Background
Alpina, or Alpina Burkard Bovensiepen GmbH & Co. KG to give the company its full title, is a factory endorsed manufacturer of high-performance BMWs. In fact, the quality of its work is so high that, in contrast to more tuning automotive firms, Alpina has been known to build its cars alongside regular production models on the BMW assembly line.
The B10 E34 you’re looking at here was designed and built for the customer for whom an M5 was a bit too common, a bit too mainstream; Alpina customers have always preferred to plough their own furrow, and the sort of person that would have chosen one of these over the (admittedly very, very good) production M5 is one of us.
Costing $3.2m in development costs, this bi-turbo version is based on the 535i but the changes were extensive: the six-cylinder M30 engine was stripped down and rebuilt with, among many other changes, new Mahle pistons, two Garrett T25 turbochargers and a Bosch variable boost control. Power rose from 208bhp to 355bhp, with torque rising by 150lb.ft to a whopping 384lb.ft, necessitating the installation of a Getrag five-speed gearbox to handle it.
Performance was, er, ‘improved’. The top speed was now in excess of three miles per minute at full chat and the B10 could pass the benchmark 60mph in under five and a half seconds.
As recent events have shown, power is nothing without control and Alpina didn’t stint here either. Alpina-specific springs and anti-roll bars were fitted plus Bilstein dampers on the front and Fichtel & Sachs self-levelling units at the rear. Huge front brake discs were fitted on the front, discs that were an inch larger than the ones BMW fitted to the M5. Alpina is nothing if not thorough.
Just 507 were built, which isn’t surprising given it cost twice the price of a factory M5. Still, no less an authority than Paul Frere of Road & Track wrote of it: “For me this is the car … I think this is the best 4-door in the world.”







