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  • Superfast Mini John Cooper Works GP for 2020

    Want something fast and small? The 2020 Mini John Cooper Works GP might just be for you.

    Some things are just meant to be. The new BMW X2 M35i rolls on the same UKL2 platform as the Mini and has the B48 turbo four. No doubt Mini’s engineers and product planners took one look at that engine and said, “We’re having that.”

    The press release is scant on details, the JCW GP will likely also roll with the X2’s all-wheel drive system. With 225kW (306PS) and 450Nm, the front wheels are going to be in a fair bit of trouble from the get-go.

    The old JCW GP made do with 160kW (218PS), front-wheel drive and a 1.6.

    The production car is based on the 2017 Mini JCW Concept which showcased various lightweight materials. And some pretty whacky aerodynamics, let’s be honest. Expect a toned-down version of the lower aero, but that wing will no doubt survive.

    The previous JCW GPs were pretty gosh-darn amazing (I drove one in 2013). To heave weight, that car was missing the rear seats and, in its place, was a whopping brace. Given Mini’s constant push upwards, it will probably be carbon fibre in this one.

    At the time of writing, the 2020 Mini John Cooper Works was supposedly about to start final “whole of vehicle” testing.

    When and how much?

    As ever, it’s a limited edition, with just 3000 available worldwide. Australia will probably get their hands on about 50 or 60 of them (the last one saw just 55), so either way, it will be a collectible machine, just like the last lot.

  • Mini outs special edition Hatch: 60 Years Edition

    Mini Australia has released yet another special edition model, this time celebrating its sixtieth anniversary with four limited-run 60 Years Edition variants based on the Cooper and Cooper S Hatch range.

    Although the 60 Years Edition variant commands a $4000 premium over the models upon which they are based, Mini says the special edition adds $8500 of value with its unique badging, upholstery, interior trim and 17-inch alloys.

    From standard, the 60 Years Edition is coated in a British Racing Green metallic paint with a Pepper White roof and exterior mirror colour, and the interior is shod in Dark Cacao upholstery.

    Buyers can also opt for an alternative appearance package, which swaps out the aforementioned for Midnight Black Lapis Luxury Blue paint, Jet Black roof and mirrors and Carbon Black cabin features.

    Heritage has been the name of the game for Mini since the British marque was taken over by BMW in 2000, and according to Mini Australia general manager Brett Waudby, the 60 Years Edition continues that philosophy.

    “This year we are celebrating an exceptional brand milestone, and what better way to commemorate this than with a special edition model,” said Mr Waudby.

    “The Mini 60 Years Edition offers excellent customer value with specific design details that encompass the Mini legacy, such as iconic exterior finishes and timeless interior elements.”

    Powering the Cooper variants is a 1.5-litre turbocharged three-cylinder engine, which generates 100kW and 220Nm.

    The Cooper S ups the ante with a more spritely 2.0-litre turbo four-pot producing 141kW and 220Nm.

    PRICING

    Pricing kicks off at $33,900 plus on-road costs for the base Cooper three-door hatch, while the sharper and faster Cooper S three-door starts at $43,900.

    The five-door is priced at $31,150 in Cooper form, while the Cooper S five-door tops the range at $45,150.

  • BMW Z4 2019: Review

    The BMW Z4 is a car that polarises opinion. The second-generation hardtop was not a particularly accomplished motor vehicle and had none of the character of the oddball Z3 that went before both Z4s.

    BMW killed the E89 almost three years ago and nobody really mourned its passing. It was heavy and dynamically compromised by the high-set weight of the roof and its mechanism. It was a 90s car in a 2009 body, perhaps crushed by the weight of the Global Financial Crisis. And the roof, obviously.

    After a bit of think and some time in a dark room, BMW came up with the G29. Rolling on a platform shared with both the 5 Series and the new Toyota Supra, the new Z4 is sleek, sophisticated, laden with tech and it’s here.

    I’ve driven the Z4 30i with M Sport Plus and the M40i and I’ll be driving the 20i first chance I get.

    Words: Peter Anderson
    Images: Supplied

    Peter travelled to Nagambie in central Victoria as a guest of BMW Australia.

