There is a moment—just after the engine turns over – when a classic car reveals its soul. In a 1973 BMW 2002, that moment is unmistakable. The starter whirs, the engine catches with a mechanical eagerness, and the entire car settles into a living rhythm. It doesn’t hum in the clinical way of modern machines – it pulses, breathes, and speaks.
In my experience, the BMW 2002 is a soul-filling conversation.
Anyone who knows me well knows my deep affinity for BMW automobiles. I have owned and driven multiple generations of BMW design across model types, such as the Neue Klasse from the late 1960s, 3-series – 330xi, 5-series – 528i, 530i, 540i 6-speed M-sport, 545i, 550 xDrive, M550 xDrive (3rd Gen E28, 4th Gen E39, 5th Gen E60 & E61, 6th Gen F10 & F11, 7th Gen G30), 7-series 750 xDrive (6th Gen, G11 & G12 Carbon Core), 8-series M850i (2nd Gen, G15), and their range of X utility vehicles (4th Gen, G05, X5 4.4 xDrive CLAR Architecture)… indeed a long relationship with BMW engineering. On my very first visit to the BMW factory in Dingolfing, Germany, it became very apparent as to why the engineering stands out. An engineering heritage built on aviation beginnings and high-performance motorsport, these cars are centered around the driver.
I write this article to share my experience of owning one of these rare, hard-to-find Neue Klasse BMW classics. A 50+ year-old car that drives like magic, speeds down the highway like it was new. Effortless in its action, a joy to drive, a truly life-enriching experience.
A Car You Don’t Just Find – You Discover

As I found out very early in my search, the path to owning a BMW 2002 is rarely straightforward. These cars aren’t sitting on dealer lots waiting for impulse buyers. They are scattered across garages, tucked into collections, or quietly aging under covers, each one carrying decades of stories. Between finding one, matching VIN numbers, engine codes, chassis codes, writing to BMW for verification of authenticity, getting it evaluated, technically inspected, and most of all, getting it shipped… It’s a process – one filled with absolute excitement, trepidation, and joy.
Finding the right one requires patience, instinct, and a willingness to see beyond imperfections. When I finally encountered mine, a 1973 model that had survived the years with integrity, it felt less like a purchase and more like an introduction. The kind where you know, immediately, that this is going to be something meaningful.

The First Drive: A Different Language
Modern cars are fluent in ease. The 1973 2002 speaks a different language entirely.
I find the steering isn’t just a control, it’s more of an ongoing interaction, a dialogue. Every subtlety on the road translates through the wheel. The ’73 BMW 2002 has a 4-speed manual transmission, and the clutch requires commitment. The throttle responds to intent. And the gearbox, precise, mechanical, honest, rewards rhythm over force.
Taking it out early on a misty morning, for its first drive, was an experience. The air was moist. It was silent all around. All I could hear was the engine running like it was new. The tappets were audible upon a cold start. Then slowly the oil pressure built up and swirled through the engine, and the tappet sound quietened out. All I could feel was the road. Opened the windows, and a cool breeze filled the car.
The car transported me back in time. It literally took me back to the 1970s.

M10 – the Machine

Powered by BMW’s legendary M10 engine, the car doesn’t overwhelm you with speed. Instead, it invites you into the experience of driving itself. You begin to notice things- how weight transfers through a corner, how the engine note changes with load, how the car settles when you get everything just right. It does take a little getting used to any car, especially one that is truly meant to be driven. The low gear ratios are distinct when starting from a full stop.
You don’t simply drive the 2002. You learn from it.
The M10 engine is an inline four-cylinder that blends mechanical simplicity with robust engineering. Displacing 1,990 cc, the engine features a cast-iron block paired with an aluminum cylinder head and a single overhead camshaft (SOHC) valvetrain operating two valves per cylinder. With a bore and stroke of approximately 89.0 mm × 80.0 mm, the design strikes a balance between rev capability and torque production. In its typical carbureted configuration (often using a Solex 32/32 DIDTA), the engine produces around 100 horsepower at about 5,500 rpm and roughly 140 Nm (103 lb-ft) of torque near 3,000–3,500 rpm. The compression ratio, generally around 8.5:1 to 9.0:1 depending on variant, contributes to its smooth yet responsive power delivery, while its relatively long stroke helps provide usable low-end torque for everyday drivability.
What makes the M10 particularly compelling is not just its output, but its engineering resilience and adaptability. At least in my experience, carbureted engines have something different about them when compared to fuel-injection powered engines. The bottom end is notably overbuilt, with a forged crankshaft supported by five main bearings, enabling the engine to handle sustained loads and higher-performance tuning. The camshaft is chain-driven, contributing to durability over long service intervals, and the straightforward carburetion system makes tuning accessible and intuitive. Cooling and lubrication systems are equally robust, designed for reliability under varied driving conditions. This architecture proved so capable that BMW later used it as the foundation for its turbocharged racing engines, including Formula 1 variants that produced extraordinary power. Yet even in its naturally aspirated street form, the M10 remains a benchmark of mechanical honesty – in my opinion, an engine that communicates, endures, and rewards drivers who appreciate both its technical integrity and its timeless character.
The Ritual of Ownership

