ISSUE #07 - English Edition

 

COVER STORY

SCHNITZER-BMW M1 TURBO

A DIFFICULT START — THE BMW M1 AND IST GROUP 5 MODELS
GREAT EXPECTATIONS — DRM 1981: THE FINAL TWO-CLASS AFFAIR 
BIG GUNS — THE COMPETITION OF THE GROUP 5 SCHNITZER BMW M1 
THE 1,000 HORSEPOWER MONSTER 
BACK TO THE ROOTS — Rebuilding the Gr. 5 Schnitzer M1 
“IT FELT LIKE SOMEONE WAS KICKING MY STOMACH...” — Hans-Joachim Stuck on racing the M1 Turbo

A difficult start

  • 1979-79LM3.1089967.jpg
  • 1979-S11_09.2603736.jpg
  • 1981-81_LeMans_MBD_05.367515.jpg

 

On paper, the Group 5 BMW M1 had all the ingredients needed to match the mighty Porsche 935 on the international stage. But it took until 1981, right before the Group 5 regulations became obsolete and the Group C sportscar era was about to start, for it to actually happen. 

A delayed start to production of the M1 road car meant that there were too few cars finished in time to be homologated for motorsport. In fact, it was only through special dispensation from Germany's national motorsport commission ONS that the Group 4 BMW M1 (built to Procar specifications) was allowed to compete in the Deutsche Rennsport Meisterschaft (the DRM). But in Division 1 for over two-litre cars, against the Porsche 935s, the power deficit was around 200 horsepower. At the ADAC Eifelrennen on the Nordschleife in April 1979, Marc Surer gave the M1 its racing debut – and against the more powerful and race-proven Porsche 935s and 934s managed just ninth place. Despite a lack of homologation – and thanks to special permits – there were various outings for M1s in the DRM in '79 and '80, with professional drivers such as Stuck, Lauda, Regazzoni, and Mass, and privateers such as Wolfgang Schütz, Sepp Manhalter, Franz Konrad, Walter Brun, and Ralf-Dieter Schreiber. 

The M1 also raced at Le Mans in '79, Hervé Poulain, Marcel Mignot, and Manfred Winkelhock finishing an impressive sixth outright after entering in the IMSA class. There should have also been a proper Group 5 M1 at Le Mans that same year, something that former managing director of BMW Motorsport GmbH Jochen Neerpasch remembers well: “We were already planning a Group 5 M1, through a joint project with March. Josef Schnitzer, under the direction of Paul Rosche, had developed a charged six-cylinder engine for the Turbo 3.0 CSL Coupé – and the plan was to use that motor in the Group 5 M1."

 

by Robert Weber

Photographs: LAT

Great Expectations

DRM 1981: The final two-class affair

  • 1981-DRM-1.jpg
  • 2011-05-18-SC-0026.jpg
  • 2011-05-18-SC-0033.jpg
  • 2012-08-22-SC-0011.jpg
  • 2015-11-12-SC-0025.jpg
  • 2015-11-12-SC-0041.jpg
  • 149435_810405NuerburgringDRM-Wollek-Stuck-nicot-064.jpg

 

On March 19, 1981 the 'usual suspects' of the DRM (Deutsche Rennsport Meisterschaft) gathered in the paddock at the Zolder circuit in Belgium for the first round of the series' 10th season. The usual suspects were the likes of the Schnitzer, Kremer, Zakspeed, GS and Joest teams. They were the ones left from the glory days. Others, like Loos, Max Moritz, and Grab had already gone. The factory teams from right at the beginning were gone too, and from the many international stars like Hezemans, Schurti, Stommelen, Peterson, Ickx, and Schenken, only a handful remained. What was once considered the best production car series in the world had become too expensive, too overwrought, and no longer relevant. The development of the increasingly finicky Group 5 cars meant the grids had shrunk, with just a few genuine front-running cars left. To enlarge the fields, a new class had been created a couple of years earlier; the 'Rennsport Trophäe' – the Racing Trophy – was essentially a race within a race, with a separate pointscore for drivers in Group 4 or Group 2 cars. It did create some interesting battles, with German touring car talents such as Selzer, Boller, Vogt, Henzler, Nussbaumer, and Wolf. But it really was a second class, in the shadow of the Group 5 competitors from Divisions 1 and 2. The DRM racing format really was becoming an out-dated model. 