    Z Series History

    BMW Z4 E89
    E89 Z4
    BMW 507 Roadster
    507 Roadster

    BMW has been buildimg roadsters for nearly a century. Z, however, is relatively recent, with the Z1 arriving in 1989. Z stands for Zukunft, the German word for future which has always been an excuse to get weird. The Z1 was a weird car, with plastic body panels, vertically sliding doors and the running gear of an E30 325i.

    It was designed by Harm Lagaay, who went back to Porsche to design the 1992 Boxster concept that became the 986 road car. Only 8000 Z1s were made.

    Next came the mass-produced Z3, made famous by Pierce Brosnan’s Bond in Goldeneye and based (again) on the E30 3 Series. The Z3 ran from 1995 to 2003 and was built in BMW’s Spartanburg plant in South Carolina. It, too, spawned a couple of weird cars, most notably the breadvan M Coupe. You hardly ever see them anymore, which is kind of sad. Breathtakingly ugly but also wickedly fast for their time.

    Another Z car dropped in 2000, the gorgeous and limited Z8 (BMW Australia has one!). 5703 rolled off the line in Germany and half of them ended up in the US. It was left-hand drive only (dammit) and ran the E39 M5’s V8 and gearbox.

    The Z8 started life as an homage to the 507 roadster and was designed by Henrik Fisker, who now runs an electric car company (to a fashion) and designed Aston Martins for a while.

    BMW Z4 History

    Then the first Z4 arrived. The E85/E86 series came during the halcyon days when BMW’s design  was under the guiding hand of Chris “flame surfacing” Bangle. He’d started with the slabtastic 7 Series (well, he came to prominence at Fiat with the amazing Coupe Fiat) and continued to convince the BMW board to produce individualistic cars.

    The Z4 split opinion, but that was kind of the point.

    Dynamically, it was a lively thing. The trailing arms of the Z3 were replaced with a multi-link rear-end that didn’t mind stepping out, on or off the throttle. The Z4 also spawned a coupe in 2005 which was far stiffer than the roadster and the choice for enthusiasts. Not as individual as its predecessor, though…

    The E89 replaced the 85/86 in 2009. The design was BMW’s first attributed to two women – Juliane Blasi on the sheetmetal and Nadya Arnaout in the cabin. The 89 brought with it a folding hardtop as had been the fashion and production started in Regensburg alongside the 3 Series Cabriolet. The looks were more conventional, shall we say.

    It wasn’t a bad thing, but nor was it much of a smash-hit. More boulevarde than racetrack, the enthusiasts weren’t keen and there wasn’t a Z4 M or M Coupe to encourage them. It seemed weird to have two lifestyle convertibles in roughly the same segment (the other was the 3-Series cabriolet), but hey, car makers build what their customers want (most of the time).

    The E89 died quietly in 2016. To give you an idea of how popular it was here in Australia not once was the Z4 on BMW’s press fleet when I asked for one.

    BMW Z4 2019 (G29)

    And so to the G29 Z4. It’s been a while coming and I was a bit surprised BMW committed to another one. It made more sense when it turned out that it would roll on the CLAR platform and, critically, Toyota would base their new sports car (which turned out to be the Supra) on the same running gear.

    Game-changer. It worked on the 86/BRZ so why not a new Z4? Sports cars are increasingly difficult to make profitable, so it made perfect sense. I asked BMW Australia CEO Vikram Pawah if the G29 would have happened without the Supra and he firmly told me that BMW builds what customers ask for.

    Just quietly, I think the Toyota link-up probably helped. Going out on a limb, there, right?

    Look and Feel

    BMW Z4 2019 headlights
    Stacked headlights
    Integrated bootlid spoiler
    Z4 roll bars
    Integrated roll bars
    Mesh grille, big air intakes
    19-inch light alloy wheel
    Air breather and lovely wheels

    The new Z4 draws much from the past. Australian designer Calvin Luk penned the exterior and says the Z8 inspired much of the Z4, which in turn took plenty from the 507.

