RE: Alpina B10 V8 | High Mile Club
RE: Alpina B10 V8 | High Mile Club
Yesterday

Alpina B10 V8 | High Mile Club

Maybe there are better looking cars with 200,000 miles - we've not seen any


The joy of cars, as we all sometimes need reminding of, is that everything can be replaced or upgraded. They are, at the end of the day, collections of metal, rubber and plastic made into vehicles that we then dedicate far too much time, money and effort to. Stuff wears out, a new part can be ordered. Or, if the part isn’t available, somebody clever somewhere can probably make a replacement. At considerably more cost, yes, but where there’s a will there’s a way. As many a car restorer must have thought quite a few times. 

When the car is worth something, either in terms of financial or sentimental value, then it’s easy to justify the expense. It’s trickier, if not impossible, to make the numbers work when repair cost outweighs resale value, but that’s where the man maths comes in. Once more, if you want to make it work, you’re going to make it work. 

An Alpina would be very easy to justify extensive recommissioning on. They’re all glorious cars for one thing, and that specialness - along with the rarity - tends to keep residuals pretty resilient. So big miles certainly aren't unfamiliar: they really are epic ground coverers, so money is spent keeping them in fine fettle. See the moon miles D3 thread in Reader’s Cars for proof. Some extra Alpina love on a BMW base makes them mega mile munchers. 

Combine that approach with 1990s German build quality and the result is very special: this is an Alpina B10 4.0, the first V8-engined Alpina and introduced years before there was a similarly configured M5. Taking the M60 BMW engine, Mahle pistons, intake changes and a new ECU meant more than 300hp for the B10. With the usual raft of Alpina chassis changes, it was the ultimate exec express of the 1990s. 

This one was one of just two right-hand 4.0s (later Alpina E34s would get a larger V8), and it was absolutely used as intended, accruing 100,000 miles in its first four years. There were BMW main dealer appointments more often than quarterly business reviews: 16 times between 1994 and 1998. By 2001 the Alpina had already done 150,000 miles. Then comes the really interesting bit; the first digital MOTs show a car still soldiering on, but desperately in need of some TLC. Some tests show as many advisories as there are spokes on those Alpina wheels. So it came off the road in 2013 and has been subjected to an extraordinary restoration that’s totalled £50,000. Where there’s a will, there’s a way, remember. 

The result is sensational, one of the smartest-looking old BMWs we’ve seen in yonks. Use has been much more sparing in the last few years than in its first, though if any car looks fighting fit to cruise through 200,000 miles, this must be it. And what a great time to take on a classic Alpina, with the Bovensiepens now preserving what already exists and BMW moving the brand forward. Make a brew, get comfy, and enjoy a great advert for an awesome Alpina. There really can’t be any better.


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

McRors

Original Poster:

419 posts

79 months

Yesterday (07:40)
quotequote all
That’s a lot of money but then that’s a lot of car. Utterly beautiful design and delightful to drive. I used a friend’s 735 for a while (in deep purple/aubergine) and it was majestic.

200Plus Club

12,943 posts

301 months

Yesterday (07:43)
quotequote all
Lovely, but absolutely overpriced given the mileage.
Would be interesting to see if it actually sells anywhere near asking however.

georgeyboy12345

4,243 posts

58 months

Yesterday (07:52)
quotequote all
What a handsome looking thing

pb8g09

3,013 posts

92 months

Yesterday (07:59)
quotequote all
Lovely car, horrible price

howardhughes

1,318 posts

227 months

Yesterday (08:11)
quotequote all
Beautiful car and hat's off to the owner for running the car to the current mileage. Hoping they'll be many more to come!

epom

14,125 posts

184 months

Yesterday (08:13)
quotequote all
Magnificent.

Quhet

2,793 posts

169 months

Yesterday (08:17)
quotequote all
What a lovely car. I'd love to be able to drop £57k on that and not worry too much about it

Edited by Quhet on Sunday 15th March 08:56

stuart100

1,067 posts

80 months

Yesterday (08:19)
quotequote all
Beautiful car. I don’t like the interior wood and red leather though. Needs cream leather, or lose the wood.

I had a 525i manual up to 2012. Loved it, but had to be scrapped and not worth saving. Always admire these.

sutts

1,080 posts

171 months

Yesterday (08:48)
quotequote all
Not over priced at all - a comprehensive restoration of an ultra-rare, one owner car. Mileage is immaterial at this point and I’m never sure why some people are blinded by what are now just numbers on the dashboard.