I am truly blessed to have been raised in a family where owning a car was never about just purchasing it and using it for point-to-point transportation. I grew up watching my Dad wash our cars, wax them diligently, shine the chrome on them, maintain them well at all times, treat them as part of the family, and have an enormous difficulty parting with any of them. During my childhood years, the first one or two cars he purchased were pre-owned. Multiple new cars came later. I saw that he gave every car the same amount of love and care. Over the decades, I have realized that I share many of the same traits: a deep passion for automobiles and their designs.
Owning a classic car like the BMW 2002 is not passive; I believe it is collaborative and participatory in the purest sense. The best way to participate is to truly be a part of the ownership experience – not outsource it. There is a zen-like feeling when you do this. Wax a car yourself, and you will notice every little detail in a car’s design.
Every drive begins with awareness. You listen more closely. You feel more deeply. There is a quiet ritual in checking the car, understanding its condition, and engaging with it on its own terms. Maintenance becomes less about obligation and more about stewardship.

The beauty in a BMW 2002 lies in its simplicity. Without layers of abstraction, the car invites you to understand it. Seen on the left is a Blaupunkt Frankfurt model radio with multi-band capabilities. The engineering is accessible, almost transparent. And in that transparency, you form a bond, based not just on admiration, but on comprehension.
Design That Refuses to Age
The BMW 2002 doesn’t rely on nostalgia – it earns its timelessness.
Often I just place a camping chair near the car, sit and observe the car. Nothing more than observe it.
Attributed to Giovanni Michelotti, the designer, its proportions are nearly perfect: compact, balanced, purposeful. The lines are clean, free of unnecessary ornamentation. There’s confidence in its restraint. It doesn’t try to impress – it simply is. Inside, the philosophy continues. Analog gauges. Clear sightlines. Controls that exist only where needed. It is an environment designed entirely around the act of driving – nothing more, nothing less.

The design of the BMW 2002 is a masterclass in restraint – an era when form followed function without compromise. Its compact, boxy silhouette is deceptively simple, yet every proportion feels intentional. The short overhangs, upright greenhouse, and balanced stance give the car a sense of agility even at rest. When I look at it from its side, the forward posture does carry a slight upward tilt relative to the rear end. Unlike many modern designs that chase visual drama, the 2002 achieves presence through clarity and proportion. It looks exactly like what it is: a lightweight, driver-focused sports sedan. At the front, the now-iconic BMW kidney grille sits confidently between two round headlamps, establishing a visual identity that would define the brand for decades. There is no excess, no aggressive vents or sculpted distractions, just clean surfaces and subtle detailing. Chrome accents are used sparingly, as decoration, where necessary. The result is a face that feels both approachable and purposeful, equally at home on a winding road or parked on a quiet street.

The cabin is built around the driver, with large, legible analog gauges and a dashboard that communicates only what is necessary. Every control has a tactile honesty, switches click with intention, and knobs turn with mechanical feedback. Since it is a chapter from cars were purely analog, there are no layers of abstraction, no digital mediation – just a direct interface between human and machine. The upright seating position and excellent visibility further reinforce a sense of control and awareness that modern cars often dilute. What makes the 2002’s design enduring is that it combines nostalgia with integrity. It reflects a time when engineering and design were inseparable, when aesthetics emerged naturally from purpose. Decades later, it still feels relevant because it does not compete with modern design, instead it transcends it
The Hofmeister Kink: A Signature in Steel

