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The Isetta Owners Club of Great Britain Ltd.
OFFICERS & COMMITTEE
CHAIRMAN
Chris Skepper
6B High Street, Little Paxton, St. Neots Cambs. PE19 6HA
email:
[email protected]
TREASURER
Bob Crompton
1 North View, Ryhope, Sunderland. SR2 0PE
email:
[email protected]
SECRETARY
Joanne Todd
108 Clee Road, Grimsby. DN32 8NX
email:
[email protected]
MEMBERSHIP SECRETARY
Ian Parris
1 Winston Close, Nether Heyford, Northampton. NN7 3JX
email:
[email protected]
GAZETTE EDITOR
Ian Parris
1 Winston Close, Nether Heyford, Northampton. NN7 3JX
email:
[email protected]
USED SPARES MANAGER
Mike Ayriss
29 Oak Drive, Syston, Leicester. LE7 2PX
email:
[email protected]
TECHNICAL ADVICE
Lee Turnham
Mike Ayriss
70 Prebendal Avenue, Aylesbury,Bucks. HP21 8LQ
email:
[email protected]
29 Oak Drive, Syston, Leicester. LE7 2PX
email:
[email protected]
NEW SPARES MANAGER
Lee Turnham
70 Prebendal Avenue, Aylesbury,Bucks. HP21 8LQ
email:
[email protected]
ARCHIVE/RE-REGISTRATION
and REGISTRAR Dave Watson
c/o Ridgeway Furniture Ltd, Unit 21a Chartmoor Road, Leighton Buzzard,
Bedfordshire. LU7 4WG email:
[email protected]
WEBMASTER
Ian Parris
1 Winston Close, Nether Heyford, Northampton. NN7 3JX
email:
[email protected]
COMMITTEE
Jeff Todd
108 Clee Road, Grimsby. DN32 8NX
email:
[email protected]
TECHNICAL ADVICE 600’s & 700’s Millstonford Farm, West Kilbride, Ayrshire. KA23 9PS
Alastair Lauchland
email:
[email protected]
Website www.isetta.org.uk
Isetta World www.facebook.com/groups/267159327250111
I.O.C.O.G.B SUBSCRIPTION RATES
United Kingdom (and members £18.00
receiving an emailed gazette)
Europe
£21.00
Rest Of World
£25.00
Registered Office:
Annual Subscription payments should be made by PayPal to
[email protected] alternatively via the Online Spares
System by purchasing an Annual Membership Subscription
(Renewal Only) item or by Cheque to the Membership Secretary
Ian Parris.
For Standing Orders:- Sort Code 09-01-56 Account No.
00744809 to Isetta Owners Club of Great Britain Ltd.
Ref. Your Name.
Geoff Davey ACMA, 46 High Street, Gargrave, Nr Skipton. BD23 3RB
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Company Reg. No. 2527362
Editors Bit
I have treated you all to 20 pages this time but don’t get complacent, I have
absolutely nothing going forward for the summer edition. If you want a
gazette next time put pen to paper or save some of this gazette until June.
As you should know, I am also the membership secretary and I remind
members several times to pay before the latest deadline of 31st January or
get disabled from using the spares service. I still get a few complaints that
members can’t renew their membership way into February using the online
spares system. I can’t win can I?
Anyway, a new rally year is about to start and I am looking forward to getting
lots of test miles on my latest restoration. I only managed about 10 miles
before I had to put it to bed for the winter. It is blocked in by my motorhome
which is under it’s covers until 1st April.
If it all shakes down OK I a would like to take it to North
Wales where there is a ‘Drive it Day’ rally in late April, so
fingers crossed.
Ian Parris
Chairman's Chat
Well here we are the start of the show and rally planning, getting our cars
serviced and ready. I still haven’t confirmed my electrics burnout has been
sorted but that is the next job on my list if I can hide the other list monitored
by my wife. Hope everyone had a good Christmas and New Year I know it
was a week or two off for Lee with new spares but he has been unimaginably busy for the last two months with record orders so please be patient if
your order is not sent out by return. Mike is still working hard on replica
spares and is currently looking at rear bumper brackets and RHD door
catch plate… if anyone can help him out with a set of brackets or door catch
to use a pattern, I know he would be grateful.
Nothing else to report at the moment but watch out for offer on spares
ordering hopefully coming soon
Chris Skepper
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3 tips to save you pulling out your hair and foul language
1.
A simple spanner conversion to help with the removal of a carburettor.
