2003 BMW Alpina Roadster V8
(from BMW Press Release) Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey, December 2, 2002…This new edition of BMW’s contemporary classic roadster is sure to raise eyebrows. A Z8 with an automatic transmission? A new Z8 powered not by the BMW M engine, but rather by a specially developed, higher-performance version of BMW’s “regular” V-8 engine? A new Z8 with 20-inch wheels and tires in place of the original model’s 18-inchers?
Yes, it’s all true, and there’s quite a story here. For starters, this
new Z8 is not only from BMW, but also from ALPINA. Located in the Upper
Bavarian town of Buchloe, ALPINA was established in 1964 as an official
and approved “ennobler” of BMW automobiles – and with that word, we
unabashedly translate directly from the German word Veredler, which
tells us that ALPINA is not concerned merely with making BMWs go faster
and look racier. Instead, ALPINA’s tradition is to take production BMWs
and make them even more appealing to connoisseurs of automotive finery.
Performance finery, we must add, as ALPINA’s treatments include not
merely cosmetic modifications but also a palette of powertrain and
chassis refinements that consistently enhance BMW models’ already
formidable road capabilities within a context of thorough engineering
and mature character.
ALPINA has transformed the Z8 in a thoroughly logical way, consistent
with its own long-standing principles and the tastes and preferences of
ALPINA founder Bovensiepen himself. Toward an understanding of the
ALPINA transformation of the Z8, it is helpful to bullet-point the ways
in which the ALPINA roadster differs from the original Z8 – whose
limited production concludes today with a total of approximately 5,000
units having been largely handbuilt:
Production of the original Z8 for the U.S. concludes at the end of
November ’02. Beginning on December 1, ’02, BMW and ALPINA will build
555 BMW ALPINA ROADSTER V8s, of which some 450 are for U.S. sale. Actual
construction of the basic roadster platform runs from September ’02
through July ’03, with ALPINA’s engine construction beginning before
that.