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1957 BMW Isetta 300 - Izzit An Isetta? It Is-And Possibly The World's Fastest

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Old 03-18-10, 01:06 PM
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Post 1957 BMW Isetta 300 - Izzit An Isetta? It Is-And Possibly The World's Fastest

Was reading Eurocar at B&N and saw this article...could not believe it...just superb.

http://www.europeancarweb.com/featur...300/index.html



1957 BMW Isetta 300 - Izzit An Isetta?
It Is-And Possibly The World's Fastest
March, 2010
By Isaac Mion
Photography by Isaac Mion

1957 Bmw Isetta 300 Hatch Open
Jim Anderson's 1957 BMW Isetta 300
For those used to flipping through these pages and finding a familiar make and model on each page, an introduction may finally be in order. This is the BMW Isetta 300... or more accurately, a heavily reworked version of one.

This quirky little rear-engine two-seater can trace its roots back to post-war Italy. Those with meager means generally got around on scooters and the like back then until Renzo Rivolta, a manufacturer of Iso S.p.A refrigerators, started making three-wheeled trucks. Iso debuted the first Isetta, (literally "little Iso") at the 1953 Turin Motor Show. The stats for this tin can with a motor weren't exactly devastating: Two-cylinder, two-stroke, 236cc motor; 50 mpg; 4.5 feet wide and 7.5 feet long; zero to 30 in 36 seconds and a 45-mph top speed.

While the performance may have been anemic, one particularly appealing aspect of the car seemed to be the mileage. A little gas mileage goes a along way. Especially when you're buying gas on the black market. At the time, BMW needed what today we might call "a beater car" as the 502 and 507 it had for sale at the time weren't really doing that.

1957 Bmw Isetta 300 Front
BMW acquired the Isetta in the autumn of 1954 and proceeded to completely redesign it with a more reliable 13-hp motorcycle engine, debuting the car in October 1956. Over the course of its life it sold over a hundred thousand in Germany. Many agree that BMW would not be here today if not for the success of this odd-looking, sometimes three-wheeled, yet inexpensive chariot.

Of course, the Isetta wasn't exactly a huge seller in the U.S. BMW exported about 8,500 Isettas here starting in 1957. Today approximately 1,000 remain. And you're looking at what could be one of the fastest in the world.

If anyone has petrol pulsing through his veins it's the owner of this revamped refrigerator, Jim Anderson. He started drag racing in high school at various tracks throughout Colorado at the helm of various muscle cars like 270-hp '57 and 290-hp '58 Corvettes, a '58 Nomad with 348 cubic inches, a 220-hp Chevy 150 police car, and a 425-hp '56 Chevy. After seeing this horsepower-heavy list you might think that he'd be the last to want to jump into a 900-pound car with as much horsepower as a riding mower. But that's exactly what he did with this very Isetta more than 50 years ago.

1957 Bmw Isetta 300 Driving
A little arithmetic will tell you that Anderson is no spring chicken, but take it from this reporter, he's a spritely chap with plenty of bounce in his step. While he had help with this build from a few other men, he did a lot of the work himself-and of course initiated the project in the first place. As we were going over some facts of the buildup in his office I couldn't help but notice the array of motocross trophies. One of them was for First in a seniors division won just three years ago. Like Tupac said, "Ride 'til I die."

Anderson lives on the very 15-acre spread that he bought 30 years ago, and this is where we photographed the Isetta. This is also where he worked on the car and where he lived when he bought it.

Actually, he didn't buy it. He swapped for it.

1957 Bmw Isetta 300 Seats
"About seven years out of high school I found the car at a gas station called Enco," Anderson says. "It had a tiger on the front and a tail sticking out of the gas tank. The logo read, 'put a tiger in your tank.' I traded a paint job on a 1956 Ford for it."

Anderson is by trade a housepainter but obviously possesses a number of other skills. Lucky for him, none of those skills include destroying the Isetta when he was younger.

"My cousin and I abused it by seeing if we could roll it in the gravel," he says. "Luckily we didn't get it done." He went on to mention how he lifted the car up by himself to assess the damage but nearly tipped it over.

As other more powerful vehicles came his way, Anderson put the little stunt buggy away for a while. He'd almost forgotten about it until about 15 years ago when he was chasing down a wolverine on his property and opened up one of the garages to see the humble BMW.

"At that point I tried to putting in a Kawasaki 1000 motor but had trouble getting the clearances right," he says. Frustrated, he put the little Iso back to bed. Enter two key players, fabricator Don Gacceta and machinist Dwight Hoelscher. Together these two spent more than a year building the frame.

"The biggest challenge was keeping the car in proportion and within the wheelbase," says Gacceta. "But it came out better than anyone expected."

