Tue, Aug 16, 2016
A BMW driven by the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll that was lost for nearly half a century before being found and meticulously restored will be one of the stars at the upcoming Concours d’Elegance in Pebble Beach, California.
The BMW 507 was driven by US musician Elvis Presley while he was doing his military service in Germany.
After that it disappeared for nearly 50 years and was believed to have been lost before returning to the limelight. After almost two years of exacting restoration work, BMW Group Classic is presenting the roadster for the first time in a public arena.
Restored to its original condition, it will be exhibited on August 21 at the Concours d’Elegance in Pebble Beach. The BMW 507 with chassis number 70079 will be on view for visitors to the popular classic car show exactly as it was when soldier Elvis Presley took delivery of the car December 20, 1958: with paintwork finished in feather white, the 150 hp V8 aluminium engine under the bonnet, centre-lock rims, black-and-white interior and a Becker Mexico radio.
“The opportunity to bring back the BMW 507 owned by the King of Rock ’n’ Roll to us here in Munich for purposes of restoration in accordance with the wishes of the previous owner, Jack Castor, was a dream come true for all those involved,” comments Ulrich Knieps, Head of BMW Group Classic. “This was an exceptionally fascinating project. The outcome is not simply a source of great pride to us. Jack would undoubtedly have been delighted by the outcome.”
In the summer of 2014, the exhibition of the unrestored discovery at the BMW Museum generated a great deal of excitement among classic car enthusiasts, but it also threw up questions: Was this really once Elvis’ BMW 507? And will it even be possible to transform this roadster back into a jewel of the 1950s?
‘IT’S NOW OR NEVER’
The condition of the two-seater really was a cause for concern. Although the original body parts and other components were virtually all present and intact, the roadster had lost its engine and gearbox. The rear axle was a replacement part of unknown origin, rust was eating away the floor assembly, the seats were worn and there was no instrument panel. However, the fascination of a rare and beguilingly beautiful automobile outweighed all the inadequacies and deficiencies, augmented by the memory of Presley and his greatest hits.
A project managed by BMW Group Classic succeeded in restoring the automobile. In-house experts and external specialists joined forces to carry out the work and the result defined new benchmarks for the restoration of a BMW 507.
THE BMW 507 OF THE ‘KING’
The BMW 507 has been one of the most exclusive and sought-after rarities in the history of the brand with just 254 automobiles being produced between 1955 and 1959.
Right after its world premiere at the Frankfurt International Motor Show in 1955, the two-seater penned by designer Albrecht Graf Goertz was hailed in the press as the “Dream from the Isar”.
Celebrity owners like Alain Delon, Ursula Andress and John Surtees contributed to the image of the roadster as a status symbol. However, no other automobile of this model is shrouded in mythology like the BMW 507 once owned by Elvis. This particular roadster was believed to have been lost for almost five decades. In fact, there was not even certainty about the chassis number of the car driven by the late ‘King’. There were also doubts about whether Elvis had ever transported the car back to the US after he finished his military service in Germany, and nobody knew anything about the subsequent ownership of the car.
All these puzzles have now been solved thanks to the experts at the BMW Group Classic Archives and American journalist Jackie Jouret, who works for “Bimmer” magazine in California. In 2006, she was already searching through contemporary reports for Elvis’s BMW and relevant literature going into the history of this model.
During the course of her work, she found out that the BMW delivered to Elvis in Germany was not brand new but had previously been used by racing driver Hans Stuck. Between May and August 1958, the racing driver known as the ‘Hillclimb Champion’ won a number of hillclimbs in Germany, Austria and Switzerland – in a white BMW 507 with chassis number 70079 and registration plate M–JX 800.
This roadster rolled off the assembly line on September 13, 1957 and a few days later was exhibited at the Frankfurt International Motor Show. As early as October 1957, Stuck presented the car at the London Motor Show and then drove the roadster through Belgium, where he presented it to King Baudouin, before motoring down to the Turin Motor Show.
In the summer of 1958, Stuck’s car won the automobile beauty competition in Wiesbaden and then played a role in the Bavaria film studio for the feature film ‘Hula-Hopp Conny’ with Cornelia Froboess and Rudolf Vogel.
This vehicle had been carefully serviced at BMW after every race, the engine had been upgraded and a new gearbox fitted when it ended up with a dealer in Frankfurt in the autumn of 1958. The young Elvis was 23 at the time, and he came along and decided to buy the car. Photos taken at the time show that export licence plates had already been fitted to the BMW 507. Later on it was given a registration from the US military that changed every year. This was part of the reason why subsequent identification of the vehicle proved to be complicated later on.
The experts from the BMW Group Classic Archives were only absolutely certain about its provenance when they came across the insurance proposal from December 1958 which contained the chassis number 70079 alongside registration of the keeper of the vehicle as Elvis Aaron Presley.
RADICALLY MODIFIED
Elvis used the BMW 507 to drive between his home in Bad Nauheim and the US Army Base in Friedberg. His female fans always kept a close eye on him and he was often mobbed by them. The paintwork of the roadster was frequently daubed with messages of love painted in lipstick but they were an embarrassment to Presley as a US soldier. A new livery in red solved the problem.
