Autocar UK – 31 July 2019

(lu) #1

Where better to experience the 395bhp, 354lb ft Audi five’s dramatic crescendo?


44 AUTOCAR.CO.UK 3 1 JULY 2019


t was always going to


happen, wasn’t it? Even


in the middle of July, no


more than a fortnight


after temperatures


around the UK soared into the mid-


30s, it would seem that gathering


a triumvirate of convertible sports


cars together in North Wales is still


too much like tempting fate. Or the


weather gods. Or any other abstract


concept you’d usually curse and swear


at while shaking your fist at the sky,


wondering why oh why, on today of all


days, did it have to rain. How typical.


But anyway, the new BMW Z4


M40i is one of the latest examples


of the breed to touch down on


our shores. Previous iterations


of Munich’s two-door drop-top


haven’t always been praised for


being standout driver’s cars, but


BMW seems confident this third-


generation model is the one to


rewrite that history for the better.


A Nürburgring lap time reportedly


some three seconds quicker than that


of its M2 stable-mate is certainly an


encouraging sign. So too is the fact


that the Toyota Supra – the BMW’s


brother from another mother –


emerged victorious when we pitted


it against the Porsche Cayman T and


BMW M2 a few weeks back.


With all that in mind, the


temptation to gather together a


handful of ideologically aligned


adversaries and head for the hills


proved too strong to resist. Which is


exactly why our test subjects – made


up of said Z4, a Porsche 718 Boxster


T and an Audi TT RS Roadster – are


now moored in a windswept, soggy


car park on the side of the B4391,


completely saturated.


But sitting here, watching snapper


Olg u n K ord a l f i sh a r ou nd i n h i s


bag for the correct lens as the fine,


mist-like rain continues to drive


home t he f a c t t h at one of u s shou ld


have checked the weather forecast,


isn’t without its perks. From this


vantage point, you can appreciate just


how motley this crew of convertibles


really is, and soak in the diversity of


the drop-top landscape in 2019.


Of the three cars here, the BMW is


closest to the archetypal convertible


sports car. Its long, muscular bonnet


houses a longitudinal 3.0-litre


I


turbocharged straight six, which


sends its 335bhp and 369lb ft straight


to the rear wheels via an eight-speed


ZF torque-converter automatic ’box


and an electronic slippy diff. Adaptive


M Sport suspension drops its ride


he i g ht b y 10 m m c ompa r e d w it h t he


standard Z4, and also throws in
electronically controlled dampers.

And unlike its predecessor, there’s a


folding canvas roof instead of a metal


one, which helps reduce weight, lower


the car’s centre of gravity and – in my


mind at least – lend it a bit more in


the way of authenticity. That said, at


1535kg, it’s still the heaviest car here.


The Boxster, meanwhile, forges


a different path. It is mid-engined,


for starters, and its 295bhp 2.0-litre


f lat four does seem a bit weedy by


comparison. But in T guise, this is


supposed to be the sharpest, most


focused version of the 718 Boxster


breed (Weissach-fettled Spyder


Box ste r : 20 i n a l l oys , sh o d i n P Ze r o t y r es


Z4: 19in alloys, Michelin Pilot Super Sports


TT RS: 20in alloys and Pirelli P Zero rubber


Boxster is the best


driver’s car, but Z4


has all-round appeal


`


Compared with the


other two, the Audi is


a bit of an oddball


a

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