Us a small number 13 and one that is as thin as possible then cut off the end and
weld back on at right angles. This will allow you to access the two nuts more easily.
.
2.
Before removing the donuts from the drive to enable easy replacement tie up with
cable ties as tight as possible this will help keep the shape for refitting.
3.
When re-aligning the clutch plate to centre it use a pair of callipers, measure the
four points North, South, East and West set the same distance between all four
points then tighten the thrust ring. The gear box will slide onto the engine with ease.
Simple ideas you may already do something similar but in my case it is helping save what
little hair I have left.
Brian Chadwick
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Going Home in 292 MHN by Yvonne Jaques
I didn’t think there would be a round two when I was ready to leave the stand at NEC in
November, but driving from the parked trailer into the NEC on setting up day I thought the
brakes seemed a bit soft. Usually I consider them to be over engineered for the Isetta, and
worry that there is always good possibility that whilst you as the driver have the steering wheel
to hang onto, the passenger could well be propelled forward pretty seriously if you slammed
on the brakes a bit smartish.
So... at the end of the show I warned Ray and Jenny Dilkes that I would be following them
pretty cautiously back for our final nightie night on the campsite before loading up and heading
South again on the following day. I was sure if I kept my wits about me, watched Ray’s Heinkel
rear lights all the time, kept the speed down, kept in the right gear, and made sure I could get
at the hand brake if the need arose, I would live to tell the tale. As long as I watched all the
other idiots on the road home like a hawk, and generally kept out of danger there was a fair
chance I would arrive back at the campsite in one piece. Musing at the situation, I thought
there might be a leak in the brake fluid somewhere and that was the cause of my troubles, but
7pm on a dark Sunday night is not the time to start looking.
I arranged with Derek Cole to A frame the car over to his place because he now had a spare
garage where the car could be dealt with and left on site. I thought it would just be checking
the brake fluid. HE thought he’d start by taking the wheel off and look and the brake drums
and pads. Hmm. Good job he did. Inside the drums there was a shed load of dirt and what
looked like oil or grease lining them and caked on the inside, and it had infiltrated the brake
pads too. We had no idea where it had come from, there was plenty of grease there but no sign
of any oil leaks anywhere. We even wondered if the axle grease had become warm and leaked
out somehow. One of mysteries I suppose.
We began by trying to adjust the snails – well that was the plan – but even Derek had no
spanner small enough and strong enough to fit the rear adjusting shank and the only option
was to clamp a small pair of mole grips on the shanks which we managed turn – eventually.
The whole assembly including the back plate was removed from the axle and at last we could
get a look at the brake seals and I think we were both surprised at what we found. The seals
were encapsulated in metal shrouds which looked as though someone had tried to extract the
felt seal with a fair amount of force. The nuts holding everything together were well and truly
rusted on. What shocked me was the felt seals that looked as though they had come out of the
ark. Bearing in mind one of the rubber seals was also missing, I’m amazed that the brakes
worked at all. Getting out the bushes and replacing them was soon achieved on an excellent
30 tonne press. However, it was clear the last one had been hammered in, that was obvious
from the surface damage.
Now came the time to buy the spares we would need, so I contacted Lee and asked him what
we would need. I put an order together and Lee sent all the bits we would need to repair the
whole thing, within a few days. However, he politely pointed that we might have missed one or
two things so I helpfully suggested that they send everything they thought we would need to
replace everything but the back plate. Mercifully the new snail adjusting shanks were a decent
size and robust enough to get a decent spanner on the back. Sensibly, Derek finished the job
without any help from me, and bled the system with the help of Ken Bell. A preliminary trial run
round the block revealed that the brakes were now different but very adequate and subject to
some minor adjustment when they had had time to bed in, would be good to go. After the New
Year I will take the old girl round the block several times to be sure it’s pulling up well and not
pulling to one side or the other. As a relatively new owner it’s all still a bit of a mystery to me,
but I am very impressed indeed with the spares department, I ordered the parts on the Monday
night, they were picked and packed on Tuesday, dispatched on Wednesday and arrived on my
doorstep on Friday morning. That’s excellent service, and beats some of the other car clubs to
which I belong into a cocked hat.
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As a recent member to the I.O.C. I thought that I would introduce my car.
After thoroughly enjoying rebuilding a Mk E Bond tourer and a Mk G Bond estate
and running them for many years since 1989, I met a local-ish chap around 1996
whom we, the rest of the micro-noughts lovingly called him “Revin” Kevin.