In March 1960, Elvis ended his military service in Germany. Back in America, he traded in the red roadster bearing chassis number 70079 with a Chrysler dealer in New York. The dealer in turn sold the car for $4,500 to radio moderator Tommy Charles.
Charles took the automobile to his home town of Birmingham in the state of Alabama where a very successful racing career began, although this move was very questionable when it came to the issue of authenticity. The BMW 507 was fitted with a Chevrolet engine in preparation for action on the race track. This took up so much space that parts of the front frame carrier had to be cut out. The gearbox and the rear axle, and the instruments in the cockpit were replaced.
Charles won a race in Daytona Beach/Florida with the radically modified roadster and he lined up on the starting grid in several more competitions before selling the vehicle in the course of 1963.
Two more changes of ownership followed and the car then went to California. Space engineer Jack Castor acquired the car in 1968 and he used it occasionally before deciding to put it into storage for a subsequent restoration. Castor was a passionate collector of historic bicycles and over the years he also amassed an impressive collection of classic automobiles in Half Moon Bay to the south of San Francisco. He got involved with several classic car clubs and delved into the history of the vehicles he had acquired.
PUMPKIN WAREHOUSE
Castor also put together a comprehensive dossier on his BMW 507. Meanwhile, the engineer had gone into retirement and one day he happened to see the article in Bimmer magazine.
Castor wrote to the author, told her about the BMW 507 with chassis number 70079 that he owned and invited her over to look at the vehicle. He was aware that he was the owner of the racing car driven by Stuck, but up to then he had only been able to speculate about a potential connection with Elvis. However, Jouret was absolutely certain about this issue. She accompanied Castor to a warehouse for pumpkins where the red BMW 507 was stored. “Jack had tied down its engine bonnet with ropes,” recalled the journalist. “It took some time until we actually got the engine compartment open and identified the stamped chassis number: 70079.”
Castor had already collected a large number of parts carefully stowed in boxes for the planned restoration of the roadster to its original condition. What he lacked was an appropriate engine and the necessary time to see the project through. However, things then started to happen. Jouret set up the contact with BMW Group Classic where new information about the identity of the car used by Elvis in Germany was being gathered. This allowed the facts that had been researched in the US to be confirmed.
Castor was not interested in making a fast buck out of the unexpected additional fame of his BMW 507. However, the contact with BMW Group Classic was strengthened. After several years and a number of discussions with the experts for restoring classic cars at BMW Group Classic, Klaus Kutscher and Axel Klinger-Köhnlein, an agreement was reached. Alongside the purchase of the vehicle by BMW Group Classic, it also included the authentic restoration of the car along the lines envisaged by Castor.
INTO THE WORKSHOP
In 2014 the car was shipped to Germany in a container, together with the spare parts collected by Castor. The first stop in Munich was the BMW Museum where the roadster was presented to an admiring audience in the special exhibition ‘Elvis’s BMW 507 – lost and found’. Work then began on restoration in the workshop of BMW Group Classic.
The vehicle was completely dismantled, a process which in this case took an entire week, rather than the two days that had been originally planned. Initially, the aluminium body was separated from the floor assembly made of sheet steel. This was the only way of retaining as much of the original material as possible. The paint was then removed from the floor assembly in an acid bath and from the body in an alkaline bath. The engine had already been removed and the remnants of the interior that remained had been set aside.
A lot of components had to be remanufactured from scratch because the stocks of original parts for the BMW 507 are limited. Traditional craftsmanship in the style of the 1950s was melded with high-tech production procedures of the modern world.
The instrument panel was newly cast on the basis of the original. The leather upholstery was created to precisely match the pattern shown in old photographs and catalogues.
When the seats were reconstructed, it proved possible to use the original steel subframe for the seats after all the rust had carefully been removed. A rubberised coconut mat was then drawn over the steel springs.
This natural material was already being used in the 1950s for series production of the BMW 507, alongside the overlaid felt and linen layers to make the seats as comfortable as possible.
Window winders and door handles were remanufactured in an advanced, modern 3D printing process based on the original dimensions. After producing a digital data set by three-dimensional scan of the original part, a facsimile was generated with the help of additive manufacturing and mirror finished afterwards. By contrast, the rubber seal for the tank cover was reproduced in a conventional manufacturing procedure.
The 3.2 litre V8 engine for the car was completely rebuilt from spare parts but it was not given an engine number on account of use of old and new components. The front frame carrier, which had been cut down at an early stage, also had to be reproduced in its original geometry and integrated in the floor assembly. The wooden nailing strip for fixing the soft top in place was also reproduced using materials and processing methods in keeping with the 1950s.
The car was repainted in its original feather white using a procedure that corresponds to the technology in use some 60 years ago. This enabled the excessive colour brilliance to be avoided which is considered desirable nowadays but is inappropriate for classic cars.
Castor had wanted to restore the roadster to the original condition it was supplied in back in 1958. However, his aspiration to be able to see the BMW through the eyes of the ‘King’ remained unfulfilled as he passed away at the age of 77 in November 2014.
The BMW 507 will be presented at Pebble Beach for the first time not simply as the automobile of the ‘King’, but also as the legacy of Castor and a masterpiece of BMW Group Classic.
The Concours d’Elegance in Pebble Beach is one of the final highlights of the Monterey Car Week in California, US, which started yesterday.
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