The 1981 season actually highlighted the fundamental problem with the original two-class system (Division 1 and 2), and why it needed to be abolished. There had already been a decision to do so in principle, but a compromised formula could not be agreed on. So the existing system stayed in place, making 1981 the last season where the champion would be whoever scored the most points in either of the two Group 5-dominated divisions. 

Pre-season favourites for the title were the two Zakspeed Capri drivers, namely the 1979 champion Klaus Ludwig and Manfred Winkelhock, the reigning champion Hans Heyer in the Lancia, and Bob Wollek, who after a stint with the Loos team had returned to his spiritual home at Kremer. The crew at Zakspeed had developed a clever two-pronged strategy across the big and small classes, and the Capri was perfectly-suited for sprint racing. It was fast enough to win, and as reliable as an everyday workhorse. 

Competition for Ludwig in the 'small' class was coming from BMW and Lancia, and it was not to be underestimated, given the strong performances by the previous year's runner-up Stuck and reigning champion Heyer. In the 'big' class, Wollek was always a tough nut to crack as an opponent. And just where Stuck would stand in the Group 5 BMW M1 was an unknown. So, Winkelhock started the season in the 'big' Zakspeed Capri in the Division 1, while Ludwig went after the title in the small class.

 

by Uwe Mahla

Photographs: Ferdi Kräling

Big Guns

 

When it came to competing for the top spots in the 1981 German Racing Championship, the Schnitzer M1 had three main rivals; the Porsche 935s from Joest and Kremer, and the Zakspeed Capri. Both the Porsches and the Ford had the advantage over the newcomer M1 of having already been refined over several seasons. But on the other hand, the basic design of the BMW was perfect for Group 5 specifications. With its mid-engine concept (the motor sitting ahead of the rear axle), the car was theoretically better suited to the job at hand than the Ford and the Porsche. Considering the immense power generated by the 3.2-litre turbo engine, it was an important factor. The Capri and the 935 were front and rear engine designs respectively. While both had their engines moved as close to the middle of the car as their designs possibly allowed, their weight distribution still was not quite as good as that of the M1. 

Zakspeed's challenger was a product of ongoing and successful development of the space-frame Capri which started in 1978, and its potential had been clearly demonstrated in 1980 with six wins. Ford was so focussed on Ludwig winning the title that it developed a small class 2 Capri, with a 1426cc engine, almost 500 horsepower, and weight of just 885 kilograms. Zakspeed also developed an almost identical Capri for the larger class 1, with a 1745cc engine and 580 horsepower, weighing only 810 kilograms. That gave the 'big Capri' a weight advantage of around 220 kilograms over its opponents in the top division, with the larger displacement cars generally heavier. 

 

by Uwe Mahla

Photographs: Ferdi Kräling, Bilstein

  • 1981-Norisring-Capri-2.jpg
  • 2011-05-18-SC-0027.jpg
  • AM062012_powerslide_kremer-porsche_04-650x474.jpg

The 1000-horsepower Monster

The Group 5 Schnitzer BMW M1 Turbo built for the 1981 DRM

  • 1-10008.jpg
  • 2-M1-Turbo-Lubri-Team-001.jpg
  • 2c-810405HockenheimDRM-Stuck-nicot-076.jpg
  • 3-149441_810712SalzburgringDRM-Stuck-nicot-038.jpg

 

“We originally didn't give the BMW M1 project a high priority, although it obviously presented a fascinating challenge from a technical standpoint,” recalls Herbert Schnitzer. From the very first stroke of the pen on the design table, the exciting sportscar was the ideal base for a successful racing car – perfectly crafted for use in Group 4 Gran Turismo and Group 5 Special Production Car racing. Schnitzer explains: “It was a mid-engine coupé, and had good aerodynamics and a potent engine, the six-cylinder with the proven four-valve cylinder head and possibility to be turbo-charged – but it was a real challenge to build a flawless Group 5 racer.” 

