L
L
O
O
A
A
D
D
I
I
N
N
G
G
auto transporta pārvadāšana
Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image Intro image

BMW Alpina B7 Turbo Coupe

Based on BMW 635 CSi, this king of the autobahn turned out to be Alpina’s last turbocharged masterpiece.

This time, the car hauler of the car transport and logistics company Kurbads carries an especially powerful passenger from the 1980’s: a BMW Alpina B7 Turbo Coupe. Today, 330 horsepower is not that uncommon, even in the ‘hot hatchback’ league, but back in 1984, the two-door B7 was Germany’s fastest mass-produced car.

Made by BMW

It is doubly important to emphasise the word ‘mass-produced’, because the launch of this supermodel coincided with the recognition of Alpina as a car manufacturer (in 1983) and not just a BMW tuning company, which it had been for two decades since the creation of Alpina Burkard Bovensiepen GmbH & Co. KG in 1965. Starting with racing carburettors and ‘polished’ engine blocks, Burkard Bovensiepen took his company to such technological heights that Alpina cars eventually began to be made on the same production line as the respective BMW model.

They are sold and repaired in BMW dealerships, and even keep the manufacturer’s warranty. The original VIN number in the engine compartment is crossed out mechanically, however, and every unit that comes out of the Buchloe factory gets a new, original chassis number, which repeats on other number plates elsewhere on the body.

Choose your turbo pressure

Under the name B7, Alpina models appeared in 1978, based on the first-generation Series 5 saloon (E12). The success of BMW 2002, the new Series 3 and the E12 ‘five’ paved the way for a new luxury coupe that continued on the glorious path started by the legendary Series E9 (3.0 CSi/CSL), both in motorsport and in BMW showrooms.

It’s worth noting immediately that the original car was already unique and excellent.

The body, styled by BMW’s renowned designer Paul Bracq, featured a generation M30 in-line six-cylinder engine, which grew in power with each upgrade, soon reaching and exceeding 200 horsepower.  

But Bovensiepen sought a radical increase in power, but not much could be done with a single camshaft and 12 valves. The six-cylinder engine was as a result fitted with lighter Mahle pistons and, much more importantly, a KKK turbocharger. And B7 Turbo managed to generate up to 300 horsepower.

Why ‘up to’ 300? The pressure of the turbocharger can be changed between 0.55 and 0.85 bar with a special knob inside the car, located to the right of the parking brake lever. So the actual power of B7 Turbo Coupe has between 250 and 300 hp. The first generation B7 Turbo already went from 0 to 100 km/h in 6.9 seconds. 17 seconds in, the B7 Turbo went as high as 180 km/h, with a top speed of 250 km/h. To control this ambitious increase in power, Alpina modified the suspension and the brakes, and equipped the coupé with the popular Pirelli P7 tyres.

Handmade, with Alpina stripes

Interestingly, B7 Turbo was originally called Alpina 630 Turbo, but the coupe’s name and origins were subordinated in many ways to the evolution of the Series 5 saloon-based Alpina models.

B7 Turbo Coupe was an expensive and rare car, with only 110 produced, or rather built, plus an additional 20 with catalytic converters and reduced power. A new one could cost 10 to 30 thousand Deutschmarks, more than a new 635CSi. 

An original interior trim was made for every coupe, with Alpina’s signature half-leather seats, four-spoke sports steering wheel with special lining, and a lathed gear lever knob. As befits a true old-school manufacture, everything, including the dashboard, was handmade, either fully, or to a large degree

B7 Turbo Coupe stands out from BMW 636CSi with its distinctive front and rear spoilers, the classic Alpina 20-spoke wheels and the decorative stripes whose pattern you can still use to quickly identify cars from Buchloe. The signature golden Alpina also adorns this fully restored B7 Turbo Coupe at Kurbads.

The car’s interior trim was restored in its entirety, albeit in a shade of leather slightly different from what you would find in an Alpina catalogue from the period. Interestingly, the cockpit of this B7 Turbo does not feature the traditional Alpina plate with the serial number of the car in that model series.

Given that only 130 examples of the second run of Alpina B7 Turbo Coupe came out between 1984 and 1987 (officially known as the B7 Turbo Coupe/1), the serial number would have had some value. Interestingly, in the mid-1980’s, Alpina B7’s engine power increased to 330 horsepower (previously only possible with the 1982 special edition B7 S Turbo), reducing the time from 0 to 100 accordingly.

