Junkyard Find: 1983 BMW 528e

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

As Morning in America dawned during the first half of the 1980s, with finance-industry mavericks shaking down S&Ls while Ford Aerospace did the same to the U.S. Army with its antiaircraft version of the ED-209, BMW was in an excellent position to cash in on newly fashionable conspicuous consumption in the United States. Hitting our shores just in time for this was the E28 5 Series, which was available here for the 1982 through 1988 model years. Here's an example of the early E28, found in a Carson City boneyard recently.

The MSRP for this advanced Teutonic machine was $23,985, or about $77,139 in 2024 dollars.

That price was for the less powerful 528e; the hot-rod 535i listed at $28,985 ($93,220 after inflation).

The "e" in the designation for this car referred to the Greek letter eta (╖), used by engineers to represent efficiency. This is a stroked 2.7-liter version of the 2.5-liter straight-six, which was rated at 121 horsepower and 170 pound-feet in North American configuration.

The idea was that this engine would provide sufficient torque to be quick enough (by early-1980s standards) in real-world driving while helping BMW meet CAFE requirements.

A five-speed manual transmission was base equipment in the 1983 528e, but most American buyers paid the extra $775 ($2,493 in today's money) for a ZF three-speed automatic.

The interior was quite luxurious, 41 years ago, but the Nevada sun has given it a bit of rough handling.

We can assume that the interior didn't look like this until the car reached its fourth or fifth owner.

The detritus buildup indicates years of outdoor storage.

There was no need for BMW to rediscover performance in 1983.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

1983 BMW E28 in Nevada wrecking yard.

[Images: Author]

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Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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4 of 14 comments
  • AZFelix AZFelix on Aug 26, 2024

    The design of this era can be likened to that of a young teenager. The indications of future beauty are there but present in an awkward manner. The development in the following years present with improved (perhaps peak?) styling.

  • Redapple2 Redapple2 on Aug 27, 2024

    Sheet metal looks straight and clean. Almost like having a 40 yr old body in white waiting for the right guy with a project car.

  • Namesakeone It should be a name that evoques the wild west, that emphasizes the go-anywhere nature of how an SUV should be used. Something like a wild animal, maybe something like a horse. I've got it! How about . . . Mustang! Oh, wait. They already did that, didn't they?
  • Slavuta There Used to be Pontiac Trans Sport.... That "Trans Sport" part has a totally new meaning these days
  • 210delray You need to change the headline -- it's a 2025 model.
  • Jeff How about Aspire for a new subcompact crossover from Ford because it aspires to be bigger and its buyers would aspire for a better vehicle if they could afford it.
  • Jeff Carlos Travares wants to cut costs by 1/3. I don't see Chrysler or Dodge surviving too much longer especially since they are being literally starved for product. The success of the new Charger could extend Dodge a few more years but a failure might be a quick end to Dodge. I could see Stellantis moving more manufacturing for Jeep and Ram to Mexico which I believe will eventually be the only surviving brands of the old Chrysler. As for the Durango if it continues it will not be for too many more years it is an outdated product that I doubt will be redesigned especially when Jeep has a comparable product. Stellantis needs to address the high dealer inventory level by giving better incentives and low interest rates to clear excessive inventory.
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