    The distinctive, wide and low kidney grille filled with a mesh effect rather than the usual slats, the vertically-stacked headlights (a BMW first) and an integrated spoiler are still unmistakably BMW. It’s more of a reboot than an evolution, though. A particular favourite element of mine is the functional air breather on the front guards that draws turbulent air from the front wheel arches.

    The cabin is terrific. I actually read something somewhere where an overseas reviewer complained that the cabin didn’t feel like a stripped out roadster. 1. Wut? 2. For this money, I want all the things. Buy an MX-5 or a Lotus Elise if you want bare-bones top-down action.

    The same week I drove the Z4 I also drove the G20 3 Series. There are a lot of the same components which is, frankly, awesome. The new Live Cockpit is brilliant and looks terrific, the redesigned iDrive screen running BMW Operating System 7.0 is great. It just feels good.

    The seats look like the same as those on the X2 M35i but are wrapped in more weather-friendly Vernasca leather rather than Alcantara.

    Drivetrain

    BMW Z4 M40i straight six

    At launch, all Z4s feature the eight-speed ZF automatic BMW is rightly so fond of, replacing the seven-speed DCT in plenty of cars as well as the older six-speed auto.

    You can choose between two 2.0-litre B48 twin-scroll turbocharged engines.

    The 20i generates 145kW (197PS) and 320Nm of torque. That’s not bad for an entry level machine, delivering a 0-100km/h (0-62mph) time of 6.6 seconds and combined fuel economy figure of 6.5L/100km.

    Step up to the 30i and the same engine delivers 190kW (260PS) and a very healthy 400Nm. The benchmark run to 100km/h is over in just 5.4 seconds and BMW reckons you’ll get an identical 6.5L/100km despite the significant increase in power and torque.

    Then there’s the big fella, the M40i. The lovely B58 (as seen in the X3 M40i and M140i) is along for the ride, with 250kW (340PS) and 450Nm for a 4.5 second run to 100km/h and a combined fuel figure of 7.4L/100km.

    There’s still plenty of room in those figures for a Z4 M which should be epic, probably packing the X3 M’s S58 (we live in hope). It will also be interesting to see if the 225kW tune of the B48 found in the X2 M35i ever finds its way to the Z4…

    Chassis and Aero

    BMW Z4 M40i 2019

    The Z4 rolls on BMW’s Cluster Architecture (CLAR) platform, shared with a very wide range of Beemers such as the 7, 5, X3, X4 and X5. And X6 and X7. And the 3 Series. Yeah. BMW is working it hard.

    The Z4 is the smallest car on CLAR, but is bigger than the old Z4. Looking at it, that’s hard to believe, but it’s 85mm longer and the front and rear tracks are 98mm and 57mm wider respectively. Interestingly, the wheelbase is down by 26mm.

    Front suspension is by double-joint spring struts with plenty of aluminium to keep weight down. The rear is a complex five-link setup, the first time that arrangement has appeared in a BMW roadster.

    If you choose the M40i or the M Sport Plus Pack on the 30i, you’ll also get an electronic limited slip-diff.

    All Australian cars feature the M Sport package, notionally lowering the suspension by 10mm. The 30i and 40i have adaptive dampers and you can option it on the 20i. The 30i and 40i have M Performance brakes and again, they’re optional on the 20i.

    And the 30i and 40i run on 19-inch light alloy wheels, which on the cars I drove had Michelin Pilot Sports.

    You can see the aero in the front bumper, with the signature BMW air curtains at the front and, interestingly, an integrated spoiler on the boot. The air breathers on the side are real and actually extract the nasty bumpy air from the front wheelaches.

    (for detailed spec, read our specifications story)

    Driving the 30i

    BMW Z4 2019

    If you want to break a years-long drought in Australia, launch a highly-anticipated roadster. The skies opened up not long after we left Melbourne’s Tullamarine Airport and kept up most of the time I had behind the wheel as we pushed northwards.

    To get the boring stuff out of the way first, the roof didn’t leak and even with a ton of water to push through, the cabin remained fairly civilised. We could easily hear each other’s weather jokes but you couldn’t accuse the cabin of being quiet.

    The 30i was very sure-footed in the slippery conditions. BMW is very good at sorting out a non-interventionist stability and traction control system, the diff doing plenty of hard work before cutting the power when things get hairy.