Kevin was a Micro Maniacs member and he used to arrive at camping rallies in this
Isetta fully loaded up with a disproportionate amount of camping gear no matter
how far away the venue was from Leeds, sometimes driving through the night, it
did not have a rear rack back then, some guy. The only persons I have ever known
that could get more stuff in and on an Isetta are Steve and Jackie Pepper.
Three years later while the Micro Maniacs were holding a rally at the Holme on
Spalding Moor site called Major Bridge Park he mentioned that he reluctantly
needed to sell his beloved Isetta. Mmmm light bulb moment methinks. After a few
beers we struck a deal
The car seen here during the camping years doing a 120 mile round trip to site
A week or so after the deal was struck I slowly wobbled and panicked my way
home, my trailer was not able to carry a 4 wheel Isetta before being converted
hence driving it. I did not know at the time just how bad the steering and brakes
could get on an Isetta. That was just the beginning of a year-long learning curve
and getting to know all the foibles that came to bite me along the way. Luckily I still
had my Mk G Bond to use during the renovation of the Isetta.
I repaired the steering bushes and links and replaced the entire braking system
along with a new exhaust and gear selector joints the list goes on, as it does. Being
an electrician the wiring was not a problem. Everything on the car was shot and
bodged even the front wheels had been turned inside out to make it look sporty; all
this did was to crack the wheels from one stud hole to the other.
The late great Allen Forster rebuilt 3 engines for me as I had bought all sorts of
engine related stuff enough for 3 engines and then some. One of which was fitted
2 years after I bought the car.
Luckily all the bodywork including the floor and wings have never seen a welding
machine as at some time in its life it has had several layers of green Hammerite
paint and grease applied throughout underneath, so apart from some lads from the
local pub adjacent to where Revin Kevin lived who decided to roll the car over one
night the car was in good nick, all sorted 18 years ago.
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I now have had GSV 820 for 18 years a dark red 4 wheeler R/H drive car and the
car has travelled the UK to long distance rallies mostly on the back of my trailer but
also I have driven the car for about 21,000 which includes rally miles, or should I
say rally smiles.
After this year’s season has finished the car will be parked up in my garage for the
best part of 6 months and suffer its annual maintenance tinkering.
Ray Glendinning rally coordinator for the Micro Maniacs
Last weekend there
was a Classic Cars
and Motorbikes exhibition in Aveiro
(Portugal) .
We manage to have
a small area there
gathering 8 Isettas! Never seen before in Portugal (?)
Of course, that mine was there, is the Yellow one (three
wheeler).
Paulo Couto
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FORTHCOMING EVENTS
August 30th Ormskirk Motor Fest in Ormskirk West Lancashire. For
information go to https://ormskirkmotorfest.com/about/
To register go to https://ormskirkmotorfest.com/registrations/register/
Messerschmitt Owners' Club International Rally 2020 To be held at John
Ruskin School, Coniston, Cumbria, LA21 8EW 30th July - 2nd August 2020
Isettas are more than welcome to attend. www.mocrally2020.weebly.com
National Microcar Rally 2020 Photo Competion
The Messerschmitt Enthusiasts Club have kindly offered to help sponsor a photographic competition for a calendar to commemorate the National this year and will
be included in the Rally pack. We need as many good quality photographs of as
many different models of Microcar as possible. Send to
[email protected]
Wings & Wheels Weekend Event 15th & 16th August 2020 at Wolverhampton
Halfpenny Green Airfield, Bobbington near Stourbridge, DY7 5DY.
Booking forms are now available at www.halfpennygreenevents.co.uk on a first
come first served basis.
The Club is pleased to welcome:Andrew Steeves
Derek Woods
Marek Sudomirski
Sammy Gauci
Simon Delia
Michael Robbins
Luis De Freitas
Paul Watson
Robert Champlin
Canada
Preston
Northampton
Aberdeenshire
Malta
Jaywick
Surrey
London
USA
David Bell
Rodger Bycroft
David Leach
Paul Denyer
Aimee Waterworth
Karl Kleeman
Nick Plowright
Soren Kusk Nielsen
Corin Mellor
Newcastle
USA
Weymouth
Canada
Bolton
USA
Winchester
Denmark
Sheffield
New Members since the last Gazette
To advertise your items for sale or want adds etc. please email the editor at '
[email protected]'
The Isetta Owners' Club of Great Britain Ltd. will not accept liability for any loss or damage resulting
from articles, features, adverts or any other material published in The Isetta Gazette.
Copyright The Isetta Owners' Club GB Ltd.
