Final Parking Space: 1971 BMW 2500

Murilee Martin

While exploring the car graveyards of the American West, you’re likely to run across a pretty good selection of discarded BMWs from the 1970s and 1980s, with examples of the E21 and E30 3 Series, E12 and E28 5 Series, and E23 7 Series the easiest to find nowadays. Today’s Final Parking Space resident is a much rarer Bavarian machine, found in a Denver yard a few months back.

1971 BMW 2500 badge
Murilee Martin

Although this car was born in the Free State of Bavaria, it isn’t a BMW Bavaria. That name went on later versions of this car sold in the the United States with the bigger 2.8- or 3.0-liter engines.

1971 BMW 2500 interior seats
Murilee Martin

This car is a member of the E3 family of four-door sedans, which was built from 1968 through 1977 and can be considered the ancestor of the 7 Series. The coupe siblings of the E3 were designated as E9s.

1971 BMW 2500 front
Murilee Martin

The first E3s appeared in American BMW showrooms as 1968 models, and they were available as the entry-level 2500 and loaded-with-luxury 2800 models. The 2500 was discontinued here after 1971.

1971 BMW 2500 engine
Murilee Martin

American buyers of the 1971 BMW 2500 paid $5753 (about $45,740 in 2024 dollars) for a sophisticated European sedan that weighed about the same as a new Chevy Nova sedan and came with a twin-carbed 2.5-liter SOHC straight-six rated at 148 horsepower.

1971 BMW 2500 engine parts
Murilee Martin

The Zenith carburetors were still in this car when I found it, though they had been detached from the intake.

1971 BMW 2500 ad
Murilee Martin

This car’s final caretaker was a repair shop owner who wanted it gone a decade after a customer dropped it off and (presumably) never returned. It was available on Facebook Marketplace in Denver with an asking price of $500 for months before taking its final ride behind a U-Pull-&-Pay tow truck.

1971 BMW 2500 double up
Murilee Martin

The Facebook listing photos show a weathered but complete car.

72-1971-BMW-2500-for-sale-on-Craigslist-interior
Murilee Martin

It ran when parked, allegedly, but none among the local E3/E9 aficionados wanted to rescue it.

1971 BMW 2500 rust bubble
Murilee Martin

There’s some rust-through, but nothing too horrible.

1971 BMW 2500 shift pattern
Murilee Martin

Two transmission choices were available in this car: a four-on-the-floor manual and a three-speed automatic.

1971 BMW 2500 interior shifter
Murilee Martin

This car has the manual.

1971 BMW 2500 dash
Murilee Martin

This BMW may have been about the size of a Nova, but its price tag was just a few hundred bucks lower than that of a new 1971 Cadillac Calais sedan. At the same time, the BMW 2500 was nimbler than the similarly priced (and much stodgier) Mercedes-Benz W114 sedans, and quite a bit cheaper than the six-banger W114s to boot.

1971 BMW 2500 rear three quarter
Murilee Martin

Not many American car shoppers of the early 1970s understood the appeal of a taut German luxury sedan, but that story would change as the 1980s approached.

In its homeland, this was a fast and roomy car for wealthy, slightly devilish drivers.

Read next Up next: 7 Cars That Prove Horsepower Doesn’t Influence Classic Car Values as Much as You Think
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Comments

    Ashes to ashesโ€ฆ I miss my similarly hued โ€˜74 (and the days when solid ones were littering Auto Trader for $1500 obo) but what I most appreciate about these is the oddbal headrest mounting. Did some German orthopedist suggest to the designers that the posts should, in fact, be spaced like your shoulders and not your ears?

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