Car Chat General discussion about Lexus, other auto manufacturers and automotive news.

2011 BMW Alpina B7 Full Test

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 01-13-11, 04:33 AM
  #1  
rdgdawg
Pole Position
Thread Starter
 
rdgdawg's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Lake Country, WI
Posts: 2,794
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Default 2011 BMW Alpina B7 Full Test

Dear God,
If we can ever work out that Lottery prayer, I would like to own one of these...

http://www.insideline.com/bmw/alpina...full-test.html

2011 BMW Alpina B7 Full Test-alpina.jpg

2011 BMW Alpina B7 Full Test
More of Everything

By Michael Jordan, Executive Editor, Edmunds.com | Published Jan 13, 2011

So Andreas Bovensiepen, the guy who runs Alpina, is wheeling the 2011 BMW Alpina B7 and he's just finished telling us that this car is all about luxury.

In the next moment we're hurtling into Turn One at Infineon Raceway in 4th gear, bending left up the hill and under the bridge and then straightening the car out for the short braking zone before the right-hander at the crest. Now we start sliding to the right, crossing the crest at Turn Three where the big curb can pitch the car out into the dirt bank beyond.


We're doing this in a 4,686-pound sedan with laurel-wood trim on the dash, you understand. Right then it becomes clear that Alpina's idea of luxury might be a little different from what you might think appropriate — or even possible.

Getting Serious About America
We are in Sonoma, California, to spend a little more time with the 2011 BMW Alpina B7 than we were able to get at the Monticello Motor Club for our First Drive. Alpina has long been the BMW equivalent of Mercedes-AMG, but it has been more like an engineering company than a purveyor of flashy wheels. Now the Bavarian company is finally getting serious about the U.S. market and it will import 1,000 examples of the BMW Alpina B7 between 2010 and 2011 through BMW dealers.

Burkhard Bovensiepen put Alpina on the map clear back in 1961 when he slapped a dual-carburetor setup from Weber on the BMW 1500 sedan. Soon enthusiasts were lining up at the door and Alpina became BMW's partner for specialty motorsports projects, like the 1972 BMW CSL 3.0 racecar. It's never looked back since.

Alpina Burkhard Bovensiepen GmbH is still in Buchloe, a little town far out in the Bavarian countryside southwest of Munich, where the girls still keep a traditional dirndl in the closet for special occasions. The corporate mailbox even remains in the original typewriter factory of the 1930s, though it's surrounded now by buildings where 180 people engineer the 1,000-1,500 Alpinas that are produced at its factory every year. But ever since Andreas Bovensiepen returned from seven years spent as an engineer with BMW to lead his father's company, Alpina has been relentlessly modernizing.

Infineon Raceway sloshes you this way and that as if you were the only cocktail olive in a very large jar.
Andreas Bovensiepen is particularly proud of the three transient dynamometer cells that have been created, which he hopes will help his company keep up with the rapid changes in air emissions regulations. The twin-turbo 4.4-liter V8 under the 2011 BMW Alpina B7's hood is a point of pride with him, as it's a 500-horsepower representation of what his company can do. This is no quick-and-dirty hot-rod motor with a reflashed ECU. After all, these are German engineers — relentlessly methodical.

The Pressure To Perform
The Alpina recipe for the B7's V8 starts with Mahle pistons that deliver a compression ratio of 9.2:1 and a pair of Garrett turbos with larger 44mm outlets. With 14.7 psi of boost, the engine now delivers 500 hp at 5,500 rpm and 516 pound-feet of torque at 3,000-4,750 rpm. Alpina's typically meticulous engineering includes new intercoolers with 35 percent more surface area, plus an additional radiator so the car can withstand the higher temperatures of the Mideast. Bovensiepen is also proud to note that the engine (like the car itself) is built right on the BMW assembly line in Dingolfing, which helps keep down the cost.

This engine certainly does the business on the Edmunds test track. The 2011 BMW Alpina B7 gets to 60 mph in 4.5 seconds with the traction control disengaged (4.3 seconds with 1 foot of rollout like on a drag strip), and the quarter-mile comes up in 12.7 seconds at 111.6 mph. It gets away from the starting line effortlessly and seems to accelerate harder the faster it goes. To cope with the power, the B7 carries the transmission of the BMW 760i.

The brakes from the 760i are also onboard, and the combination of their huge thermal capacity plus the enormous Michelin PS2 tires (245/35R21 in front and 285/30R21 in the rear) makes for prodigious stopping power. The B7 just shrugs off each stop with complete fade-resistance, coming to a halt from 60 mph in an amazing 107 feet.