    Common to all of the Z4s is a fantastic driving position. It immediately reminded me of one of my favourites, the Jaguar F-Type, although the Z4 is a smaller car and a fair bit lighter. You sit right down in the chassis and everything is in the right place – pedals, steering wheel, console. It’s cosy, comfortable and a great place to get down to business.

    The steering is really nicely-weighted in all modes, never getting too heavy even in Sport Plus. BMW used to just wind off the assistance and leave you with a heavy, fuzzy feeling rather than genuine steering feel.

    The front end loves to change direction without hesitation, with the diff turning the car in on an ambitious late-braking gambit without letting you embarrass yourself. And boy can you get on the power early. It’s not as predictable or ultimately as awesome as a proper mechanical LSD, but it’s not far off.

    The 30i’s lighter nose rides the bumps well and it’s only on the big stuff that you feel the rear might be a bit too stiff in Sport Plus. Having said that, it doesn’t upset the car, the bumps merely underlining that you’re basically sitting on the rear axle.

    Driving the M40i

    After some nit-picking about the weight distribution – the heavier six-cylinder sits slightly further forward than does the four – it turns out it isn’t even as bad as 51:49 front-to-rear. It’s like…50.2 to 49.8, so near as makes no difference. Park your backside in the car and it probably evens out. Anyway.

    There is a lot of torque. In fact, there is a near-overwhelming amount of the stuff meaning the M40i is a lively thing. The deep lungs of the B58 mean the Z4 surges forward at a rate no Z4 has done before. The linear power delivery is the same as everywhere else but with the roof down.

    You have to stay awake in the M40i. Well that’s not strictly true. When it’s in comfort mode, it cruises beautifully. The suspension is still quite firm – the wheelbase is always going to be the enemy of a plush ride – but you can get around without needing surgical intervention.

    Wind it up into a proper mode, though, and the Z4 loosens up and gets a bit more jumpy-in-a-good-way. The rear wheel drive sportscar is always a delight, even when it’s not very good (I can’t remember a bad one in the last ten years) but the Z4 is a step above. The active steering is so seamless you have to check it’s actually fitted and those big front tyres grip the tarmac hard.

    I love the way the Z4 changes direction and the way it digs in at the front and the car goes with you. I love how the M40i wags its tail, again without letting you embarrass yourself. The fact the conditions were tricky but the Z4 stayed planted until I unplanted it won my heart.

    And the M40i’s speed, oh the speed. Top-down speed is so, so good. If only the engine made a bit more racket…

    Redline Recommendation

    I’m not about to tell you which one is better but I will say that the 30i with the M Sport differential was terrific. As it was still pretty damp even on Day 2 of the launch program, I took it easy but was still impressed with the Z4’s grip in the wet, the lovely, sharp steering and the mildly charismatic engine.

    It’s lighter than the M40i and makes you work a bit harder for speed. I like that.

    The M40i, though, is lively. Fitted with the same diff as the 30i I drove, it’s a lot of fun in the wet and you need to keep your wits about you in Sport mode. It will shrug off pretty much anything you throw at and if you intend to take a Z4 to the track, the M40i is the car for you. The bigger lungs of the M40i will be worth it.

    Oh, and the M40i knocked off a lap of the ‘Ring in 7:55. That’s quicker than the M2 Competition.

  • BMW Z4 2019 Pricing and Spec: Australia

    The BMW Z4 is here, we’ve driven it and we also know how much it costs and what’s in it. Toyota might still be keeping us waiting, but BMW has thrown the kitchen sink at us, with three models and a whopping great list of gear. To go with the price.

    Z4 Model Comparison

    BMW Australia has kicked us off with three models – the Z4 20i, Z4 30i and Z4 M40i. Based on the 5 Series’ CLAR platform (and shared with Toyota on the Supra), the Z4 is built in Graz, Austria and is available now.

    [table id=40 /]

    Starting at $84,900 for the 2.0-litre four-cylinder 20i, there is a fairly solid standard equipment list to get you started, which includes the M Sport package as standard. Australians always get it, so BMW thought it may as well just throw it in.