PRINTED BY THISTLE PRINT LTD TEL: 0113 2040600 EMAIL:
[email protected]
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My Restoration by Richard Bulkley
After finishing my Messerschmitt KR200 restoration I was looking for a fresh challenge and
decided that an Isetta restoration would make an enjoyable project due to the excellent
spare parts situation. However, since I already had a 3-wheel microcar I really wanted to find
a 4-wheel Isetta.
I spent ages looking at various websites
and simply couldn’t find a project in the UK
or one that I felt would be worth bringing
back from Europe. I then came up with the
idea of joining the UK Isetta club and seeing
if I could find a project through the club. So,
having joined the club I emailed Ian Parris
saying that I was looking for a project. A
week later I had an email from Ian with
details of a 3-wheel project in Cornwall. I
politely declined this project and was
amazed a week later when I had a second
email from Ian with details of a very early
4-wheel 250cc project attached. Even better this project was only 40 miles away!
Lee Turnham from the UK Isetta club agreed to meet me near the car’s location and we then
made our way to a very large house nearby where the Isetta had lived since its original
purchase in 1955! The car’s story was an unusual one. It had been bought from the UK Isetta
distributor by a doctor in 1955 who also then bought a 300cc later car. He had enjoyed both
cars but at some point the 300cc engine had ended up in the early car and the later car had
been scrapped. Later on he passed away and the early 250cc car was bequeathed to this
caretaker who lived in a tied cottage on the same site. Fast forward a few more years and
the caretaker had passed away, the car was a wreck and the widow was moving, hence the
car was available. Lee and I spend time examining the 250cc car, the stock of spare 300cc
parts and I decided that the mass of rusty parts and the car would make a great project so I
agreed to pay the asking price on the spot. At this point my own mother passed away and
we were still in the middle of a house extension project so Malcolm Thomas kindly stepped
in and offered to help recover the car and store it for a few weeks whilst life settled down and
I could get the car back to my house.
It took me around 9 months to summon up the energy to remove the body from the chassis
(again with Malcolm’s kind help and muscles) and then the restoration started in earnest.
The body went away to be shot-blasted and
came back only requiring a new floor. The
car had probably not been on the road since
around 1980 as it only had a buff log book
and all those years off the road and in a barn
had probably saved it. After shot-blasting it
was clear that the body was in great condition and only a new floor and some repairs to
the bottom of the door were required. I chose
to paint the car Reseda Green as the original
colour was Beige which I personally didn’t
like. Reseda Green is a striking colour which
really suits the car.
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Whilst the body was away being done I
stripped the chassis. The 300cc engine
which came with the car was sold and a
new 250cc unit built in Germany. I then
posted the gearbox to Germany so this
could be rebuilt as well. Whilst the rear
suspension is quite simple the front suspension proved to be the complete opposite and quite a challenge given that parts
are only available from one German supplier and one side was fitted with a later
300cc brake backplate. The chassis was
also shot-blasted and powder-coated before being slowly but steadily refitted with
hubs, brakes, suspension, cables, pipes
etc. Mike Ayriss kindly dismantled, vapour-blasted and the rebuilt the rear transmission.
Once the rear transmission was back in the chassis the rebuilt engine/gearbox was fitted and
I had a chassis ready to accept the body.
Malcolm and his wife Sheila came to the rescue again and helped lift the body back onto the
chassis. Once the body was on some of the most difficult challenges became apparent –
fitting the front quarter ‘triangle’ windows, the side windows and the front windscreen. The
triangle windows in particular are incredibly hard to get right and you can see why BMW
simplified the design after the first six months! Their workforce must have been ready to go
strike! An aluminium rear bumper was sourced in the US and new front quarter
bumpers/brackets handmade based on
originals lent to me by Malcolm Thomas.
The door and side cards were cut at home
from millboard and then these and the
seat professionally covered by a local trim
shop. The green tartan material was
sourced in Germany. Once the seat was
in the car could be road-tested, again by
Malcolm who judged the car to be roadworthy! Finally the car went to the trimmers to have the sunroof made to fit the
car. Just when I thought I was done the
last challenge emerged – fitting the rear
window. This final job involved 3 pairs of
hands, 3 hours and much cursing. However, it all seemed worthwhile once the finished car could be admired from a distance.
So many thanks to the people and firms
that made bringing this Isetta back from the
dead possible. Ian Parris, Lee Turnham,
Malcolm Thomas, Sheila Thomas, my
wife, the UK Isetta club and the German
Isetta parts suppliers (Isetta Service and
Oldtimer Teile).
