Glas GT

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Glas GT
Glas 1300 GT
Glas 1700 GT
BMW 1600 GT
File:Glasexport uploaded by wiki-conbtributor Maggiora and cropped by Charles01.jpg
Overview
Manufacturer Hans Glas GmbH
Production March 1964 – August 1967
Coupé bodied: 5,013 units
May 1965 – July 1967
Cabriolet bodied: 363 units
June 1967 – May 1968
BMW badged: 1,259 units
Assembly Dingolfing, Germany
Designer Frua
Body and chassis
Body style Coupé, Cabriolet
Layout FR layout
Powertrain
Engine 1,290 cc
(1964 – 1967)
1,682 cc
(1965 – 1967)
1,573 cc
(1967 – 1968)
Transmission 4-speed or 5-speed manual
Dimensions
Wheelbase 2,320 mm (91.3 in)
Length 4,050 mm (159.4 in)
Width 1,550 mm (61.0 in)
Height 1,280 mm (50.4 in) (coupé)
1,280 mm (50.4 in) (cabriolet)

The Glas GT is a sports coupé produced by Hans Glas GmbH at Dingolfing. The car was first presented as the Glas 1300 GT in September 1963 at the Frankfurt Motor Show, with volume production starting in March 1964. The much rarer cabriolet version appeared in May 1965 and a larger engined 1700 GT in May 1965.[1]

1300 GT

Deliveries of the Glas 1300GT began in March 1964. The body had been designed by the Piedmontese firm Frua of Moncalieri, and the body shells were built in Moncalierei by the coach-builders Maggiora before being transferred to the Glas factory at Dingolfing for final assembly. The 1,290 cc engine was a bored out version of the modern unit that had powered the manufacturer’s 1004 model since 1962, with an overhead camshaft . Claimed power output at this point was 55 kW (75 PS) which provided a top speed of 170 km/h (106 mph).

In September 1965 maximum power was increased to 62.5 kW (85 PS). The car was fitted with larger wheels and the top speed rose to 175 km/h (109 mph).

1700 GT

From September 1965 the cars could be ordered with the 1,682 cc engine from the newly introduced Glas 1700 TS sedan, which came with a maximum power output of 74 kW (100 PS) and a top speed of 185 km/h (115 mph).

The longer stroke of the 1,682 cc engine made the unit slightly taller than the smaller engine fitted in the 1300 GT which gave rise to the need for a ridge along the central portion of the bonnet/hood. Matters were therefore simplified by specifying the same bonnet/hood ridge for all GT models regardless of engine size from the September 1965. The 1700 GT was also homologated for sale in the USA, which was a lucrative market for European sports cars at this time.

BMW 1600 GT

File:BMW 1600 GT Coupé.jpg
From summer 1967, during its final year the Glas GT faced the world with a BMW badge and grill, reflecting its adoption of BMW rear suspension and a BMW engine

With the BMW acquisition of the Glas business, the GT was refitted to accommodate the 1,573 cc BMW engine already fitted in the BMW 1600. The BMW “new class” models introduced in 1962 had attracted press comment concerning the fact that the engine was canted over at an angle of 30 degrees from the vertical plane, permitting a lower bonnet/hood line, and this feature was retained when the engine was fitted in the Glas GT body to create what was now branded as the BMW 1600GT. By using the BMW engine the car also acquired a further increase in power output, now up to 77 kW (105 PS). Handling was improved by applying the BMW's relatively sophisticated semi-trailing arm rear axle with coil springs in place of the more old fashioned rigid rear axle and leaf spring configuration previously employed by the Glas GT. BMW also took the opportunity to fit “new” round rear lights – being those that from 1966 also featured on the BMW 1602, and to reconfigure the front grill to incorporate the BMW “twin kidney” grill

Commercial

Between 1964 and 1967 Glas produced 5,376 GTs including 363 cabriolets. Between June 1967 and August 1968 a further 1,259 BMW badged cars were produced.[2]

Sources and further reading

  • Rosellen, Hanns-Peter: Vom Goggomobil zum Glas V8, Zyklam-Verlag Frankfurt (1985)
  • Jürgen Kraxenberger, Ferdinand Mader: Das grosse GLAS-Buch, ISBN 3-930648-40-7

This entry is based on information from the German Wikipedia Glas GT article.

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