MenuClose
In This Article
Category: Magazine

Think of the 1975 3.0CSL ''Batmobile'' as the Plymouth Superbird of the German car world. Plenty of clones and replicas exist, but the real ones are as rare as hen's teeth. The CSL is rare enough, but only 57 of these authentic ''Batmobile'' CSLs were ever constructed, and only four in the ultra-bold Taïga 072 color.

This car represents the birth of BMW Motorsport Gmbh. At the time of the standard 3.0CSL's creation, Ford was spanking BMW and every other manufacturer at tracks all over Europe with its successful Capri racing program. With Jochen Neerspach and Martin Braungart at the helm of Ford's racing endeavors, BMW had little choice but to make the team a better offer, and in doing so BMW began to win races.

In order to capitalize on the early success the team had achieved in German Saloon Car Championship racing, Neerspach and Braungart conceived a much more aerodynamic machine that would lead to the creation of these brutish homologation specials. The car's most obvious modifications were to the body, with elongated runners on the tops of the front fenders, a huge chin spoiler where the chrome bumper used to be, a roof-mounted air deflector, and the pièce de résistance, the three-piece, deck-mounted rear wing. When Plymouth supplied the Superbird with such a device, the height was such that it provided clearance for the trunklid. Similarly, the ''Batmobile's'' wing required the CSL's aluminum trunklid to be replaced with steel to support the crushing strength of passing air when the car was at full speed.

BMW built two series of the homologation special, with 110 units in the first, and just 57 in the second, all built in BMW's Motorsport wing. The first series were all painted Polaris Silver or Chamonix White, while the second series cars were available in a wider palette of colors.

This example (Chassis Number 4355049) was originally delivered to a BMW dealer in Memmingen, Germany. However, it was eventually shipped to New Jersey in the 1980s, then back to Germany in the 1990s, and then back to the U.S. again following an extensive, five-year restoration in its home country.

Bonhams & Butterfields offered this gorgeous example at its Quail Lodge event in Carmel, California, this past August. The auction house expected between $180,000 and $200,000 for the car, not inclusive of the buyer's premium, as well as a 2.5 percent additional import duty, which the buyer may or may not have been responsible for, depending upon the circumstances of its official importation.

As rare and stunning as they may be, BMWs do not yet ring up the kind of numbers you might expect. At $150,000, this unique automobile is something of a bargain, when you compare its rarity to that of a "run of the mill" Porsche 356 Cabriolet, which seems to be ringing up numbers like this with relative ease. At the same auction, another rare BMW--a 1981 BMW M1--met its low auction estimate, but just barely. Mark our words: The time is coming when these cars will be all but untouchable on the auction circuit. Buy one now before it's too late.

Auction Notes

Auctioneer: Bonhams & Butterfields

Location: Quail Lodge, Carmel, California

Date: August 14, 2009

Lot Number: 241

Condition: Restored/#1

Auction Estimate: $180,000 to $200,000

Selling Price: $150,000

Recent
What Happened When Mitchell Motor Car Company's Design Was Too Advanced
Images from Pat Foster's collection

There's an old saying in the automobile business: You never want to be too far behind styling trends, or too far ahead. Finding that sweet spot between styling that’s too conservative and too advanced is critical, and the Mitchell automobile is a good example of what can happen when a design is too far ahead of trends.

In 1919 the Mitchell Motor Company of Racine, Wisconsin, was considered a veteran automaker. It had begun producing motorcars in 1903, one year after Rambler and the same year as Ford Motor Company. Mitchell was profitable, a picture of success and prosperity, yet five years later the company was out of business and its plant sold to another carmaker. It proved a cautionary tale for other automobile companies.

Keep reading...Show Less
This Dual-Quad 1964 Buick Riviera Is Seeing Daylight After Thirty Years
Photography by Scotty Lachenauer

If there’s one thing we’ve learned about automotive barn finds, such discoveries are not always the cut-and-dry variety. You know, the classic image of some rarity being pulled from a structure so dilapidated any hint of wind might bring it crashing down. There are the well-used, truly original vehicles that have spent the static hours of existence in dusty, century-old abodes, handed from one family member to the next. Some barn finds were never really lost, rather just left to languish under the auspice of an idyllic restoration that never seems to happen. And then there are barn finds that have a habit of migrating home.

A case study is this 1964 Buick Riviera. It’s never really been lost, technically contradicting “find,” yet its decades-long dormancy in more than one storage facility, and with more than one owner, makes this first-gen GM E-body a prime barn find candidate. More so when the car’s known history, and relative desirability, can be recited with ease by current owner Tim Lynch.

Keep reading...Show Less

Trending