PressClub Africa, DOM, East Europe · Article.
Cars ranging from MINI Coopers to BMW 7 Series models limber up for the Allgäu-Orient Rally.
Tue Apr 23 14:00:00 CEST 2013 Press Release
BMW, MINI and BMW Group Classic support alternative event for classic cars and recent classics – Adventure tour and fundraising event is without parallel worldwide – Route leads from Oberstaufen via Istanbul to Aqaba, Jordan – 41 participating BMWs to be joined by the organising committee’s MINI Cooper, which will be handed over to a mobile midwifery service in Aqaba after the rally.
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Irmgard Arsenschek
BMW Group
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Author.
Irmgard Arsenschek
BMW Group
Munich. Its organisers describe the Allgäu-Orient
Rally as “one of the world’s last remaining automotive adventures”.
The vehicles gathered for the eighth edition of this low-budget rally
– which doubles as a fundraising event with a difference – will set
off from Oberstaufen, Germany on Saturday, 27 April 2013. This
unconventional competition for traditional and more recent classics
will take in the Turkish cities of Istanbul and Ankara as well as the
Israeli port of Haifa en route to the Jordanian desert near Aqaba.
Setting this rally apart – in addition to its exotic itinerary – is
the absence of a return leg. Indeed, once they cross the finish line
the vehicles will be auctioned, with the proceeds going to local
charitable causes. This year is the first time that BMW, MINI and BMW
Group Classic are all registered as partners of the event, which will
boast a line-up of nearly 250 entrants, including 41 BMW 3 Series, 5
Series and 7 Series cars. Accompanying the participants will be the
organising committee’s MINI Cooper, which will be presented to a
mobile midwifery service in Jordan when it reaches its destination.
This is the fourth time that BMW Group Classic has signed up as
a partner of the Allgäu-Orient Rally. And, for the first time this
year, BMW will be joined by MINI as a partner of the event. In 2012,
five classic Minis made it to the finish line of this demanding
expedition, and this time round a red MINI Cooper will have members of
the organising committee on board. The model year 2003 car – which has
already clocked up 180,000 kilometres (approx. 110,000 miles) – is the
event’s youngest entrant. It has been meticulously prepared and is now
in fine technical fettle to soak up not only everything the rally
distance can throw at it, but also as many miles as possible in its
subsequent life in service of a charitable organisation. The MINI will
soon be added to the fleet of vehicles run by a midwifery service in
Jordan whose employees often have to cover long distances to care for
women in sparsely populated areas and locations far away from the
hospitals of towns and cities.
The MINI Cooper is the exception to the Allgäu-Orient Rally rule
stipulating that vehicles must be at least 20 years old. All the
vehicles must also be left behind at the destination once the event is
over. To this end, the organisers have come to a special arrangement
with the Jordanian royal family; since the proceeds from the sale of
vehicle parts will be donated to social aid projects in the country,
the usual import regulations for old cars will be relaxed.
Though now somewhat long in the tooth, the starting field of
recent classics still have plenty of miles left in them. All will have
been purchased by the teams for no more than the maximum €1,111.11 set
out in the rally regulations and prepared with plenty of elbow grease
for their final active adventure. This year the teams will once again
include many BMW Group employees and fans of the BMW brand who for
months have been investing a great deal of their free time and
technical knowledge in the project. A striking number of them are
placing their hopes for a successful rally in the reliability and load
capacity of the first-generation BMW 5 Series Touring. The BMW ranks
will be further swelled by a trio of BMW 3 Series Tourings and no
fewer than nine BMW 7 Series Sedans. In many cases, an admirable
choice of car has gone hand-in-hand with an imaginative selection of
team names: “Fleckvieh” (a type of cattle), “Doppelhöcker” (“double
hump”), “Werk 6” (Plant 6), “Bavarian Pathfinders”,
”CologneCamelHunters” and the “Camel Chasing Racing Team” will each be
running three BMW 5 Series cars. Elsewhere in the field, “Team 69”
will not be alone with their triple-pack of BMW 7 Series Sedans; the
“OILfinger” crew have recruited a BMW 730i, a BMW 735i and a
12-cylinder BMW 750i for the journey to Jordan.
The early stages of the rally will take the participants through
parts of Germany and Austria before heading into Slovenia,
Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo, Macedonia and Bulgaria on their way to
Turkey. From the southern Turkish port of Iskenderun the rally convoy
will cross over by ferry to Haifa in Israel, before embarking on the
final leg of its journey to Jordan, where the winners are due to be
crowned on 17 May. Along the way, the teams will be called upon to
complete a series of special trials as well as lend a helping hand
with social organisations and aid projects at stage finishes. In this
they will be supported by local organisations and individuals who are
also doing their bit to make the Allgäu-Orient Rally a border-crossing
adventure with an impressive dedication to good causes.