One of the most distinctive design elements of the BMW 2002 is the subtle yet unmistakable Hofmeister kink, the forward-angled bend at the base of the C-pillar. Named after BMW’s design chief Wilhelm Hofmeister, this feature is more than a stylistic flourish; it visually anchors the car, giving it a sense of rear-wheel-drive balance and forward motion even when standing still. This signature design element, a distinctive bend in the rear window pillar (C-pillar), is present on all 2-door coupe models of the “02” series, helping define the car’s iconic, sporty side profile.
On the 2002, the Hofmeister kink is executed with remarkable restraint. It doesn’t call attention to itself, yet once noticed, it becomes impossible to ignore. It adds a distinction to the car’s otherwise clean lines, reinforcing both its structural identity and its dynamic intent. Decades later, it remains one of BMW’s most enduring design signatures—a small detail that carries immense brand legacy.
What Modern Cars Forgot
For me, driving the 2002 forces a realization: somewhere along the way, car designers optimized away something essential. Today’s cars are extraordinary feats of engineering – safe, fast, efficient, intelligent. But in solving every problem, they have removed much of the engagement. The 2002, by contrast, leaves space for the driver in me. It requires attention. It rewards skill. It invites imperfection.
Driving the BMW 2002 is less about speed and more about sensation. The moment the car begins to move, you realize how unfiltered everything feels. There’s no electronic mediation, no artificial weighting. It brings a direct mechanical connection between driver, machine, and road. The steering is alive with feedback, constantly communicating surface changes, grip levels, and subtle shifts in balance. It’s not heavy, but it’s expressive, and within a few minutes you begin to trust it completely.
The power delivery from the M10 engine is linear and honest. It doesn’t surge; it carries a seamless response. You work through the rev range deliberately, matching engine note to road conditions, learning to anticipate rather than react. The manual gearbox reinforces this rhythm; each shift is an action that requires precision and rewards smoothness. There’s a cadence to driving the 2002, almost musical, where throttle, clutch, and gear selection come together in a kind of mechanical choreography. What stands out most is how the car handles transitions. Entering a corner, you feel the weight transfer clearly – front to rear, side to side – giving you time to adjust and refine your inputs. There is body roll, but it’s progressive and informative, not unsettling. The car communicates its limits early and honestly, encouraging you to explore them with confidence rather than fear. In that sense, the 2002 is both forgiving and instructive – a car that teaches you how to drive better the longer you spend with it. Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of the experience is the level of engagement. Even at modest speeds, the car feels alive. You don’t need to push it hard to feel connected; the joy comes from the interaction itself. In a world where performance is often measured in numbers, the BMW 2002 reminds you that the true essence of driving lies in feel, feedback, and flow.
The 4-speed manual in my 1973 BMW 2002 is a study in mechanical clarity. The ratios, approximately 3.76:1 in first, 2.02:1 in second, 1.32:1 in third, and a direct 1.00:1 in fourth, are spaced to keep the engine in its most usable band rather than chase outright speed. Paired with a typical final drive around 3.64:1, the car delivers roughly 30 mph in first, about 55 mph in second, 80–85 mph in third, and a top speed just over 100 mph in fourth, depending on condition and tune. These numbers aren’t about acceleration figures; they define the rhythm of the car – short enough in the lower gears to feel lively, yet long enough in third and fourth to make backroad driving fluid and continuous. The gearbox works in harmony with the M10 engine’s character, which produces around 140 Nm (103 lb-ft) of torque with a broad, usable curve. There’s enough low-end pull to move cleanly without constant shifting, but the real reward comes from working through the gears deliberately. Each shift feels purposeful – mechanical, precise, and satisfying – encouraging you to match revs and engage fully with the process. Rather than isolating the driver, the 4-speed invites participation; it turns even modest acceleration into an experience defined by timing, feel, and connection.
There is no buffer between you and the experience. And that is precisely the point.
The Imperfections That Matter
Of course, the 2002 is not without its quirks. It asks for care. It demands patience. It occasionally reminds you that it was built in a different era. But I feel that these are not flaws; they define the car’s character. They are what make the experience real. In a world where everything is designed to be seamless, the 2002 embraces texture. And in that texture, you find something increasingly rare: authenticity.
To understand the 1973 BMW 2002 is to accept that perfection, in the modern sense, was never the goal. This is a car from a time when machines carried the fingerprints of their design and use. The idle may wander slightly on a cold morning. The choke demands attention. The gearbox, when rushed, reminds you – firmly – that it prefers patience over haste. There are vibrations that modern cars would engineer away, sounds that today’s cabins would insulate, and behaviors that require interpretation rather than correction. And yet, these “imperfections” are not defects. They are feedback loops that draw the driver into a more attentive state. You begin to notice temperature, engine tone, throttle response, and road texture in a way that modern vehicles simply don’t require. The car doesn’t hide its condition; it communicates it. In doing so, it transforms driving from a passive act into an engaged, almost mindful experience. I don’t feel like I am just operating a mechanical ecosystem; I feel like I’m actually participating in it.
There is also an honesty in the aging process. The slight wear on the steering wheel, the subtle patina on the chrome, the mechanical feel of switches that have been used thousands of times – these are not signs of decline, but of continuity. Each imperfection carries history. Each quirk tells a story. In a world increasingly obsessed with the new, the flawless, and the disposable, the 2002 offers something different: durability with character.
Of course, this comes with responsibility. You learn to listen for changes, to anticipate needs, to maintain rather than ignore. But that responsibility deepens the relationship. The car rewards care with consistency, attention, and reliability. Over time, what might initially feel like inconvenience becomes something far more meaningful—a sense of stewardship over a machine that continues to live, evolve, and respond.
The imperfections of the BMW 2002 are what make it whole. They are what anchor the experience in reality, what keep the driver engaged, and what elevate the car from a product to a companion.
More Than a Car
Owning a 1973 BMW 2002 has become something far greater than a hobby. It is a reminder of craftsmanship, of engagement, of the simple joy of doing something well. ABSOLUTE POETRY.
It changes how you approach driving. It changes how you think about machines. And, in subtle ways, it changes how you relate to the balance between human skill and engineered systems. To sum it up, the BMW 2002 doesn’t just take you down the road. It brings you back to why you wanted to drive in the first place.
CP Jois
