ "Five cars you'd never expect to be turned into rally racers". Driving. 22 November 2018. Retrieved 15 August 2019.
  8. ^ Gluckman, David (April 2008). "2008 BMW M1 Homage Concept". Automobile Magazine. Source Interlink Media, LLC. from the original on 1 May 2008. Retrieved 2008-04-29.
  9. ^ Kable, Greg (27 April 2008). "Homage to the master". Autoweek. Hearst Digital Media. Retrieved 2020-09-17.
  10. ^ (Press release). BMW of North America, LLC. 27 April 2008. Archived from the original on 27 April 2011. Retrieved 2011-05-05.
  11. ^ Abuelsamid, Sam (29 August 2009). "Frankfurt Preview: BMW reveals Vision EfficientDynamics turbodiesel plug-in hybrid concept [w/VIDEO]". Autoblog.com. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
  12. ^ Boeriu, Horatiu (24 December 2012). "BMWBLOG interviews Benoit Jacob, Head of Design BMW i". BMWBLOG. Retrieved 2018-05-21.
  13. ^ Eric Loveday (2014-03-10). "First BMW i8 Deliveries Scheduled For June – Final Performance / Fuel Consumption Figures Released". InsideEVs.com. Retrieved 2014-03-10.
  14. ^ "BMW i8 vs BMW M1". www.topspeed.com. 28 November 2014. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  15. ^ "BMW Vision M Next Concept revealed - a look forward, via the past | evo".
  16. ^ "BMW M1 reborn as 591bhp two-seat plug-in hybrid | Autocar".
  17. ^ "BMW Vision M Next concept heralds plug-in performance at M division".
  18. ^ Jun 26, Heidi R. Vanke on; Pm, 2019 at 1:35 (June 25, 2019). "BMW Vision M Next previews M1 supercar's successor - a dedicated 600 hp, carbon-bodied plug-in hybrid - paultan.org".

confused, with, series, coupe, model, code, engined, sports, produced, german, automotive, manufacturer, from, 1978, until, 1981, overviewmanufacturerkarosserie, baur, gmbhproduction1978, 1981453, producedassemblyturin, italy, initial, assembly, munich, german. Not to be confused with BMW 1 Series M Coupe The BMW M1 model code E26 is a mid engined sports car produced by German automotive manufacturer BMW from 1978 until 1981 BMW M1OverviewManufacturerKarosserie Baur BMW M GmbHProduction1978 1981453 producedAssemblyTurin Italy initial assembly Munich Germany final assembly and inspection DesignerGiorgetto Giugiaro at ItaldesignBody and chassisClassSports car S Body style2 door coupeLayoutMid engine rear wheel drivePowertrainEngine3 5 L M88 1 I6 1 Transmission5 speed manualDimensionsWheelbase2 600 mm 102 4 in 1 Length4 361 mm 171 7 in 1 Width1 824 mm 71 8 in 1 Height1 140 mm 44 9 in 1 Curb weight1 300 kg 2 866 lb ChronologyPredecessorBMW TurboSuccessorBMW Nazca C2 spiritual In the late 1970s Italian automobile manufacturer Lamborghini entered into an agreement with BMW to build a production racing car in sufficient quantity for homologation but conflicts arose that prompted BMW to produce the car themselves 2 3 The resulting car was sold to the public from 1978 until 1981 as the BMW M1 It is the first mid engine BMW automobile to be mass produced the second is the i8 plug in hybrid sports car Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Development history 1 2 Engine and transmission 1 3 Steering suspension and brakes 1 4 Interior 1 5 Production 1 6 Accolades 2 Motorsport 3 Commemorative cars and spiritual successor 3 1 M1 Homage concept 3 2 Vision EfficientDynamics concept and the BMW i8 3 3 Vision M Next concept 4 ReferencesOverview EditDevelopment history Edit The M1 has a tubular steel space frame chassis The motorsport division of BMW headed by Jochen Neerpasch had been wanting to compete in motorsports using a car developed for competition racing in order to compete with arch rival Porsche in Group 5 racing thus the development of the M1 was initiated Neerpasch who was head of the development program stressed that the car was to be strictly mid engine in order to outclass its competitors As BMW wasn t able to build 400 road going examples of the car in the required time period as stipulated by the rules the company partnered with Lamborghini to work out the details of the car s chassis assemble prototypes and manufacture the vehicles The tubular steel space frame chassis was the work of Gianpaolo Dallara but soon Lamborghini s financial position and the possibility of the car s production by the Italian manufacturer became bleak and BMW reassumed control over the project in April 1978 after seven prototypes were built The delay in production and the changes in Group 5 rules forced the company to compete in Group 4 racing with the car 4 The M1 coupe was hand built between 1978 and 1981 under the motorsport division of BMW as a homologation special for sports car racing The fibre glass body was designed by Giorgetto Giugiaro taking inspiration from the 1972 BMW Turbo concept car Since the engineering of the