28 january 2018 motormag.com.au
BMW M3 Pure
Price cut puts iconic four-door in a new light
LIKE A fine wine or cheese, the BMW
F80 M3 is getting better with age.
Unlike a fine wine or cheese, though,you don’t have to pay a premium to
enjoy it – quite the opposite, in fact.The M3, and its M4 two-door twin,
hasreceivedthe‘Pure’treatment,firstintroduced on the previous-generation
E92 M3 and has since rolled out acrossthe M5 and M2.
Essentially, BMW Australia deletesa bunch of equipment and slashes
the price, in this instance to a faintlyludicrous $129,900 ($139,900 for the
M4). Remember this is a car that cost$156,900 when it was introduced in
July 2014. The good news continues, asnone of the deleted kit is anything you
really need; you lose leather upholsteryand heated seats, the flash Harman
Kardon stereo, adaptive LED headlightsand high-beam assist. That’s it.
This is no stripped-out bargain-basement special. Some may baulk at
thelackofleather,butthecombinationleather/cloth seats look and feel great
and it’ll otherwise take a trainspotter tonotice you’ve bought the ‘cheap’ M3.
Even better is BMW’s decision toretain the Competition Pack for Pure
models. The suspension and diff
revisions definitely improve the M3’s
handling and composure and theCompetition’s ride quality penalty can
be nullified by sticking with the Pure’sstandard 19-inch rims, which to my
eyes look much better than the GTS-like 20s anyhow.
Ask for Continental ContiSportsrather than Michelin Pilot Super Sports
and what you might lose in ultimateracetrack performance you’ll gain in
more predictable responses and much-improved wet-weather performance
on the road. Thus equipped, the Pure isarguably the sweetest road-going M3
while retaining the super-sharp frontend and love of oversteer that makes it
First Fang
ENGINE 2979cc inline-6cyl, DOHC, 24v, twin-turbo / POWER 331kW @ 7300rpm / TORQUE 550Nm @ 1800rpm / WEIGHT 1560kg / 0-100KM/H 4.0sec (claimed) / PRICE $129,900
by SCOTT NEWMAN
New. Fast. Driven.
such an exhilarating drive.
The Competition tweaks also give
the 3.0-litre twin-turbo straight-sixa more sporting voice, something
you’ll notice more than the extra (butwelcome) 14kW. It’s still not a tuneful
noise, but it is aggressive, a serratedgrowl with lots of burbles once you lift
off the throttle and unless your dailydriver is a 911 Turbo, it’s difficult to
imagine anyone stepping out of an M3wanting more performance.
In fact, this level of grunt is virtuallyunheard of at this price point. If this
package was the regular M3’s $141,610it would be impressive – at $130K it’s a
steal. It almost gives BMW a problem;it’s tough to imagine anyone forking
out extra for a normal M3 when thePure offers more performance for less,
and when you can equip an M4 Purewith carbon brakes and Cup tyres for
a total outlay of less than $160K themore exclusive, but less practical CS
struggles to justify its premium.The F80 M3 is in the twilight of
its career – a new M3 is expected in2019 – but BMW’s constant process of
refinement (not to mention discounts)has made it tastier than ever.M
Like
Crazy performance
for the priceSTAR RATING
Dislike
Steering still iffy;
challenging in
slippery conditions4.5