Investing in future value

Between December 1978 and June 1988, Alpina produced a total of only 313 B7 Turbo Coupes, and some sources say that the number is even lower. In any case, this is an average of thirty cars a year, which is low even for the homeopathic production runs of Bovensiepen’s company. It also accounts for a microscopically tiny fraction of all the BMW E24 Series coupes made, given that over 13 years, the Dingolfing plant assembled more than 86,000 Series 6 coupes, of which well over half were BMW 635CSi, donor vehicles for B7 Turbo Coupe. 

So this 1980’s king of the autobahn, whose version S is not slow even by today’s standards, is at least as good an investment as the wines made in the Bovensiepen family’s vineyards (Alpina also made typewriters back in the day). In good condition, an Alpina B7 Turbo can fetch as much as 150,000–200,000 euro, while examples of the 30 B7 S Turbo ever made come up with such outrageous auction prices that they do not always attract interested bidders.

Curiously, sixty S vehicles were originally planned, but the forthcoming switch to Coupe/1 risked making this plan unprofitable. While there are fewer and fewer B7 turbo coupes available out there, the chance to get lucky and fetch one at a reasonable price at an auction here in Europe, through ads in the US, or through forums in Japan has not yet been exhausted. With Alpina’s announcement of a full merger with BMW Group, effectively meaning the slow end of Alpina’s original models, and with the passing of the company’s founder, Burkard Bovensiepen, at the age of 87 in October this year, interest in Alpina’s early vehicles will only grow in the future.

Image modal

Privacy policy

1. Introduction

SIA “KURBADS UN KO” (hereinafter – the Controller), through the website www.kurbads.lv (hereinafter – the Website), processes personal data obtained from the data subject – the Website user (hereinafter – the User).
The Controller respects the User’s privacy and personal data protection, observing the User’s rights to lawful processing of personal data in accordance with the applicable legislation – Regulation (EU) 2016/679 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 April 2016 on the protection of natural persons with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data (the Regulation), and other applicable legal acts in the field of privacy and data processing.
Considering the above, the Controller has developed this Privacy Policy with the aim of providing the User with the information specified in the Regulation.
This Privacy Policy applies to data processing regardless of the form and/or medium in which the User provides personal data (via the Website, in paper form, in person, or by phone).
The Controller reserves the right to amend these terms at any time. It is the responsibility of the Website visitor to independently check the Website content to be informed about any changes to the terms.

2. Controller’s identity and contact details

The Controller is SIA “KURBADS UN KO”, VAT registration No. LV50003264331.
Address: Mazjumpravas iela 24, Riga, LV-1063
Website: www.kurbads.lv
E-mail: kurbads@kurbads.lv
Phone: +371 67803311

3. Purposes and legal basis for processing personal data

If the User provides their personal data to the Controller by phone, via Website contact forms, by e-mail or postal mail, we store and use this information to fulfil or conclude a relevant service contract, including: customer identification; contract preparation and conclusion; provision of services (fulfilment of contractual obligations); customer service; handling and processing complaints; enhancing customer loyalty; administration of payments and settlements; debt recovery and collection; proof of facts; website maintenance and improvement; business planning and analytics; planning and record-keeping. We also process such data for providing information to public authorities and operational entities in cases and to the extent specified in external regulatory enactments.
The legal basis for data processing includes: conclusion and execution of a contract, compliance with legal obligations, the Client’s (data subject’s) consent, and our legitimate interests (for example, to verify the Client’s identity before concluding a contract; to ensure the fulfilment of contractual obligations; to analyse Website usage; to ensure service efficiency, etc.).

4. Categories of personal data

Categories of personal data: name, surname, personal identification number, e-mail or postal address, IP address, phone number, content of a message or letter, etc.

5. Categories of personal data recipients

Data is disclosed to those Controller’s employees who require it to perform their direct duties in order to fulfil or conclude a relevant service contract.
When obtaining and using personal data, we partially use the services of external service providers who, under contract, strictly follow our instructions and whom we check both before using their services and continuously thereafter.

6. Categories of data subjects

Categories of data subjects: current, former, and potential clients of the Controller, as well as other persons who express a desire to contact the Controller.

7. Transfer of data outside Latvia

The received data is not intended to be transferred outside Latvia, the European Union, or the European Economic Area, nor will it be transferred to any international organisation. However, given that the Website is linked to Google and Facebook services, the Controller cannot guarantee that these companies will not transfer data outside the EU or EEA.

8. Data retention period

We process and store the User’s personal data for as long as either party has a legal obligation to retain the data.
After the specified circumstances end, and unless otherwise stated in the data protection provisions, we delete personal data no later than three months after the original reason for data retention no longer applies, except where we have a legal obligation to continue storing the data (for example, but not limited to, for accounting or litigation purposes).

