RE: Terrific-looking BMW M535i for sale

RE: Terrific-looking BMW M535i for sale

Yesterday

Terrific-looking BMW M535i for sale

M GmbH's first super-saloon doesn't come up for sale very often - feast your eyes on a beauty


We should have seen this coming, of course. With the benefit of hindsight, it was inevitable that the traditional, straight-six-powered, handsome BMW saloons of yesteryear would appreciate eventually. They’ll always look brilliant, they’re simple to use and enjoy, and the availability of a manual gearbox always adds appeal. Because old autos in anything vaguely sporting aren’t much fun.

It’s nice to think that the ascent of values is a new phenomenon, brought about by auto-only M3s and two-tonne M5s, but the reality is there’s been plenty of warning. Famously - at least famously on PH that is - there was an E34 M5 as a Shed of the Week, complete with MOT, in 2011. Just a few years later, they were starting at £4,000 or so, rising to £15k for the very best. And now look. There was a time that E28 M5s were less than £10,000. They were always going one way. Arguably ever since the E60 M5, really, with its futuristic look, a multitude of modes and automated manual, demand for the old-school M cars was probably guaranteed. It just didn’t look quite so guaranteed 20 years ago, when they were affordable but expensive to run and rust-prone. 

Hopefully some got their fill of M thrills when they were more attainable, or snuck one away into dry storage for the figurative rainy day. For those that didn’t, entry to the hallowed classic M car club doesn’t come cheap - although, if anything, it looks more appealing than ever. Formidably capable though the latest batch of M cars is, they don’t immediately tug at the heartstrings as they once would have. You might say that about whole swathes of new performance cars, in fairness to BMW, but let’s save that discussion for another time. 

Instead, let’s talk about nothing else but this beautiful M535i. Built from the E12 generation 5 Series, the 218hp, 3.5-litre flagship never carried the M5 moniker - that would of course arrive later in the '80s with the E28 - but did nicely set out M’s stall for what was to come. This was the first M road car after the M1, remember, and represented the template of what would follow: the handling would be sharpened, the design spiced up, the engine upgraded and the desirability sent soaring.  

However, this was also back in the time (45 years ago, actually) when M - and especially the road car bit -  was a much smaller part of BMW’s operation. So the M535i was only made for a year, between April 1980 and July 1981, with just 1,650 units made globally. That number must be much lower almost half a century on, what with a powerful old 5 Series’ propensity to oversteer. And oxidise. 

This one did its share of the latter, with old iffy repairs properly seen to and the end result little short of sensational. The decals are fresh, the wheels are great, and the paint gleams. Someone, somewhere, sometime - presumably quite recently - has properly invested in this car, and the results are incredible. The interior, too, presents beautifully; not much to it to the modern eye - also why it might appeal so much - with the Recaros a particular highlight. 

This 1981 example has had some remedial work done by the selling dealer; all that’s left to do, they reckon, 'is turn the key and enjoy driving this rare and special car’. No doubt a privilege for whoever gets the chance. A BMW of this vintage is going to require some specialist care by now, but the experience promises to be pretty special. And if £40k is more than they’ve ever been, there’s at least no chance now of the classic M cars being forgotten about. If only we’d realised sooner.


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

mrclav

Original Poster:

1,533 posts

236 months

Yesterday (06:21)
quotequote all
And to think people on here criticise modern BMW dashboards...

The interior of this car is utterly hideous!

M138

361 posts

4 months

Yesterday (06:30)
quotequote all
Terrific-looking price.

Stick Legs

6,867 posts

178 months

Yesterday (06:37)
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I can assure you that you will not be looking at the middle of the dashboard when driving it! But yes, the E28 was a far more accomplished car inside and out, however to drive an E12 M5353i or an '02 is something to be experienced. BMW got the recipe SO right that it influenced every other manufacturer.

GTEYE

2,214 posts

223 months

Yesterday (06:50)
quotequote all
mrclav said:
And to think people on here criticise modern BMW dashboards...

The interior of this car is utterly hideous!
You’re judging it from 2025 though. Bear in mind this was a 1972 design and 1981 was the last year of production before it was replaced with the E28 which had a “1980s” interior.

Remember 1972 was 53 years ago! I’m not really sure what you would be expecting to see?




Edited by GTEYE on Thursday 1st May 06:54

WonkeyDonkey

2,455 posts

116 months

Yesterday (07:01)
quotequote all
Dumpy looking thing lol.

Far better looking classics out there.

Stick Legs

6,867 posts

178 months

Yesterday (07:02)
quotequote all
GTEYE said:
mrclav said:
And to think people on here criticise modern BMW dashboards...

The interior of this car is utterly hideous!
You’re judging it from 2025 though. Bear in mind this was a 1972 design and 1981 was the last year of production before it was replaced with the E28 which had a “1980s” interior.

Remember 1972 was 53 years ago! I’m not really sure what you would be expecting to see?