Driving in the Real World
As we drove across the northern fringe of Sonoma county out to the rugged Pacific coast, the B7 really didn't feel much different from a conventional 7 Series. But as Bovensiepen points out, this is much harder to accomplish than it seems, since the B7 wears 21-inch examples of Alpina's famously lightweight, 20-spoke wheels (which also incorporate the air valve into a space beneath the center cap). By dispensing with run-flat tires, he says, the B7 is able to deliver the steering response of a high-performance car with its 21-inch Michelins, yet maintain the ride comfort of a 7 Series on 18-inch tires.


The B7 certainly doesn't feel like the usual motorsports monstrosity developed on the Nürburgring, yet Bovensiepen notes that his experience there as a racing driver (he won the Nürburgring 24 Hours overall in 1998 and has been a class winner three other times) has taught him that tires do their best work when they're on the pavement, not in the air. That's why he prefers progressive suspension rates, something he learned as a suspension engineer while developing the BMW Z8.

In Germany, an Alpina is thought of as executive transportation for long-distance commuting, so it must maintain its civilized nature. The fact that the B7 is available with all-wheel drive just like the new-generation 7 Series is part of this car's programming for real-world travel. No wonder our drive to Nick's Cove in Inverness, right on the shore of the long bay that defines the Point Reyes National Seashore, seemed so undramatic — aside from having 500 hp at our command, of course.

Doing That Track Thing
And of course the next day, we're hammering this car around Infineon Raceway and it hardly seems like a luxury car at all. Once you dial the chassis calibration to Sport+, the transmission shifts so quick and hard that it can be unpleasant, while the chassis maintains an evenly balanced poise even when the Michelin PS2s get hot, something you really notice in the Turn 1-Turn 3 combination, which sloshes you this way and that as if you were the only cocktail olive in a very large jar.

Bovensiepen is keen to point out that the car's goodness comes from engineering the mechanical package first, then overlaying it with the electronic safety net that everyday drivers expect. For example, the Alpina-calibrated stability control lets you skate the tires around as long as your inputs are smooth, but as soon as something happens abruptly, the electronics pull your leash short. It's a very sophisticated approach, one that encompasses the whole car.


The 2011 BMW Alpina B7 certainly puts up good handling numbers on the Edmunds test track. Around the skid pad, the B7 grips to the tune of 0.90g, plus its Alpina-tuned stability control lets it achieve this number with the stability control engaged. Nearly the same thing is possible in the slalom, where the car does 68.5 mph with the stability control disengaged and 68.1 mph with the system engaged.

Racing to Success in America
Alpina has been a long time coming to the U.S. While Burkhard Bovensiepen of Alpina and Hans-Werner Aufrecht of AMG are contemporaries (Bovensiepen's BMW 2800CS Alpina won the European touring car championship in 1970, while Aufrecht's AMG-prepared Mercedes-Benz 300 SEL 6.3 made his company's reputation by winning the 1971 touring car event at Spa-Francorchamps), AMG has had far greater commercial success in the ensuing decades.

Apparently Alpina was reluctant to commit to the quantity of cars that BMW dealers in the U.S.A. were eager to get and didn't want to undertake the expensive transformation of the company that would have been required. And it's useful to remember that AMG only acquired its sizable influence after Mercedes bought into the company in 1990, and then only because it lacked the equivalent of BMW's M Division.

Now that BMW can back up Alpina with its own distribution, financing and warranty, the Buchloe company's fortunes might be changing. And with the 2011 BMW Alpina B7, it has created something unique — a fast car that delivers the pinch of BMW M cars with an exquisite sense of balance and poise. It's not just more power; it's more of everything.

The manufacturer provided Edmunds this vehicle for the purposes of evaluation.
rdgdawg is offline  
Old 01-13-11, 05:59 AM
  #2  
passnu2
Lexus Fanatic
iTrader: (33)
 
passnu2's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: .....
Posts: 13,958
Received 8 Likes on 8 Posts
Default

Dear Russ,

If you ever work out that lottery prayer can you find it in your heart to get 2 and give one to Me

passnu2 is offline  
Old 01-13-11, 06:10 AM
  #3  
rdgdawg
Pole Position
Thread Starter
 
rdgdawg's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Lake Country, WI
Posts: 2,794
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Default

Originally Posted by passnu2
Dear Russ,

If you ever work out that lottery prayer can you find it in your heart to get 2 and give one to Me

Yes Mike... since you asked first... but that's it... if everyone asks for (fill in blank here) then I won't have money for gas to drive it or a garage to put it in. God would want me to help those less fortunate BUT be frugal/prudent nonetheless... I will not argue this point.