    BMW Z4 20i 2019

    10.25-inch touchscreen
    10.25-inch touchscreen
    BMW Z4 2019 M Sport Seatbelts
    M Sport seatbelts
    BMW Live Cockpit
    12.3-inch Live Cockpit
    Leather interior (M40i shown)
    Aluminium trim (20i, 30i, M40i)

    B48 2.0-litre twin-scroll turbo four cylinder with 145kW and 320Nm

    18-inch alloy wheels
    8-speed auto with paddle shift
    Heated seats with electric adjustment
    Through-loading system
    Fake “Sensatec” leather on the dash
    Dual-zone climate control
    Cruise control
    Auto high beam
    Auto parking with “reverse replay”
    Head up display
    10 speaker stereo with DAB
    Connected Package Professional (includes Apple CarPlay)
    M leather steering wheel
    10.25-inch BMW Live Cockpit digital dash
    Wireless charging pad
    Leather seats (Vernasca)
    Chinese language display (NCO) – (中文显示,免费)
    Aluminium trim

    BMW Z4 30i 2019

    B48 2.0-litre twin-scroll turbo four cylinder with 190kW and 400Nm

    Building on the Z4 20i spec, you get:

    19-inch alloys with performance tyres
    Comfort Access with Digital Key smartphone unlocking/locking and start (see below)
    M Sport brakes
    Active cruise control with stop and go
    Adaptive M Suspension
    Adaptive LED headlights

    The Comfort Access system works with either an NFC-enabled credit card-sized card. Unlike Jag’s Activity Key, you don’t have to keep the key in the centre console to activate the feature. If you have a Samsung Android-powered phone, you can use the phone to lock, unlock and start the car, which is rather clever. You can’t do it with iPhone (yet) because Apple refuses to open up the NFC chip.

    BMW Z4 M40i 2019

    Again, the M40i builds on the models below. The highlight is, of course, the engine…

    B58 3.0-litre twin-scroll straight six with 250kW and 500Nm.

    Tyre pressure indicator
    M seat belts
    M Sport differential
    Lumbar support for driver and passenger
    Ambient lighting
    12-speaker harmon kardon stereo

    Z4 M Sport Plus Package

    19-inch light alloy wheel
    19-inch M wheels
    Z4 roll bars
    BMW Z4 2019 roll bars
    BMW Z4 M40i grille
    Sharknose grille

    The Z4’s M Sport Plus package adds a swag of gear depending on the model you apply it to.

    20i: $3500
    30i: $2600
    M40i: $2100

    The list includes:

    Tyre pressure indicator (20i, 30i)
    M Seat belts (20i, 30i)
    19-inch M Light alloy wheels (20i)
    M Sport brakes (20i)
    Adaptive M Suspension (20i)
    M Sport differential (30i)
    Metallic paint (M40i)

    Comfort Package (20i only)

    Available only on the 20i, this $1800 pack includes Comfort Access (keyless entry and start), lumbar support and Active Cruise.

    Precision Package

    20i: $2600
    30i: $2400

    Ambient light
    harman kardon Surround system
    Adaptive LED headlights (20i)
    Metallic paint (30i)

    BMW Z4 2019 Engine Specifications

    All Z4s currently come with the eight-speed automatic from ZF so beloved of German brands. And for good reason – it’s excellent.

    [table id=42 /]

    Z4 Warranty and Servicing

    BMW offers a three year/unlimited km warranty which it reckons customers are happy with. Where have I heard that before? (Mazda was saying that three years was fine just weeks before upping to five years).

    Like all BMWs, the Z4 is subject to condition-based servicing, so there are no set service intervals as such. You can pre-purchase a few years of servicing in Basic or Plus.

    When?

    Now. You can buy one now. Go go go. BMW says the waiting list is pretty short for the Z4 and can have you in one reasonably quickly as long as you don’t want some whacky combination of options.

  • BMW M850i Pricing and Spec: Australia

    https://youtu.be/-hdCMjV8Sps

    BMW’s long-awaited replacement for the iconic 8 Series of the 1990s has arrived in Australia. Launching with the top-shelf (not including the M8) M850i xDrive, there’s a choice of Coupe and Convertible.

