BMW New Six
| BMW New Six (E3) | |
|---|---|
BMW 2800  | |
| Overview | |
| Manufacturer | BMW | 
| Also called | BMW E3 | 
| Production | 1968–1977 | 
| Assembly | Germany: Munich | 
| Designer | Wilhelm Hofmeister | 
| Body and chassis | |
| Class | Executive car (E) | 
| Body style | 
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| Layout | Front-engine, rear-wheel drive | 
| Platform | E3 | 
| Related | BMW E9 (coupés) | 
| Powertrain | |
| Engine | |
| Transmission | |
| Dimensions | |
| Wheelbase | 
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| Length | 
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| Width | 
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| Height | 
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| Curb weight | 
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| Chronology | |
| Predecessor | BMW 501/502 | 
| Successor | BMW 7 Series (E23) | 
The BMW New Six (also known as the BMW E3) is a line of mid-size luxury sedans and grand tourer coupés produced by the German automaker BMW from 1968 to 1977. All models used the then-new M30 straight-6 engine. It marked BMW's return to the full-size luxury sedan market after a hiatus of 5 years and was introduced as a response to growing market segment dominated by Mercedes-Benz. It was important in establishing BMW's reputation as a maker of sporting luxury sedans.
The BMW New Six coupés (better known as the BMW E9) are built on a shortened version of the E3 platform. The E9 coupés share engines, transmissions, some suspension and many other features with the E3 sedans.
A total of 221,991 sedans and coupés were built.