Here is the translation from the dealers website (seems it comes with good history file which is a big plus)
As description:
Alpina stands for an extremely successful, motor sport symbiosis with BMW, characterized by many remarkable successes, thanks to such great drivers as Stuck, Quester, Lauda, etc.
Especially the E9 Coupe's - as one is offered here - have made the 1970s unforgettable in the racing sport!
Yes such a BMW Alpina B2 did not simply buy "around the corner", no, you had to buy first a standard car at BMW buy and could then be customized at Alpina or in an Alpina branch according to its own ideas ,
Well, to our car:
Production year 1973 with the FIN: 2213317
Conversion Alpina B2 1975 apparently with Motorradfahrer "Schorschmeier" in its BMW branch in Munich.
- 3 double gasifiers
- 300 ° camshaft
- Cylinder head adjustment with 10,0: 1, 231 hp
- Sports gear
- Alpina 7 inch rims
- Alpina front and rear spoiler
- Alpina steering wheel
- at that time Recaro driver's seat
All changes are registered in the old German vehicle letter and prove this timely conversion. Extensive documentation includes, among other things, Papers from Alpina on technology, letter from BMW on the acceptance of the B2 engine compartment, and technical documents by Max Heidegger, which made the veteran test in Switzerland possible.
The E9 was extensively part-financed in 2010 and today is in a very good condition. History is widely known.
Let us summarize, an E9 B2 Alpina as a model of the beginnings of Alpina, no lightweight construction, but with just as good weight-performance ratio as an E9 CSL - but rarely as a CSL. Alpina estimates that there was no 100 B2. Not to forget, Alpina gave the initial ignition for the construction of the E9 CSL at BMW.
"The joy of driving" was at the time the advertising - in Switzerland it would have been "joy reigned".
Errors and errors excepted