For one, the time just wasn't right, as there were unexpected delays in building the 400 production cars needed for homologation. And secondly, Schnitzer's focus was on its 320 turbo DRM program, with Winkelhock in 1979 and Stuck in 1980. However, through running M1s in the Procar Series for the likes of Sepp Mannhalter, Willi Siller, and Peter Oberndorfer, the team was familiar with the M1. 

But later, the M1 came back into consideration for the Freilassing crew. “In 1980 we reached the end of development with the Group 5-spec BMW 320,” says Schnitzer. “Particularly in terms of aerodynamics, we were starting to fall behind Ford and Porsche.” 

The idea to build an M1 in Group 5 specification and take on the top class in the DRM first came to Herbert Schnitzer during qualifying at Hockenheim in April 1980. “The lap times started to tumble,” says Schnitzer. “Harald Ertl led the whole field with a 2m04s, and Hans Stuck was sure there was no way he could do that with our 320.” 

What really sold the Bavarians on the idea of a Group 5 M1 was practice ahead of the 1000-kilometre race at the Nürburgring. Driving a lightly-modified Procar M1 with around 480 horsepower, Stuck did a 7m40s lap – and then said: “If we fine-tune this car a little bit, I reckon we could even do a 7m30s.” Schnitzer: “That's when I thought that if somebody took a M1 and fitted a turbo, which would take the power to something like 700 or 750 horsepower, then Hans should be able to do a 7m30s lap at the Ring. And that would have been way faster than what the Porsche 935 was capable of at the time.” 

 

by Uwe Mahla

Photographs: Sammlung Schnitzer Motorsport / Franz Klinger, McKlein

“It felt like someone was kicking my stomach”

  • 2015-11-12-SC-0026.jpg
  • 149438_810628NorisringDRM-Stuck-kroe-800.jpg
  • 149439_810712SalzburgringDRM-Stuck-nicot-024.jpg
  • 149444_810712SalzburgringDRM-Stuck-nicot-049.jpg
  • RF8107_1.jpg

 

The background story to my time with that crazy M1 actually started at the final round of the previous DRM season at Hockenheim. That round decided whether it would be me or Hans Heyer who would be crowned champion – and I was the unlucky one who ended up in the barriers at the ultra-quick Ostkurve corner after a hard fight with Klaus Niedzwiedz. Game over – title gone! But as a team, it only made us stronger; the Schnitzers didn't say a single bad word about it. As talk of the M1 Turbo got more serious, and it was expected that BMW's racing director Dieter Stappert would support me in joining that program, I got confirmed as the driver. And what an adventure that was! The way the Schnitzer crew really knuckled down spurred me on even more. And when things got tricky in the short development phase, BMW, and Rainer Bratenstein in particular, were there to support us. 

The first thing I remember is the 1000 horsepower that we tuned up in practice. The thing had so much acceleration that it felt like someone was kicking my stomach. And the car had a bizarre phenomenon that we couldn't quite explain; when you were in top gear, and at the Salzburgring that was close to 190 mph, it would suddenly become completely silent inside the cockpit. It was like I was flying. It could have been due to the vibrations, it could have been an aero effect. Nobody knew for sure. But it was so quiet it was almost scary. 

As you'd expect, we had plenty of problems at the beginning. Still, I managed to finish on the podium with Bob Wollek and Jochen Mass at just the car's second race. It took a few weeks, and a lot of learning, for us to get right on the pace – and at the Norisring we really saw the car's potential. There we won in front of a sold-out crowd, and more importantly in front of the entire Porsche 935 brigade and even Manfred Winkelhock's miracle Capri. 

