BMW Isetta 250 (1 G.) `1955 - Квадрицикл (Германия) | |
HW100 - 45000
UAW55 - 105000 RRW100 - 175000 PKRR - 7500 |
BMW Isetta (Germany)
The BMW Isetta widely differed from the Iso model. Although the major elements
of the Italian design remained intact, BMW re-engineered much of the car, so
much so that none of the parts between a BMW Isetta Moto Coupe and an Iso Isetta
are interchangeable. BMW changed the powerplant to a one-cylinder, four-stroke,
247 cc motorcycle engine of their own manufacture which generated 12 PS (8.8 kW).
The first BMW Isetta appeared in April 1955. In May 1962, three years after
launching the conventionally modern-looking BMW 700, BMW ceased production of
Isettas. A total of 161,728 units had been built.
In the 1990s, the BMW Isetta had garnered a resurgence through the television
show Family Matters, in which one of the main characters, Steve Urkel (Jaleel
White), drives a 1960 BMW Isetta.
BMW Isetta 250
While it retained the "bubble window" styling, it differed from the Italian
model in that its headlamps were fixed separately to the sides of the bodywork
and it carried the BMW badge below the windscreen. The car was also redesigned
to take a modified version of the 250 cc four-stroke engine from the BMW R25/3
motorcycle and the front suspension was changed. The single-cylinder generated
12 PS (8.8 kW) at 5800 rpm. The crankcase and cylinder were made of cast iron,
the cylinder head of aluminium. However, the head was rotated by 180° compared
with the motorcycle engine. The twin-bearing crankshaft was also different in
the Isetta power unit, being larger and featuring reinforced bearings. One of
the reasons for this was the heavy Dynastart unit which combined the dynamo and
self-starter. The fuel mixture was provided by a Bing sliding throttle side
draft motorcycle carburetor. In addition to further changes of detail, the BMW
engineers enlarged the sump for installation in the car and cooled the engine by
means of a radial fan and shrouded ducting.
The power train from the four-speed gearbox to the two rear wheels was also
unusual: fixed to the gearbox output drive was something called a Hardy disc,
which was a cardan joint made of rubber. On the other side of it was a cardan
shaft, and finally a second Hardy disc, which in turn was located at the
entrance to a chain case. A duplex chain running in an oil bath led finally to a
rigid shaft, at each end of which were the two rear wheels. Thanks to this
elaborate power transfer, the engine-gearbox unit was both free of tension and
well soundproofed in its linkage to the rear axle.
In Germany, the Isetta could even be driven with a motorcycle license. The top
speed of the Isetta 250 was rated as 85 km/h (53 mph).
The first BMW Isetta rolled off the line in April 1955, and in the next eight
months some 10,000 were produced.
1955 BMW Isetta 250, BMW Museum, Munich, Germany
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