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1961 BMW Isetta 300 – BMW Lays An Egg
On a bright and beautiful Saturday morning last
month, Jim Klein and I were on our way to the
Toyota Megaweb museum by way of an elevated
train. He was keen to point out an Alfa Romeo he
had spied in one of the surrounding building car
parks when we rode past a gigantic BMW / Mini
dealership. Amongst the many modern machines gathered there, I thought I saw a distinctly
un-modern ovoid shape. Our stop was next, so I
convinced Jim to walk in the opposite direction of
our stated goal to investigate.
That’s how we happened upon this relatively rare British-made BMW Isetta 300.
The tell-tale sign of its true origin – aside
from the RHD steering – is its three
wheels. All other Isettas, be they made by
BMW or others, had four wheels. Some
British-made ones had four wheels too, but
those were made for export, mostly. The
three-wheel tax loophole made the fourwheeled version quite superfluous in the
UK. It couldn’t have been that good for the
car’s stability, but some people will put up
with anything to save a buck (or, in this case, a quid)…
The Iso original, made from 1953 to 1956
The story of the Isetta is rooted in the inventiveness of an Italian firm and the desperation of a German one. In the late ‘40s,
Isothermos CEO Renzo Rivolta got his firm
involved in the latest automotive craze,
which was scooters. He soon figured that a
four-wheeled version might be an easy sell,
provided he could make the product compact and modern enough. Rivolta hired aeronautic engineers Pierluigi Raggi and
Ermenegildo Preti to design a completely
novel concept, the Isetta.
The Italian Isetta was launched at the 1953 Turin
Motor Show and made quite an impression. It did
not, however, meet much success on its native
market, where Fiat reigned supreme. Rivolta only
managed to make a few thousand, including a
pickup version, until Iso production stopped in
1956. He soon realized that recouping his investment would entail foreign licensing deals.
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Enter beleaguered Bavarian bike-maker BMW, whose financial health was not at its peak
by the mid-‘50s. BMW’s cars were too big for the times, so they were very keen on introducing an economy model, which could use a BMW motorcycle engine, to compete with
the dozens of microcars that buzzed around German and European towns in the ‘50s.
1956 US advert helpfully taught folks
how to mispronounce I-talian names…
The idea had merit and the Isetta fit the bill.
Production of the 12hp BMW Isetta 250
started in 1955 and sales were quite satisfactory, though they improved even more
once German legislation enabled BMW to
raise the 1-cyl. engine’s displacement to 300cc in 1956, which edged the hp count to 13.
Later that year, BMW engineered a completely
different shell for the Isetta that gave the car a
sort of pseudo-hardtop appearance. This enabled the installation of sliding windows – a definite progress compared to the older design’s
goldfish-bowl. Other Isetta licensees, such as
Velam in France or Romi in Brazil, did not get
the benefit of BMW’s superior design.
There was another Isetta at this Tokyo
BMW dealer: a two-tone German-made
late ‘50s example
But the UK did, because the licensee, Isetta of Great
Britain, Ltd., got their kits straight from Munich. The
Southern Locomotive Works in Brighton made a deal
with BMW to manufacture the Isetta under BMW’s
name in Britain and provided factory space for this
purpose in the English resort town. Production started
in April 1957. BMW sent engines, transmissions and
body panels to Brighton; tyres, electrical gear, brakes,
suspension and other small bits and pieces were
sourced in the UK.
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1957 British brochure excerpt
Compare and contrast: the interior of a German-made BMW Isetta and of a Britishbuilt one
The British Isetta lost a wheel in 1958 and sales finally took off. BMW were in danger of
sinking without a trace, and but for their little bubble car to buoy up the company’s market
presence, they would have. After the infamous Quandt buy-out in 1959, the Bavarian firm
found its footing again and started getting rid of the many dead-end product lines it had
accumulated throughout the ‘50s, such as the 600, a kind of stretched Isetta four-seater
that went nowhere, commercially speaking.
The bubble hadn’t burst yet on the Isetta, though. It soldiered on until 1962 in West Germany and for about a year longer in Sussex, as the British side of the JV was bought out by
BMW and production was moved to a different part of town. The Isetta egg-speriment had
been a success: over 135,000 were made in Bavaria and another 25,000 were assembled
in England. By comparison, none of the French, Italian, Spanish or Brazilian Isetta variants
ever broke the 10,000 unit mark.
