Rudi Klein “Junkyard” Auction Brings a Lot of Treasure

Patrick Ernzen/RM Sotheby's

It’s tough to explain to a non-car person, but barn finds are exciting. Discovering them is thrilling, and valuing them is interesting. By “barn find” I mean the neglected, sometimes decrepit cars that emerge from decades of storage in a barn (or garage, warehouse, etc.) like some undiscovered artifact or long-lost work of art. Sometimes the cars are rare and worth millions. Sometimes there’s a whole group of barn find cars uncovered. When such collections get consigned to auction—be they from the French countryside, warehouses in northern Italy, or Nebraskan corn fields—they always generate buzz.

Perhaps none have gotten as much attention as the Rudi Klein “Junkyard” collection auction held this past Saturday in Los Angeles. Over 500 lots of parts and vehicles sold for a total of $29.6M dollars, with several records set and many estimates smashed. RM Sotheby’s reported bidders from 39 countries and 36 U.S. states. This may have been a “junk” auction, but you know what they say about one man’s trash and another’s treasure.

Rudi Klein was a German who moved to the U.S. in the 1950s. Eventually, he started a business called Porsche Foreign Auto Wrecking and set up a junkyard in Los Angeles. Porsche may have been his specialty, but he built up a treasure trove of parts for all sorts of foreign cars. It wasn’t just parts, though, as he accumulated complete (and almost complete) automobiles, some of them extremely valuable. He was reportedly notorious for almost never letting anyone in to see this automotive treasure trove, although he sold off some of the cars later in life before passing in 2001. The salvage yard then remained mostly untouched until being cataloged for auction.

Many of the lots at this sale were parts, loosely organized by make/model; Porsche 356 suspension bits over here, a pile of Mercedes-Benz grilles over there. There were engines—many of them Porsche, Mercedes, or Rolls-Royce/Bentley—some offered in a package of four or five. There were wheels, of both the rolling and steering variety. There were seats, headlights, exhausts, brake drums, etc.

RM Sotheby's

Then there were the cars, and what could best be described as former cars. Many were wrecks far beyond saving, and best used for parts or garage art. Others were on the border of parts car and salvageable restoration project. Some were in decent shape. There was a literal wall of Porsches.

Many of the automotive lots brought strong prices, including a handful of truly special and even a few one-off cars. Here are the highlights:

1968 Lamborghini Miura P400

RM Rudi Klein collection
Patrick Ernzen/RM Sotheby's

The Rudi Klein collection auction had three Lamborghini Miuras in different states of disrepair, plus another front-third of a Miura strapped to the back of a rusty VW Type 2 pickup (that whole package sold for $56K). A bent-up P400 S with missing body panels sold for $967,500 and an early thin-chassis P400 missing its engine sold for $610,000, but the cleanest and most expensive Miura was this $1.325M 1968 P400, almost double its high estimate. The 159th of 275 built, the car was originally finished in yellow (the Italians call it Giallo) and had been at the Los Angeles salvage yard for nearly 50 years before the auction.

1964 Iso Grifo A3/L Spider Prototype

RM Rudi Klein collection
Patrick Ernzen/RM Sotheby's

There were quite a few cars in the 1950s and 1960s to combine European sophistication and style with reliable high-performance American V-8s, but the Iso Grifo is one of the prettiest, and best. Only one Iso Grifo—this one—left the factory as a convertible. Klein bought it from TV producer Greg Garrison in 1980 and few people have seen it since. Unique features to the prototype include special side exhaust and rear fender vents, and it sold for $1.875M, making it the second most expensive Grifo ever sold at auction.

1971 NSU ro80 2 Porte + 2 by Pininfarina

RM Rudi Klein collection
RM Sotheby's

Delightfully weird and intriguing, this is a one-off show car displayed by Pininfarina at the 1971 Turin and 1972 Brussels Motor Shows. Underneath the four-door bodywork is an NSU ro80, the revolutionary but ill-fated rotary-powered executive car. It entered the junkyard in 1995 as one of the last cars Klein bought and appears mostly complete and relatively clean. It sold for $461,500.