I hope everyone (on CL, family, "relatives", stalkers, social networking psychos, fill in blank here) understands

God Bless
rdgdawg is offline  
Old 01-13-11, 08:33 AM
  #4  
rominl
exclusive matchup

iTrader: (4)
 
rominl's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Lovely OC
Posts: 81,670
Received 184 Likes on 143 Posts
Default

i just hope russ irons down his choices soon j/k
rominl is offline  
Old 01-13-11, 08:35 AM
  #5  
LexFather
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Lovely flagship. Alpina is the only way I could drive the last 7 series, they somehow saved that car!
 
Old 01-13-11, 09:15 AM
  #6  
LIMS407
Pole Position
 
LIMS407's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: FL
Posts: 2,246
Received 6 Likes on 6 Posts
Default

i seen few black ones for sale on the web but never the blue one,,,
LIMS407 is offline  
Old 01-13-11, 09:18 AM
  #7  
rdgdawg
Pole Position
Thread Starter
 
rdgdawg's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Lake Country, WI
Posts: 2,794
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Default

Originally Posted by rominl
i just hope russ irons down his choices soon j/k
Then what... bore CL? NEVER

Side note- after looking like our project was dead there are faint signs of life...
rdgdawg is offline  
Old 01-13-11, 09:58 AM
  #8  
rominl
exclusive matchup

iTrader: (4)
 
rominl's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Lovely OC
Posts: 81,670
Received 184 Likes on 143 Posts
Default

Originally Posted by rdgdawg
Then what... bore CL? NEVER

Side note- after looking like our project was dead there are faint signs of life...
wtf? huh? no more?

personally i am sure the b7 is a beast to drive, but i am just not a big fan of it
rominl is offline  
Old 01-13-11, 10:24 AM
  #9  
bnizzle87
Lexus Fanatic
 
bnizzle87's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: CA
Posts: 5,595
Received 60 Likes on 51 Posts
Default

i've seen a few of the alpinas on the roads, and they are incredible inside and out.
bnizzle87 is offline  
Old 01-13-11, 10:32 AM
  #10  
rdgdawg
Pole Position
Thread Starter
 
rdgdawg's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Lake Country, WI
Posts: 2,794
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Default

Originally Posted by rominl
wtf? huh? no more?
Non-stop drama... tick, tick,tick...

personally i am sure the b7 is a beast to drive, but i am just not a big fan of it
BOT- a pure driving machine, I'd get it with AWD here in WI, but I have loved this car (just like the AM V8V) since I first saw it!!! As stated a while back, dealer had sold one and owner took possession before I could see it. I've seen old B7s, but the new one has upped the ante...

IMHO- If driving the flagship of one of the Bavarians is the goal (or any flagship sedan) this would be the one I would drive... no contest
rdgdawg is offline  
Old 01-13-11, 10:36 AM
  #11  
askhao
Driver School Candidate
 
askhao's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: NY
Posts: 38
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Default

that would make an awesome daily driver. super comfortable, and has the power when you need it!
askhao is offline  
Old 01-13-11, 10:52 AM
  #12  
CDNROCKIES
Lexus Champion
 
CDNROCKIES's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Alberta
Posts: 3,054
Likes: 0
Received 1 Like on 1 Post
Default

Originally Posted by 1SICKLEX
Lovely flagship. Alpina is the only way I could drive the last 7 series, they somehow saved that car!
Originally Posted by rominl
personally i am sure the b7 is a beast to drive, but i am just not a big fan of it
Agreed.

To similiar to the 3/5 series. Interior is just about the same with a few upgrades. Personally, I still much prefer the Panamera or S-class over this. Heck, I'd likely look at the LS, XJ or Quattroporte before this. Can't really explain it, but I just don't find the 7 series that "special".
CDNROCKIES is offline  
Old 01-13-11, 11:48 AM
  #13  
INHOCJP
Lexus Champion
 
INHOCJP's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: California
Posts: 2,639
Received 2 Likes on 2 Posts
Default

Beautiful car. But I still prefer the S63 over the Alpina.
INHOCJP is offline  
Old 01-13-11, 03:23 PM
  #14  
dunnojack
Lexus Fanatic
 
dunnojack's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: californication
Posts: 6,806
Likes: 0
Received 6 Likes on 6 Posts
Default

God doesn't grant lottery winnings.

Satan does.

You're praying to the wrong dude.
dunnojack is offline  
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Hoovey689
Car Chat
1
09-12-11 08:53 PM
lfeharri
Car Chat
36
07-27-11 11:37 PM
Hoovey689
Car Chat
17
10-14-10 11:49 PM
LexFather
Car Chat
36
07-14-10 10:34 AM



Quick Reply: 2011 BMW Alpina B7 Full Test



All times are GMT -7. The time now is 11:31 AM.