Edited by GTEYE on Thursday 1st May 06:54
Single pane window for all major instruments.
Clear demarcation between functions such as heating, radio, driving controls.
Driver focused ergonomics.

It was ahead of it's time and just go and sit in a similar age Jaguar XJ-6, Triumph 2500 Mk.2 or a Rover P6 / Early SD1 for comparison.

Motormouth88

516 posts

73 months

Yesterday (07:04)
quotequote all
Man!! Cars used to be so cool

MikeM6

5,446 posts

115 months

Yesterday (07:08)
quotequote all
WonkeyDonkey said:
Dumpy looking thing lol.

Far better looking classics out there.
Which classic saloon of thar era are you thinking of that is far better looking?

I think this is a great looking thing.

dontlookdown

2,097 posts

106 months

Yesterday (07:13)
quotequote all
Stick Legs said:
GTEYE said:
mrclav said:
And to think people on here criticise modern BMW dashboards...

The interior of this car is utterly hideous!
You’re judging it from 2025 though. Bear in mind this was a 1972 design and 1981 was the last year of production before it was replaced with the E28 which had a “1980s” interior.

Remember 1972 was 53 years ago! I’m not really sure what you would be expecting to see?




Edited by GTEYE on Thursday 1st May 06:54
Single pane window for all major instruments.
Clear demarcation between functions such as heating, radio, driving controls.
Driver focused ergonomics.

It was ahead of it's time and just go and sit in a similar age Jaguar XJ-6, Triumph 2500 Mk.2 or a Rover P6 / Early SD1 for comparison.
I like the way the dash looks, but there you are. I lke form to follow function, and from a functional/ergo pov, BMW dashboards of that era were in a different league to everyone else.

Remember seeing a tidy one of these at Cooks Ferry, BMW indie near Southgate I used to schlepp up to back in the day. It's one of those cars that takes me straight back to the early 80s, the sort of thing the 10yr old me would love to have spotted.

I looked at a couple back when you got get one for about £3-4k, but chickened out as they were either already quite rusty or about to get that way.

TheMilkyBarKid

700 posts

42 months

Yesterday (07:20)
quotequote all
Lovely, from a time when BMW’s were genuinely aspirational (and I say that as the owner of a modern BMW!). The size of the glasshouse (enormous) and the wheels (tiny!) are striking through 2025 eyes though.

86wasagoodyear

674 posts

109 months

Yesterday (07:44)
quotequote all
Goodness me that is a lovely thing. DIdn't realise so few were made.

s m

23,726 posts

216 months

Yesterday (07:48)
quotequote all
86wasagoodyear said:
Goodness me that is a lovely thing. DIdn't realise so few were made.
They churned out a lot more of the E28 shape M535is - these were always fairly uncommon

el romeral

1,446 posts

150 months

Yesterday (07:49)
quotequote all
My perception of how this car looks must have changed over the decades. When they were current, it was a fabulous looking thing and very desirable. I must have become accustomed to more modern cars (not EVs though). Now this BMW looks all out of proportion to me, with its top heavy tall windows, small wheels and large overhanggetmecoat.

Will still sound pretty epic though, can’t change that.

British Beef

2,465 posts

178 months

Yesterday (07:50)
quotequote all
mrclav said:
And to think people on here criticise modern BMW dashboards...

The interior of this car is utterly hideous!
Each to their own. I would take that interior over most modern touch screen for everything new interiors. 1 switch for 1 function!

Plus give me a simple steering wheel, with no airbag and buttons festooned all over it!

cerb4.5lee

36,055 posts

193 months

Yesterday (07:51)
quotequote all
These have never got me going in the same way that the M635CSi did in comparison for some reason.

Lefty

17,674 posts

215 months

Yesterday (07:53)
quotequote all
Love this but E28 is peak 5 series for me. Perhaps even peak BMW.



Edited by Lefty on Thursday 1st May 08:00

CKY

2,201 posts

28 months

Yesterday (07:59)
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Hmmm, I do love an E12, but having seen this car barely make £11k at a Historics Auction 18 months ago, I dread to think what manner of sins it could be hiding. Nice to see they have retrimmed the steering wheel since the auction, though it's still wearing E28 doors, so no doubt had some manner of 'work' done in the past.

rossub

5,038 posts

203 months

Yesterday (07:59)
quotequote all
What a state that boot is in. Could have at least cleaned it when you’re after £40k.

AmazingGrace

195 posts

17 months

Yesterday (08:00)
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Re the dashboard - love how the cigarette lighter is positioned in a prominent, almost prideful place.

How times have changed

cerb4.5lee

36,055 posts

193 months

Yesterday (08:06)
quotequote all
mrclav said:
And to think people on here criticise modern BMW dashboards...

The interior of this car is utterly hideous!
I do quite like the simplicity of it all though, plus I'm also a sucker for Recaros in pretty much any car as well.