WATCH: The legendary BMW 530 MLE lives on

The BMW 530 MLE was the most successful racing BMW 5 Series in history.


Following months of restoration, the legendary BMW 530 Motorsport Limited Edition (MLE) has finally been unveiled.

In December 2018, BMW South Africa announced that it would start restoring the BMW 530 MLE after years of searching and acquiring one of the only BMW 530 MLEs known to have endured beyond its 70s heyday.

Car number 100 came with a particular pedigree – it was owned by race driver and the racing 530 MLE’s team manager Peter Kaye-Eddie, and its engine and chassis numbers are a matching set. Unique in the world, the Rosslyn-produced vehicles saw weight-reduction measures that included bodywork and pedals drilled by hand, manual windows with no air conditioning, and Mahle wheels.

When BMW South Africa wanted to go racing in the mid-1970s, the company sought out famous racing driver and head of BMW motorsport Jochen Neerpasch. Shortly thereafter, two of the first-generation BMW 5 Series (E12) race cars were prepared to compete in the flagship Modified Production Series in South Africa. The BMW 530 MLE rolled up to the starting line in the Modified Production Series in 1976.

Fifteen wins from 15 consecutive starts followed, and BMW stamped its authority on the racing series with three championship titles in three years. The BMW 530 MLE was the most successful racing BMW 5 Series in history when it was retired in 1985.

To qualify for entry, however, BMW South Africa had to sell 100 road-going versions of this first-generation BMW 5 Series, known as the 530 MLE, to the public.

Developed by BMW Motorsport as a limited edition “homologation” model for South Africa, 110 units of the Type 1 were produced in 1976, while 117 versions of the Type 2 rolled off the production line at BMW Group Plant Rosslyn in 1977.

The six-cylinder engine was a factory tweaked version of the same motor found in the 3.0L, boasting figures such as 147kW, 277Nm, a 208km/h top speed and a 0 – 100km/h sprint time of 9.3 seconds. It proved to be an early step of BMW’s ventures into track-oriented cars for the road.

Video by Carlos Muchave.

(Compiled by Carlos Muchave.)

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