1939 Horch 855 Special Roadster by Gläser

RM Rudi Klein collection
RM Sotheby's

This car is reportedly the only surviving example of Horch’s ultimate model, the 855. An eight-cylinder car designed for the then-new autobahn, the 855 was based on a shortened version of Horch’s 853 model. One of the five to seven cars originally built, this one sold to a U.S. counterintelligence officer serving in Germany in the later 1940s, and eventually appeared with Rock Hudson in the 1959 film The World Is Ours. Klein bought it in 1980, and in 1992 it went on display at the Audi Forum museum in Germany (August Horch founded Audi), and was restored there. It’s therefore in far better shape than the other cars in the collection and isn’t really a barn find at all, though its appearance at this auction was a unique buying opportunity. It sold for $3,305,000.

1935 Mercedes-Benz 500 K ‘Caracciola’ Special Coupe by Sindelfingen

RM Rudi Klein collection
Patrick Ernzen/RM Sotheby's

Built for Mercedes-Benz’s star Grand Prix driver, Rudi Caracciola, who won three championships driving the Silver Arrows, this 500 K is a one-off with special bodywork. Caracciola reportedly used it until the late 1930s, and at some point, it wound up in Ethiopia hidden under tarps and manure. Klein bought it in 1980, and it hasn’t been seen in public since. It sold for $4.13M.

1956 Mercedes-Benz 300 SL Alloy Gullwing

Patrick Ernzen/RM Sotheby's

Any 300SL is a special, valuable car. Mercedes-Benz built over 3000 of all types so they aren’t the rarest thing in the world, but there were a precious few 29 examples fitted with light alloy bodywork, a higher-spec “NSL” engine, sports suspension, 4.11:1 rear axle, Rudge centerlock wheels, and Plexiglas rear and side windows. These cars are highly prized by collectors.

The star of the Rudi Klein collection was the 26th of those 29 cars. Luigi Chinetti ordered it new in black over red leather with a windshield washer system and 3.42:1 axle. Klein bought it from Chinetti in 1976 for 30 grand. At some point before that it got repainted silver, and in Klein’s ownership bits like the front bumpers, shift knob, jack and tool kit, and spare wheel were sold off. Its $9.355M final price at this auction is, remarkably, the most any of these cars has ever sold for at auction, well over its $6M high estimate and the $8.2M value for a condition #1 (“concours”) example in our price guide. Two perfectly good, restored Alloy Gullwings have also sold at auction in recent years for significantly less. One sold for $5.01M and another for $6.825M, both in 2022.

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Comments

    Not surprised. Rare car in mostly original condition with a story often helps inflate value today. In the future?

    Jay Leno Gullwing is a similar case. More value as is vs restored.

    The 35 Benz was the car here I would love to own. Or just drive.

    I remember dealing with Mr. Klein, or should I say attempting to deal with him back in the early ‘70’s. He was notorious for asking/getting new part retail ++ for his used parts. I am sure he would have expected nothing less than the premium prices achieved here. He did know his vehicles.

    Herr Klein was either the smartest man in Germany, or the luckiest. He picked the perfect time to move to Southern California and get involved with a “foreign” car business.

    I appraised the Rudi Klein vehicles I believe back in the mid 1980’s as I was told he was help funding a German automobile company. Some of the vehicle I appraise back then must have been sold over the years. I also worked on the finish restoration of the 500K MBZ. I showed it at Pebble Beach for Mr. Jim Packer. It won first in it ‘s class and was a fantastic vehicle. When I inspected it for appraisal it had really gone downhill.
    The Mercedes in the 1970’s was on display at Movie World Cars of the Stars. I was the manager at that time.

    I witnessed this same phenomenon a few years back when Mecum sold the lifelong collection of Elmer’s Toy & Car Museum in Fountain City Wisconsin. Cars that superficially looked good but needed a lot of work, most hadn’t run in decades, brought big money. Same applied to the pedal cars and automobilia that sold. It’s so easy to get caught up in the allure of buying out of a collection like that.

    $25200 for what’s left of that Ferrari 275 GTS? Doesn’t make since to me but I don’t have that kind of money to throw around.

    Yeah, where’s the clown that commented before the auction that they were all only fit for scrap metal and had no real value?

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