 

by Hans-Joachim Stuck

Photographs: Ferdi Kräling, McKlein

Back to the roots

  • 1-P1110279.jpg
  • 1c-P1120352.jpg
  • 2d-P1140100.jpg
  • 3_MG_0010.jpg
  • 3_MG_0033---Arbeitskopie-2.jpg
  • 3_MG_0070.jpg
  • 3_MG_0142---Arbeitskopie-2.jpg
  • 3_MG_0421.jpg
  • 3_MG_0424.jpg
  • 3_MG_0440.jpg

 

This year, the long-lost Schnitzer BMW M1 Turbo was restored to its former glory. Thanks to a complete restoration at its original birthplace – Schnitzer Motorsport in Freilassing, Bavaria – the only ever properly used M1 Turbo is ready to hit the track again. Truly extraordinary: the car came back into the family, as it were. Franz Klinger Junior – son of former Schnitzer mechanic Franz Klinger, the man who was instrumental in the original build of the car – took care of the restoration with a small team.

“It was Josef and Herbert Schnitzer who originally founded Team Schnitzer,” says current Schnitzer team manager Charly Lamm. “From the beginning of the 1970s, Franz Klinger was the chief mechanic at the team. He was a gifted craftsman, and the perfect compliment to the engineering ideas of Josef Schnitzer, who was tragically killed in a road accident in 1978.” 

“My father built this car for Schnitzer back in the day,” says Franz Klinger Junior, who himself has been part of the Schnitzer team since 1986. “That's why so much of my own passion went into the restoration of the M1.” 

After the 1981 DRM season had finished, Schnitzer only raced the M1 one more time. At Shah Alam, Malaysia, the car took part in a sports car event in 1983, although that was with a 3.5-litre normally-aspirated engine. After this, privateer racer Hans Holnburger from Miesbach, south of Munich, heard that the M1 was still with Schnitzer and potentially for sale. He decided to look into it. “I went straight down to Schnitzer,” he recalls. “I negotiated with Herbert Schnitzer, and he was ready to sell me the car.” 

Holnburger, a butcher by trade and passionate privateer driver, raced the car in the German STT series (Super Tourenwagen Trophy) until the 1990s, competing in a diverse field that included cars like the Audi quattro S1, Porsche 935, and the Group 5 BMW 320i. “Luckily, Holnburger bought all of the forms for the plastic parts as well,” says Klinger. “Seger & Hoffman had designed the bodywork of the Group 5 M1. We then took negatives of all the components and our bodywork specialist produced the parts. We obviously had to alter the rear section to fit around the intercooler and the intakes. During the restoration, we paid a lot of attention to make sure it was restored to its original state. For example, we had to re-shape the long front spoiler as it – like a number of details on the car – had been changed while Holnburger raced the car. The floor had also been changed, with a five-millimetre wooden plank rather than the original aluminium floor.” 

 

by Robert Weber

Photographs: Sammlung Schnitzer Motorsport, Walter Wilbert

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

  • Karl Ludvigsen on the Lotus 56 and Lotus 56B turbines
  • Eckhard Schimpf on Graham Hill
  • Jochen von Osterroth on the Targa Florio 1967
  • Event reports 43. AvD Oldtimer Grand Prix, Rolex Monterey Motorsports Reunion, Chantilly Arts & Elegance, Goodwood Revival
  • And many more!
  • AvD_OGP.jpg
  • Chantilly.jpg
  • Goodwood.jpg
  • Inhalt_1.jpg
  • Inhalt_2.jpg
  • Lotus_56B.jpg
  • M1_Entwicklung.jpg
  • M1_Gegner.jpg
  • M1_Gr.5.jpg
  • M1_Restaurierung.jpg
  • M1_Saison1981.jpg
  • M1_Saison1981_2.jpg
  • M1_Titel.jpg
  • Monterey.jpg
  • Schimpf.jpg
  • Targa.jpg