car was still incomplete a group of former Lamborghini engineers had founded a company named Italengineering which offered to complete the car s design Less than 10 miles away from the Lamborghini shop the engineering for the M1 was finished 5 Engine and transmission Edit The 3 5 litre M88 1 inline 6 engine The BMW M1 is the first car to be solely developed by BMW M and employs a 3 453 cc 3 5 L M88 1 petrol six cylinder engine with Kugelfischer Bosch mechanical fuel injection and Magneti Marelli ignition system The engine was developed by Paul Rosche who was also responsible for the S14 inline 4 engine and the S70 2 V12 engine A version of this engine was later used in the South African version of the 745i of which 209 examples were built between 1984 and 1986 as well as the E24 M6 M635CSi and E28 M5 The engine has six separate throttle bodies twin cams 4 valves per cylinder and generates a power output of 277 PS 204 kW 273 hp at 6 500 rpm and 330 N m 243 lbf ft of torque at 5 000 rpm in the road version giving the car a top speed of 265 km h 165 mph The engine was mated to a 5 speed manual transmission made by ZF Friedrichshafen equipped with a 40 locking limited slip differential Steering suspension and brakes Edit The M1 has an unassisted rack and pinion steering double wishbone suspension system with adjustable coil springs and Bilstein gas filled dampers The road car had softer suspension bushings to have better ride quality and tractability 4 The ventilated brakes of the car measured 300 mm 11 8 in at the front and 297 mm 11 7 in at the rear and were constructed from steel The M1 used special Campagnolo alloy wheels measuring 7x16 inches at the front and 8x16 inches at the rear fitted with Pirelli P7 tyres having sizes of 205 55 VR15 at the front and 225 50 VR15s at the rear Interior Edit Interior The M1 has a half leather and half cloth interior Its motorsport roots meant that the car had a basic interior layout with many parts sourced from other BMW models The interior had amenities such as air conditioning power windows and a stereo but had unadjustable seats and only had a left hand drive configuration Production Edit The fibre glass body of the M1 was manufactured by Italian firm Italiana Resina which was located in Modena Italy The chassis was manufactured by another Modenese firm Marchesi The body of the car was completed by Italdesign at their manufacturing facility located in Turin along with the interior The partly finished cars were then delivered to German specialist manufacturer Baur where final assembly took place by hand 6 The hand built M88 1 engines were supplied by BMW from Munich to be installed in the cars The completed cars were shipped to BMW Motorsport in Munich for final inspection and delivery Only 453 production cars were built making it one of BMW s rarest models Out of the 453 399 were road going units while 53 were made for motorsport 4 5 Accolades Edit Rear 3 4 view The M1 had various successes in motorsports In 2004 Sports Car International placed the car at number ten on their list of top sports cars of the 1970s Motorsport EditMain article BMW M1 Procar Championship A BMW M1 Procar being driven by Nelson Piquet in 1980 at the Nurburgring In 1979 the head of BMW Motorsport Jochen Neerpasch devised a one make championship using racing modified M1s The series was created to aid BMW in building enough cars to enter the group 4 classification in the World Championship for Makes The new series known as the Procar BMW M1 Championship served as a support series for Formula One and included many Formula One drivers in identical cars The series ran for two years with Niki Lauda winning the 1979 season and Nelson Piquet the 1980 season After BMW met the standards for group 4 the Procars were used by various teams in the world championship as well as other national series The M1 was also campaigned at the 24 Hours of Le Mans from 1981 to 1986 where it proved competitive 4 The car was classified as a Group B car for Le Mans purposes as Group B was also planned for GT class for road races but were instead eclipsed by Group C prototypes A M1 Pro Car was also converted to Group B rally spec by BMW France for the 1982 season The car was campaigned for the 1983 season as well before the car was entered solely by the Motul privateer racing team for the 1984 season The 1984 season proved to be the most successful for the M1 as former ERC champion Bernard Beguin won back to back at Rallye de La Baule and Rallye de Lorraine that season and even claimed an outright ERC podium at Rally d Antibes four months later The car was not campaigned further after 1984 7 Commemorative cars and spiritual successor EditM1 Homage concept Edit BMW M1 Homage concept In April 2008 