Some have claimed that this little
“motorcoupé” saved BMW’s bacon. I
have my doubts – the real saviours of
the marque were the 700 and the
Neue Klasse saloons, in my opinion.
Financially, the Isetta certainly kept a
trickle of cash flowing into Munich, but
it was nowhere near sufficient.
On the domestic market, BMW sold
these for the price of a motorbike,
which is how they manage to sell so
many. But I doubt they made a lot of
profit from it – unlike Iso, which used
the proceeds of their Isetta licensing
How small is the Isetta? Here it is compared to deals to launch an ambitious V8a regulation-size CC Editor…
powered Bertone-styled coupé. A
sort of BMW in reverse, which did not
end well. All because of that little egg.
The yolk’s on them.
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Irritating Isetta by Philip Durow
This is a tale that no doubt will make you shake your head in disbelief at the incompetence
of a new Isetta owner. Many an experienced owner will let out a small chuckle, raise their
eyes to the heavens and remember their early days. Full of hope and enthusiasm, relishing
the hundreds of miles of trouble free motoring ahead, they foolishly attempted to cross the
Pennines and peaks with only a spark plug and bag of sandwiches to keep them nourished.
Alas I am guilty of such doings, all started so well, until.… Ah, you need information? Of
course, a brief résumé of events up to this point.
I purchased the 3 wheel 1960 Brighton Isetta off a friend who had it stuck in a garage for nigh
on 20 yrs. Trailored it home and set to work getting the girl running and back on the road.
Brakes, pipes, trunnions, tyres, filters and the usual electricals, and a few hundred quid later
MOT passed, though the inspector questioned the cross ply radial mix of tyres, he let it go.
A summer of short runs and fun ended up with a limp home, smoking, popping and general
lack of power, resulted in my decision to restore.
The strip down was great fun, and a great way of
learning how things worked. Every bolt came out bar
one! Incredible. I bagged and labelled everything, a
thousand photos( thank god for digital!) and a massive
wish list of spares. Following John Jensons bible, I
stripped the engine, fairly simple job having made a
couple of extractors for the flywheel etc, and thoroughly
cleaned and labelled everything. I decided to farm out
the head to Bromley which came back looking like new,
with new valves etc and got a new o/s piston and had
the barrel rebored. Re-assembly was fairly straightforward and I replaced all bearings and seals inc the
blowey valve thingy. This is where I hear the tutting of
experienced tongues, I re-used the timing chain, but
replaced the tensioner, paying particular attention to the
marks I made on strip down. Everything else went
together fairly easily. I found a methodical approach and
a clear working area a must, and all that bagging,
photos and labelling essential, it's amazing what you
forget after stripping and one photo can save a load of
headaches. I fortunately had the benefit of a spare engine which I stripped and used some
parts as they were in better condition than what was on the original engine.
Skipping forward a few months. After successful restoration of the Isetta, an enjoyable
Saturday run out at the Cheshire Microcar Rally clocked up over 100 miles without major
issues. Trouble started next time I took her out, misfiring, spluttering, cutting out and a limp
home. Dirt in carb? So I thought, and so began the frustration.
Must be carb, so stripped, cleaned and refitted… no change. Do it again, and again, and
again. Starts but only runs on choke. Air leak? New gaskets, slightly better. Eventually she
would just not fire at all. This is where you need to simply walk away and leave it alone for a
while and scour the forums for advice! It was fascinating getting advice from people I'd never
even met in this community of microcars, all freely giving of their time and experience. Very
humbling.
In this time, I decided to strip her back and begin by replacing the timing chain. Something I
regretted not replacing on initial rebuild. Great service from ICOGB spares as per usual, I
purchased chain with new split link and gaskets. I found it awkward to see the inspection
hole to flywheel, so removed the mounting bracket and buffer, much better view. By sticking
14
a long thin screwdriver or dowel in the plug hole, I rotated the crank and with one end of the
stick on the crown of the piston, I noted the movement of the other until it moved neither up
nor down. TDC! A quick check with the marks on the flywheel confirmed all was inline thus
reaffirming the timing marks for later, also noted the marks on the sprockets I made
previously were in line.
Removed the split link in the bottom space between timing and crank sprockets, and gently
removed the chain from the crank sprocket. I rotated the crank so piston was away from
valves (unnecessary?) and with aid of grips gently rotated timing sprocket to remove chain
completely. Resistance was found when turning as the cams forced the valves open.