1957 Bmw Isetta 300 Fj1200 Yamaha Motor
While Hoelscher and Gacceta also mentioned that there were numerous difficulties constructing the frame, another obstacle was getting the tiny tin can to go in reverse. The Isetta is designed to nose into a tight parking space. Just pull in and get out the front. So of course you need a reverse gear to get out of that spot. By now the previous motorcycle motor had been replaced with a 140-hp '97 FJ1200, but that didn't come with reverse either. In order to back out of this tight spot they wound a high-torque starter motor backwards, then welded it to the brake rotor and turned it down on the lathe so it would float between the calipers. It's shadetree mechanic engineering at its finest, and while the operation is as a little jerky, it does the trick. Gacceta and Hoelscher's hands didn't stop at the reverse application. Take a look at the fully refurbished interior by F&H Auto Upholstery and you'll see the gauge panel mounted on the side by Gacceta and the Grant adapter for the steering wheel by Grant Hoelscher. Look even closer and you'll see a radio in the engine bay.

All four corners of the body had to be "stretched" to accommodate the various suspension modifications, which include another piece of top engineering, the cantilevered front suspension. This type of Formula-esque kit may be just enough to justify the graphics. While they see cartoonish at first, they represent the original spirit of Tony the tiger and belie the Isetta's potential handling characteristics in Anderson's desired theme of Sidewinder/Snakebite.

1957 Bmw Isetta 300 Suspension
There have been stories that the Isetta was used to sneak short-statured people out from behind the Iron Curtain. Legend has it one woman burned her arm on the exhaust and cried out just as she approached the checkpoint.

Her fate was sealed, but this Isetta may have a long life of speed records ahead of it from the sound of Anderson's claims.

"This car is the fastest stock body street legal BMW Isetta in the world," he says. "The speedometer is GPS so it is 100 percent correct. I've had the car up to 80 mph and it's a little worrisome, but the handling is good. Once you hit 100 it could be a problem. And at this time 150 will probably need another driver. One with lots of life insurance."

Watch this space for verification of Anderson's record. With the weather as it is in Colorado it may not become official until late spring. But until then keep your eyes on your ankles. This snake bites.

1957 BMW Isetta 300
Chassis
Modified BMW Isetta with 56-inch wheelbase

Engine
1989 1200cc FJ1200 Yamaha motorcycle motor. HiTorque starter backwards-wound for reverse, K&N style air filter, Supertrapp exhaust

Suspension
Reclined cantilever front by Dwight Hoelscher, live axle rear, custom made four-link rear ladder bar, front and rear panhard bar, adjustable AFCO coilover springs

Brakes
Wilwood calipers, 10.25-inch rotors (f), 10.75-inch rotors (r), Wilwood master cylinder

Wheels & Tires
Weld alloys, 6x13 (f), 7x13 (r) Sumitomo, 175/50 (f), 205/60 (r)

Exterior
All four corners stretched, Sidewinder/Snakebite graphics, Harley Davidson Tri Bar headlights

Performance
Peak Power: 150 hp @ 9000 rpm
Peak Torque: 70 lb-ft @ 7000 rpm
0-62 mph: 3.5 sec. (est.)
Top Speed: 150 mph (***** limited)
 
Old 03-18-10, 01:58 PM
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Faymester
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lol, those things are so funny ... this one is nothing to laugh at to be sure though. I can't help but wonder what it's like to ride in / drive it.
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Old 03-18-10, 02:56 PM
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Reverse staggered!

like my car
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Old 03-18-10, 06:44 PM
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Somehow, I think a motorcycle would be safer.
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Old 03-18-10, 07:37 PM
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mmarshall
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Like many people, I bust out laughing whenever I see an Isetta, or a picture of one. It's one of the most hilarious automotive designs ever done, along with the Messerschmitt KR series.



On a more serious note, hoever, it has to be remembered that both of these cars were developed in 1950s-era Europe, with very expensive gasoline in very short supply, as the area was still rebuilding from the ruins of World War II. Modern high-tech engineering methods had not yet been developed for enhancing fuel mileage, so, in most cases, it had to be done by making economy cars as small and light as possible......yes, like the Isetta and KR200.
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Old 03-18-10, 07:40 PM
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That's gotta be a first, Mike. I've seen a fair number of Isettas (and can remember some as a young boy), but never one like that, and with those type of wheels.

If it really does have 150 HP, it would very likely indeed be the world's fastest Isetta...or close to it, even with only 70 ft-lbs. of torque. The 3.5 second 0-60 time (if correct) leaves little arguement for that.....that's up in Ferrari, Lambo, Corvette ZR-1, and Porsche turbo territory.

Although the article doesn't give the original HP in the late 1950's (it does give the 236 CC displacement), if my memory is correct, it was around 12 HP...same as the earliest French Citroen 2CV. (The 45-MPH top speed sounds about right.....with a person my size driving, it probably wouldn't even do THAT)

Last edited by mmarshall; 03-18-10 at 07:51 PM.
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Old 03-18-10, 08:51 PM
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