BMW unveiled the M1 Homage concept to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the M1 The concept vehicle uses a mid engine layout that borrows styling cues from both the original M1 and the BMW Turbo show car 8 The M1 Homage concept was first shown to the public at the Concorso d Eleganza Villa d Este of 2008 The design was penned by BMW s in house design team inspired by both the original M1 and the BMW Turbo concept designed by Paul Bracq 9 The BMW Turbo had many technical and advanced innovations from BMW that were part of the inspiration of the M1 Homage concept 10 The front of the car differs the most from the other parts of the car The front sports double head lights which are not the same as pop up type that are on the original M1 but the usual trademark of the kidney grilles is present The M1 Homage also incorporates the double badge on the back of the car like the original M1 There are no photos of the interior of the car or of the car in action nor have the specifications of the car been released as the car was meant only to be a design exercise Vision EfficientDynamics concept and the BMW i8 Edit Main article BMW i8 BMW Vision EfficientDynamics 2009 Vision EfficientDynamics concept at the 2010 Paris Motor Show BMW i8 frontal view production model After the M1 BMW designed some mid engined concept cars but none of them inspired a production car until 2013 when the Vision EfficientDynamics concept led to the production of the i8 The BMW i8 is based on the Vision EfficientDynamics concept which is a range extender electric car with a three cylinder turbocharged petrol engine 11 The production car was designed by Benoit Jacob 12 Series production of customer vehicles began in April 2014 13 It is also the first mass produced mid engine BMW automobile since the M1 14 Vision M Next concept EditThe Vision M Next is a plug in hybrid concept sports car that was showcased in June 2019 The design is partially inspired from the M1 such as louvered rear windows and BMW roundels positioned inside the taillamps It is powered by the Power PHEV drivetrain system that offers the choice between all wheel drive and rear wheel drive with either all electric propulsion or the power of a turbocharged four cylinder petrol engine The total system output is claimed at 441 kW 591 hp 600 PS It also has a claimed 0 to 100 km h 62 mph acceleration time of 3 seconds and top speed of 300 km h 186 mph The maximum range when driving in all electric mode is claimed to be 100 km 62 mi 15 16 17 18 References Edit a b c d e Norbye Jan P 1984 BMW Goes Racing Motorsport Engines Adventures BMW Bavaria s Driving Machines Skokie IL USA Publications International pp 186 189 ISBN 0 517 42464 9 New and Used Cars BMW M1 1978 1981 CAR HISTORY Is it a lemon com Retrieved 2010 10 03 BMW E26 M1 Qv500 com Archived from the original on 2010 02 28 Retrieved 2010 10 03 a b c d Harper Bob 2018 01 28 BMW M1 history reviews and specs of an icon Evo Retrieved 2019 02 03 a b Webster Larry June 2014 BMW M1 Procar Road amp Track 65 9 66 69 BMW M1 www classicandsportscar com Retrieved 9 November 2019 Five cars you d never expect to be turned into rally racers Driving 22 November 2018 Retrieved 15 August 2019 Gluckman David April 2008 2008 BMW M1 Homage Concept Automobile Magazine Source Interlink Media LLC Archived from the original on 1 May 2008 Retrieved 2008 04 29 Kable Greg 27 April 2008 Homage to the master Autoweek Hearst Digital Media Retrieved 2020 09 17 Concept Vehicles M1 Homage Press Release BMW North America Press release BMW of North America LLC 27 April 2008 Archived from the original on 27 April 2011 Retrieved 2011 05 05 Abuelsamid Sam 29 August 2009 Frankfurt Preview BMW reveals Vision EfficientDynamics turbodiesel plug in hybrid concept w VIDEO Autoblog com Retrieved 2013 08 07 Boeriu Horatiu 24 December 2012 BMWBLOG interviews Benoit Jacob Head of Design BMW i BMWBLOG Retrieved 2018 05 21 Eric Loveday 2014 03 10 First BMW i8 Deliveries Scheduled For June Final Performance Fuel Consumption Figures Released InsideEVs com Retrieved 2014 03 10 BMW i8 vs BMW M1 www topspeed com 28 November 2014 Retrieved 29 November 2019 BMW Vision M Next Concept revealed a look forward via the past evo BMW M1 reborn as 591bhp two seat plug in hybrid Autocar BMW Vision M Next concept heralds plug in performance at M division Jun 26 Heidi R Vanke on Pm 2019 at 1 35 June 25 2019 BMW Vision M Next previews M1 supercar s successor a dedicated 600 hp carbon bodied plug in hybrid paultan org Wikimedia Commons has media related to BMW M1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title BMW M1 amp oldid 1144047570, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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