Now for the valve timing… I removed the covers and undid the pushrod adjusters, loosening
them fully. Then rotated the sprocket again gently with grips in the two side holes on sprocket
to a point where the sprocket was almost "locked" in place by the valve spring resistance.
Moving either way would open a valve. TDC. Dry positioned the new chain alongside cam sprocket with the end
in the position where I could put the link in, marked chain
and sprocket with marker then backed off the cam sprocket and fed the chain over, matching the sharpie marks.
Rotating the sprocket forward back to it's original position
at it's TDC I then positioned the crank back up to it's TDC
then pulling chain tight, laid it over the crank sprocket.
Connection of the link is awkward, I used a bent piece of
card to act as a spring against the casting and the link to
help as I connected the ends together, a few coaxing
words of encouragement also helps. All marks now lined
up perfectly so timing should be correct. Refit tensioner,
crankcase halves with new gasket, bolt up and finish
rebuild. Replaced springs on advance unit and cleaned
and greased the same.
The condenser had been fitted on the stator which
worked, but Brian at the NEC classic show generously
gave me his spare which I fitted correctly to the coil.
Connected bulb between CB wire from stator and the coil
and checked the timing of the points, slightly out, adjusted
after checking gap. Timing seemed to be bob on! Rotated
crank to 180' from TDC and adjusted the rockers.
Stripped and cleaned carburettor, replacing starter jet and
pilot jet, throttle needle and jet and main jet (all expensive!) Removed fuel tap and flushed
out the tank several times, also stripped and cleaned tap. Reconnect everything, new Bosch
spark plug. Back together, now, come on my little beauty......
Battery fully charged, new gallon of fresh fuel in tank, fuel on, ignition on, choke open, fingers
crossed and small prayer, turn the key.....chug, suck, chug....BBRRRRMMMMM!!
Huge relief, accelerator responsive, let it run for a few minutes, now, will you work with choke
closed? Gingerly I closed the choke… and she kept running. So pleased. Spent the next
happy hour adjusting the tickover and refitting the seat. Short test run proved a success, and
the following day took her out for maybe 30 mile run without incident.
So what was the cause of the initial problem? Incorrect timing due to slack chain? Dirt? Air
leak? Plug?Electrical? I don't think I'll ever really know, but the main thing is she's running
again, still noisy, still bounces around on the road, still gets pointed at with a smile. I can't
wait till the spring weather and more smiles per mile.
Philip Durow
15
Isetta World
Did you know ? …
that there is a thriving Isetta Club
in … Uruguay, South America ?
According to the historical
information service of BMW
archives, the following cars were imported into Uruguay:1955: 3 BMW Isettas
1956: 2 BMW Isettas
1957: 136 BMW Isettas
1958: 108 BMW Isettas ; 8 BMW 600
1959: 31 BMW Isettas ; 49 BMW 600;
1960: 108 BMW Isettas
TOTAL: 388 BMW Isettas (250s + 300s) + 57 BMW 600
With help from Felipe de Leon of the Isetta Club del
Uruguay, Isetta World has researched into the history
of Hoffmann, the notorious would-be Isetta competitor.
Jakob Osswald Hoffmann of Lintorf, near Dusseldorf
had a small factory producing bicycles and
accessories (exploiting forced labour during WW2).
Later, in 1949 he bought a licence from the Italian
Piaggio Company to manufacture their Vespa Scooter
in Germany, consequently acquiring a strong presence in the market
virtually overnight. His Vespas were branded "Hoffmann". Jakob even
appeared in Life Magazine as the "man who put Germany on two wheels".
Before long, Hoffmann asked Piaggio if he could put a bigger engine in the
Vespas, but his licence stipulated that he had to produce their scooters
exactly as their original design
(presumably because the Italians
didn't want a foreign scooter which
performed better than theirs). So,
exploiting know-how from his
Piaggio production Jakob started
producing his own two-stroke
scooter of 150 cc alongside the
Piaggio 125. This helped sales, but
angered the Italians and they quickly
cancelled Hoffmann’s licence .
16
Needing a new product to occupy his factory Jakob tried to get a licence to
manufacture the ISO Isetta, but found that ISO had already awarded the
deal to BMW. Realising the
potential of the concept, Hoffmann
swiftly built a prototype of his own
version which pirated the Isetta’s
design features.
His car, which he designated as
“AutoKabine” echoed the
established Isetta shape, but was
intended to include a back seat for
two children (which never
appeared). In the standard
version, Hoffmann's car had a right side door with rear hinges which was
impractical in a LHD car but in a planned luxury version, had two side
doors, left and right.
