This is the new BMW 1-series M Coupe, and it signals a significant departure for BMWâs famed M Division. After generations of high-revving, naturally aspirated engines, BMW M is being forced down the forced induction route in a bid to produce more fuel efficient autos. The forthcoming M5 has a twin-turbo V8, the next-gen M3 will feature a blown six-cylinder engine, and sitting before us on an empty stretch of best German back road is a turbocharged hotrod offering that us enthusiasts could consider as a real M auto â" the 1-series M Coupe.
We tested the X5 M and X6 M SUVs and came away unimpressed at their new mix of tallboy bodies, automatic gearboxes, four-wheel drive and turbocharged engines but the 1-series M is a blob of orange potential. Itâs the smallest M Division product since the Z4M departed this world â" and potentially the first true successor to the original E30 M â" and beneath the autotoonish bloated skin sits a torquey straight six, plus the suspension, brakes and rear differential from the current M3. If ever a turbocharged M auto had a chance to impress, this is it.
The new BMW 1-series M Coupe is the cover star of the new May 2011 issue of CAR, but is it a proper M producti, or just a tweaked 135i Coupe? Read on for the first drive reviews of the BMW 1-series M Coupe to find outâ¦
So this BMW 1-series M Coupe is actually a 135i underneath?
Only vaguely. To create the 1M, M Division has stripped out all the standard chassis componentry and replaced it wholesale with the suspension, brakes, 19in Competition Pack wheels and clever M Differential from the existing M3.
The bodywork has ballooned front and rear to cope with big brotherâs wider tracks, a huge triple-ducted air dam feeds the engine, the rear bumperâs vertical slashes mirror whatâs up front, and four signature shotgun exhausts poke out from below the black diffuser to ensure you donât mistake this 1M for a 135i. From some angles it looks so right, from others completely wrong, but itâs definitely got presence. Especially in Valencia Orange â" the only other exterior paint options are black and white.
Has the 1M got the same engine as the 135i?
Nope, the engineâs different too â" but not unique to M. Outgoes the newer, single blower 3.0-litre straight six, and in its place is the older, twin-turbo 3.0-litre straight six from the Z4 sDrive 35iS. And it means the 1-series M Coupe is a different sort of M auto, one that has low-down, almost-any-gear/any-rev gruns, and one that doesnât need to be extended to an 8000rpm-plus redline to get the very best from it.
The new forced induction philosophy means itâs much more urgent than an M3 in the bottom half of the rev range. And it sounds good too: way more convincing than a 135i, deep chested and damn mean.
And itâs all controlled via a slick, short-throw six-speed manual. The M3âs dual-clutch M-DCT transmission isnât an option, but it doesnât matter â" gone is the knuckly shift thatâs plagued both BMW and M Division products in the 21st century.
What else?
BMW M is steadily improving its steering too. The M3 has taken a step forward since launch in 2007, the helm of the latest Competition Pack autos offering up more clarity to the driver, and the steering of the 1-series M is even crisper.
But without the M3âs adaptive EDC dampers, the firm one-size-fits-all suspension means a fair bit of pitch and enough yaw to deflect you from your chosen path. And that extra low-down oomph means less provocation is needed to send yourself slewing sideways, but despite that M diff itâs a little trickier on the limit that expected.
Inside the interior is ageing, but thereâs a chunky steering wheel, Alcantara (with contrasting orange stitching) on the dash and binnacle shroud, the latest iDrive system, and a stubby little gearstick. Properly bespoke M Division instruments also make a return, with that wonderful pale grey-blue background all at CAR so love. The 1M is only available as a two-door coupe though, and don't expect to be able to cross whole countries four-up, like you can in an M3.
Verdict
The 1-series M is a proper M auto, no doubt. Sure, itâs different from whatâs gone before, but different doesnât mean itâs not as good. Our first experience of a proper turbocharged M Division machine has unveiled a 1-series with a character all its own. Itâs definitely not a hotted-up 135i, and now weâre looking forward to the future of M.
But how does the BMW 1-series M Coupe match up against its obvious rival from Ingolstadt, the Audi RS3 Sportback? Rear-wheel drive versus four-wheel? A 335bhp/332lb ft twin-turbo 3.0 six-cylinder versus a 335bhp/332lb ft turboâd 2.5 five pot? Six-speed manual versus seven-speed S-tronic? Only CAR Magazine has brought the two together, and you can read the exclusive twin test in the new May 2011 issue, out now.
Click here to see a full digital preview of the new May 2011 issue of CAR Magazine
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