The final version of the famous “baroque-angel” saloon, that was introduced as the 501 in the early fifties using a tamed version the prewar 328 engine as propulsion. My uncle had one of those early ones and I remember that he used it during winter times to pull us on the sledge behind the car. (talking about road safety…).
The major improvement came when BMW installed the 2.6/3.2 litre (95/120 BHP) all alloy V8, that became an icon in itself and that reportedly impressed the GM engineers so much that they developed the small block along the same principles.
During its production span of 12 years many versions appeared, including cabriolets and coupes, and the chassis was also used for the 503 and the Bertone bodied 3200 CS.
Shown is a mint example of the final version of the limousine, the 3200 Super, where the V8 had reached an output of 160 BHP, 10 BHP more than the 507. Also shown is a 501V8.
I will always remember these cars as you could here them coming from a long way, because of a sort of penetrating whistling sound that the body produced. They where never able to fully compete with the contemporary Mercedes 220/300 but still almost 22000 examples of all versions were produced.