The front headlights
were low, similar to
an ISO. The rear
wheels were
exposed. Thanks to
the fixed front, it was
also possible to have
a fixed dashboard
with more
instruments than the
lone speedometer of
the ISO.
The Hoffmann Auto-Kabine was such a blatant
copy of the Isetta that it even had dimensions of
2.28 x 1.39 x 1.35 m. almost identical to the BMW’s
2.28 x 1.38 x 1.33 m. ( Length, Width and Height ).
The two rear wheels were separated by a narrow
axle, without a differential, again as in the Isetta.
It was initially equipped with a horizontally-opposed
250cc twin cylinder 4-stroke motor mounted
centrally in front of the two rear wheels, developing
a claimed 18.5 HP at 5400 RPM with a fuel
consumption of 3.8 litres / 100 km (approx 74 mpg)
and a maximum speed of 85 kmh ( approx 53 mph).
The development car worked quite well until the transmission failed at
13,000 km and unfortunately the transmission continued to be unreliable.
Another problem was that the car was heavy for its size and the 250cc
engine was not powerful enough so they expanded it to 300cc. The major
problem with this was that the lowest class of driver licence in Germany in
those days was a Class 4 which only permitted driving cars with engines up
to 250cc - and Class 4 drivers were intended as the target market for the
car ! So, Jakob decided to employ deceit and simply called the car the
“Hoffmann Auto-Kabine 250" and expected no one to notice. ( Just like he
hoped that no-one would realise he had copied an ISO design concept.)
Nevertheless, Jakob made plans to put
the car in production for Autumn. As he
had invested so much money in the
engines (and in the scooter engines), he
negotiated a loan from the Deutsche
Bank to get the funds needed to make
the production tooling for the AutoKabine. The money would arrive in
October, so Hoffmann began to produce
a first series of cars by hand.
However, as soon as they learned of Hoffmann’s Auto-Kabine, ISO sent
Hoffmann a court order to stop production. Hoffmann ignored this by going
even further and publishing adverts which claimed that the Isetta was a
copy of his car. So because his lawyers had said that everything was fine,
Jakob thought he was safe and took his car to the Paris Salon Exhibition.
But - also in Paris there was a real ISO Isetta and now more people began
to be suspicious. Hoffmann countered those concerns by claiming that his
car was better. However, he was still waiting for the bank money loan and
unfortunately for him that was something which would overturn his plans –
because the new BMW
plant was also going to be
funded by the Deutsche
Bank. BMW was a much
more established brand
than Hoffmann and
Germany was eager to
restore BMW’s presence
in the world car market so
the Deutsche Bank simply
cancelled Hoffmann's loan
application.
To make his position even more difficult, both ISO and BMW sued
Hoffmann for infringement. Without money, Hoffmann couldn't pay his
workers who consequently started plundering the factory for items they
could sell. Jakob declared himself bankrupt.
Simultaneously to the bankruptcy process, he also fought against the trial.
Hoffmann claimed it was just a coincidence that the two cars looked alike
but BMW won. Curiously, BMW subsequently sent a new BMW 502 V8 as
a gift to Hoffmann .... But that was little consolation and Hoffmann’s
company was liquidated to pay late wages.
It was said that 113 Auto-Kabines had
been built before the end. It is rumoured
that at least 80 of them were sent to
Distributors but none are known to
survive today. Legend says BMW
bought them all , took them off the
market and destroyed them. The BMW
Isetta then went on to become the bestselling microcar of all time behind the
Goggomobil. In different circumstances,
would Hoffman have outsold the BMW?
We’ll never know.
Hoffmann remained in the car
industry becoming a supplier
of parts to Karmann, the
specialist body designers. He
died almost forgotten in 1972.
Today, there's a small number
of Hoffmann motorcycle
collectors and the Hoffmann
Vespas have the reputation in
the world of scooters as being
the best ever built. It has also
been said that the AutoKabine was the car that BMW would have manufactured if, like Hoffmann
with Vespa, they had not been restricted by their licence with ISO.
Terry Parkin
Isetta World www.facebook.com/groups/267159327250111/
www.facebook.com/Isetta-Club-del-Uruguay-807156312746245/
Colin Green a club member would like help with a restoration of his Isetta. He would like to
hear from anyone within a 50 mile radius of Bridport. His address is Swan Cottage, Brook
Street, Shipton Gorge, Bridport, Dorset. DT6 4NA Tel. 01308 898334
Email
[email protected]