Pauly308

7 posts

13 months

Yesterday (09:04)
quotequote all
Absolutely lovely thing, don’t like red interiors but think I could overlook that. If that has an emotional connection to you, find another.

georgeyboy12345

4,243 posts

58 months

Yesterday (09:04)
quotequote all
A few complaining about the price - if it’s too rich for you, what about a more lowly 518i?

https://www.pistonheads.com/buy/listing/19617728

These ones don’t even have a straight 6 engine though, probably better to go for something like this 520i for the true E34 5 series experience. Here’s a really cheap one for only £4495.

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202601249...

Or, you could go for the earlier E28 and enjoy some tax-free ULEZ-free wafting. This one is the relaxed 525e with the low revving 2.7 litre M20

https://www.pistonheads.com/buy/listing/19946621




Cryssys

811 posts

61 months

Yesterday (09:30)
quotequote all
Looks lovely but I couldn't live with that red interior.

Must be a very relaxed cruiser as the ad claims it's 4.0 V8 only produces 210bhp. That's only 50 bhp per litre, sounds like a typo to me.

Iamnotkloot

1,845 posts

170 months

Yesterday (09:44)
quotequote all
As others have said : great car, crazy price.

ettore

4,867 posts

275 months

Yesterday (10:32)
quotequote all
stuart100 said:
Beautiful car. I don t like the interior wood and red leather though. Needs cream leather, or lose the wood.

I had a 525i manual up to 2012. Loved it, but had to be scrapped and not worth saving. Always admire these.
Cream on Silver - are you a pervert?

Red is bang-on and you may as well go large with one of these now, so all up the wood, badges and stickers!

richinlondon

819 posts

145 months

Yesterday (10:35)
quotequote all
ettore said:
stuart100 said:
Beautiful car. I don t like the interior wood and red leather though. Needs cream leather, or lose the wood.

I had a 525i manual up to 2012. Loved it, but had to be scrapped and not worth saving. Always admire these.
Cream on Silver - are you a pervert?

Red is bang-on and you may as well go large with one of these now, so all up the wood, badges and stickers!
Agree - red compensates for the anodyne silver bodywork - red convertible roof on a silver or grey convertible looks good. Like 'The Duke's' stock and having met him and his brother once they seem pretty genuine guys.

skylarking808

1,054 posts

109 months

Yesterday (10:42)
quotequote all
As we all know, just because you spend £50k restoring a car, it does not mean you get all back at sale time!!

Great Alpina to waft in though. The red leather seems appropriate for the era.

MarkJS

2,075 posts

170 months

Yesterday (10:56)
quotequote all
Brings back fond memories of my E34. It was the lowly 520i but in that era, it still meant you got a lovely straight six with 150bhp and it was quicker you’d imagine. And it made a gorgeous noise. I miss the Porsche too.


stuart100

1,067 posts

80 months

Yesterday (11:14)
quotequote all
richinlondon said:
ettore said:
stuart100 said:
Beautiful car. I don t like the interior wood and red leather though. Needs cream leather, or lose the wood.

I had a 525i manual up to 2012. Loved it, but had to be scrapped and not worth saving. Always admire these.
Cream on Silver - are you a pervert?

Red is bang-on and you may as well go large with one of these now, so all up the wood, badges and stickers!
Agree - red compensates for the anodyne silver bodywork - red convertible roof on a silver or grey convertible looks good. Like 'The Duke's' stock and having met him and his brother once they seem pretty genuine guys.
Haha no not a Pervert. I was only thinking of the red and wood. I love the red. I actually wanted a black BMW with red for my current car but couldn’t find one.

BigChiefmuffinAgain

1,576 posts

121 months

Yesterday (11:53)
quotequote all
I owned a B10 V8s for many years and took it to 210k miles. First 200k were fine but then lots of things started going wrong. Just felt like that was what the car was engineered to do but no more. Maybe spending £50k on it would have sorted it all out but doubt it. You would pretty much have to replace everything and that is going to cost more than £50k to do.

nismo48

6,288 posts

230 months

Yesterday (13:52)
quotequote all
Lovely old girl that, plenty of life left in her yet.