    Strap yourselves in folks, it’s not cheap but you get a lot of go for your dough.

    [table id=34 /]

    What do you get?

    Thankfully, a hell of a lot of gear. And chassis technology. In an effort save weight, the Carbon Core from the 7 Series is along for the ride. It’s not a huge amount of carbon fibre, but the transmission tunnel is made of the lightweight and is strong stuff. I don’t think it has saved much weight, but it does improve structural rigidity. The Convertible also has a stronger windscreen frame and a set of rollover bars to help with the loss of the roof.

    A stiff structure means the Adaptive M Suspension has a good starting point – the stiffer the shell is, the more scope chassis engineers have. While all four wheels are 20-inches in diameter, the front tyres are 245/35s and 275/30s on the rear. All-wheel steer is along for the ride, which should make things interesting.

    Suspension is by double wishbones up front active anti-roll. BMW says the setup is designed to separate the steering and damping forces and there are torsion struts to “more directly link the suspension to the 8 Series bodywork.

    The five-link rear has bi-elastic mountings (answers on a postcard, please) and a load-bearing strut for further rigidity and response.

    Front brakes are M Performance aluminium four-piston fixed calipers and the rears a single piston floating caliper. The discs are a massive 395mm and made of steel.

    The package also includes all-wheel steer, BMW’s new 12.3-inch Live Cockpit Professional, a new and bigger head up display and a 10.25-inch iDrive screen running BMW Operating System 7.0.

    The Coupe also scores gesture control which is never not hilarious when you’re watching someone trying to get it working. Another funky feature is either an NFC card for iPhone users and Android phones can unlock the car.

    The car also comes with a mix of subscription services –  Apple CarPlay and real-time traffic info and concierge services.

    Other tech highlights include the amazing Laserlights that can basically illuminate the moon and a carbon fibre roof (you can have a painted aluminium one as a no-cost option).

    M850i Engine and Transmission

    As the 50 bit suggests, there’s a ton of grunt under the bonnet from BMW’s twin-turbo V8. Sound familiar? Well, it should, it’s in the M5, X5 M and X6 M. Under the M850i you’ve got 390kW and a massive 750Nm.

    As we found out in the M5, there’s probably more. A fair bit more.

    The Coupe cracks the sprint to 100km/h (62mph) in 3.7 seconds (the drop-top is 0.2 seconds slower).

    As in the M5, the eight-speed ZF changes the gears for you and sends the power to all four wheels. As with sister company Rolls Royce, the sat nav looks ahead for you and will tell the transmission to change gear for the next corner.

    Between the rear wheels is an M Sport diff and that’s always A Good Thing.

    Detailed Pricing

    You can buy an M850i xDrive now from BMW dealers.

    Coupe: $272,900
    Cabriolet: $281,900

    [table id=35 /]

    [table id=36 /]

    [table id=38 /]

    M850i Dimensions

    [table id=37 /]

  • BMW X3 M Competition Australian Pricing and Spec

    Ever get tired of your 260kW/500Nm mid-sized SUV and want more? Like, a lot more? You probably want a 500-plus horsepower BMW X3 M Competition, then. Or, if you fancy a smaller boot and paying more for the privilege, the X4 M Competition. But you’re going to need almost $160,000.

    Before you read on, you can check out my review of X3 M40i to get an idea of how good the M might be.

    What is it? What are they?

    The X3 M Competition and its coupe-alike X4 sibling are basically the same car. The G1 X3 is going very nicely for BMW, thanks very much, so one performance version wasn’t enough. There’s actually already two, but we don’t get the M40d here.

    Well, technically there’s now four, but we don’t get either the M40d or X3/X4 M. We only get the Competition version because we’re speed snobs. Which is no bad thing.

    There’s a suitably amped-up interior, with BMW’s front seat renaissance continuing. You can choose the ever-so posh Merino leather or a Merino and Alcantara combination.

    You get a ton of gear for your money, with adaptive LED headlights, heaps of safety equipment, 16-speaker sound system, huge sunroof (…why?) but for some reason you have to pay over $600 for Apple CarPlay.