9. Data subject’s access to personal data

The data subject has the right to access their personal data within one month from the date of submitting a relevant request.
The User may submit a request to exercise their rights in writing in person at the Controller’s legal address (presenting an identity document), by post, or by e-mail signed with a secure electronic signature.
Upon receiving the User’s request to exercise their rights, the Controller will verify the User’s identity, review the request, and fulfil it in accordance with legal requirements.
The User has the right to receive the information specified in legal acts regarding their data processing, to request access to their personal data, as well as to request the Controller to supplement, correct, or delete such data, to restrict processing, or to object to processing, insofar as these rights do not conflict with the purpose of the processing (contract conclusion or fulfilment).
The data subject is not entitled to receive information if its disclosure is prohibited by law in the interests of national security, defense, public safety, criminal law, or to protect the State’s financial interests in tax matters or for financial market supervision and macroeconomic analysis.

10. Cookie processing

The Website collects data about its visitors to allow the Website operator to assess the usefulness of the Website and how it could be improved.
The Controller continuously improves the Website to enhance its usability and therefore needs to know what information is important to visitors, how often they visit, what devices and browsers they use, the regions they come from, and which content they prefer.
The Controller uses Google Analytics to analyse how visitors use the Website. Information on how Google Analytics works can be found at https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/1012034?hl=en&ref_topic=6157800. We process collected data in our legitimate interest to better understand visitor needs and improve access to our published information. Visitors can opt out of data collection by Google Analytics as described here: https://tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout/.
The server hosting the Website may log requests sent by the visitor (device used, browser, IP address, date, and time of access). Such data is used for technical purposes: ensuring proper functioning and security of the Website and investigating possible security incidents. The legal basis for collecting such data is the Controller’s legitimate interest in ensuring the technical availability and integrity of the Website.
Cookies are small files stored on a visitor’s computer each time they visit the Website, as determined by the visitor’s browser settings. Some cookies are used to tailor and personalise content and advertising for the visitor, based on content they have previously viewed, thus making the Website easier and more convenient to use. More information about cookies and how to delete or manage them can be found at www.aboutcookies.org.
The Website uses cookies to collect the user’s IP address and browsing information and to remember visitor preferences. Cookies allow the Controller to track Website traffic and user interaction with the Website, which we use to analyse visitor behaviour and improve the Website. The legal basis for using cookies is the Controller’s legitimate interest in ensuring Website functionality, accessibility, and integrity.
Visitors can control and/or delete cookies at their discretion. More information is available at www.aboutcookies.org. Visitors can delete all cookies on their computer, and most browsers can be set to block cookies. Visitors can refuse cookies in their browser settings or at https://tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout. Blocking cookies may require visitors to manually adjust settings each time they visit the Website, and some services or functions may not work.
Statistical data about Website visitors is accessible only to those Controller’s employees responsible for analysing such data.
Unless otherwise stated, cookies are stored until the action for which they were collected is completed, and then they are deleted.
If the Website offers a forum or comment section, the visitor’s IP address and data provided by the visitor are stored. Cookies containing such data may be stored for one year for convenience (so the visitor does not have to re-enter it each time).

Provider

Cookie name

Purpose

Storage period

Google Analytics

_ga

Used to identify unique website visitors by assigning a randomly generated identifier (“Google Universal Analytics” cookie)

2 years from creation

Google Analytics

_gid

Used to identify unique website visitors (“Google Universal Analytics” cookie)

24 hours from creation

Google Analytics

_gat_UA-39952253-1

Used to reduce the amount of data recorded by Google when there is a high volume of users on the website (“Google Universal Analytics” cookie)

1 minute from creation





11. Third-party websites

We may cooperate with third parties authorised to place third-party cookies on our websites or in our services, applications, and tools with your consent. These service providers enable us to provide you with a better, faster, and safer website experience. Note that third-party cookies are subject to the third parties’ privacy policies, and we take no responsibility for these privacy policies.
The Website uses the “Facebook Pixel” tool. The purpose of using this tool is to personalise content and advertising for Facebook users. To learn more about Facebook’s privacy policy, click here: https://www.facebook.com/about/privacy/. You can also change your advertising settings in your Facebook profile.

12. Right to lodge a complaint with a supervisory authority

The data subject has the right to lodge a complaint with the supervisory authority – the Data State Inspectorate.
Documents may be submitted to the Data State Inspectorate by post, by e-mail (documents signed with a secure electronic signature), or by leaving them in the mailbox on the 1st floor at Blaumaņa iela 11/13, Riga. E-mails may be sent to: info@dvi.gov.lv.

13. Validity of the Privacy Policy

We reserve the right to amend and supplement the content of this Privacy Policy from time to time to clarify the description of how we process your data.
Therefore, we encourage you to review this Privacy Policy regularly to stay informed about the processing of your personal data on the Website.