    Drivetrain

    As you are no doubt aware, the X3 M40i’s bonnet hides a B58 straight-six twin-scroll turbo. The X3 M, as is only right and proper, runs the S58.

    Packing two single-scroll turbos, one looks after cylinders one to three, the other four to six. The upgrades mean the X3 M has a tarmac-ripping 375kW (510PS) and a huge 600Nm. It’s probably more than both of those figures, but that’s what BMW is telling us. Oh, and it redlines at 7200rpm and peak torque is available from 2600-5950rpm.

    The S58 has a new cooling system, with one big radiator and two smaller wing-men behind the chunky new bumper arrangement. Along with a transmission oil cooler, there’s a fair bit going on to cope with the inevitable hammering. Quad exhausts hopefully deliver more of a racket than the M40i’s.

    BMW reckons the X3 M was honed at the track so the sump is split into compartments with a trick pump that goes looking for the oil when it needs it. The crank is forged to save weight.

    BMW’s x-Drive all-wheel drive system makes another appearance and is rear-biased. Also returning is the near-ubiquitous eight-speed ZF automatic.

    Want to know how fast it is? 0-100km/h (0-62mph) is over in just 4.1 seconds. That’s, uh, pretty quick.

    Oh, and BMW 3D prints the cylinder head core. There’s some pub trivia for you.

    Chassis

    The xDrive system runs in rear-wheel drive mode until conditions – including how hard you punch the throttle – send some of the power to the front wheels via a multi-plate clutch pack in the central transfer case.

    Drive modes include 4WD and 4WD Sport – M wasn’t game enough go with the RWD option in the M5.

    They did, however, spend some time stiffening the shell, with a strut brace at the front and two A-shaped arms at the firewall. Longitudinal ties run down the car for yet more rigidity and there’s another lateral arm at the rear.

    The suspension is beefed up with plenty of changes including stronger thrust arms, new anti-roll bar settings and adaptive damping.

    Braking is by steel rotors with aluminium chambers. The drilled front discs are a massive 395mm gripped by four-pot calipers while the rears are single piston units on 370mm discs. Front rubber measures 255/40 and the rear 265/40 on 21-inch alloys.

    How much and when?

    The X3 M will cost $157,900 plus on-roads and the X4 M $164,900 plus the rest. You should be able to get it in the third quarter of 2019. Dealers will probably take your money right now.

  • Mercedes-Benz X-Class Edition 1: Big Money

    Australia’s new most-expensive mid-size ute will arrive in July, with the X350d-based X-Class Edition 1 checking in at a whopping $87,500 plus on-road costs.

    That price point pits the vehicle well above current performance ute flagships including Volkswagen’s Amarok TDI580 Ultimate ($72,790), and Ford’s Ranger Raptor ($75,390).

    As its name suggests, the Edition 1 will be built in limited numbers. Mercedes-Benz Vans has yet to disclose just how many units have been allocated locally.

    What’s new?

    The Edition 1 does not benefit from performance enhancements, but rather a unique range of cosmetic features to distinguish it from the X350d Power upon which it is based.

    Three exterior colours are on offer – Kabara Black, Bering White and Rock Grey – which all sport blacked-out touches including a twin-louvre grille, front and rear bumper-bars, fog light surrounds, door handles, badges, roof rails and 19-inch twin-spoke alloys.

    Bespoke exterior striping extends along the bonnet, side mirrors, skirts, tailgate and badge surrounds, which appear in high-gloss grey for the Kabara Black units, or matte black on the rest of the colour range.

    Equipment-wise, the Edition 1 gains a black styling bar and tubed side steps, as well as a bedliner and hard tonneau cover.

    Inside, the ute boasts specially embroidered floor mats and a chrome “Edition 1” badge on the dash.

    Drivetrain

    The German pick-up retains its 3.0-litre six-cylinder diesel motor, matched with a permanent all-wheel-drive system, and outputting 190kW and 550Nm.

    With no mechanical upgrades, the Edition 1 carries over a seven-speed automatic transmission, a low-range transfer case and a rear differential lock.

    PRICING

    Although the four-cylinder Mercedes-Benz X-Class has been offered in Australia since April 2018, V6-powered variants have only been available since February of this year.

    The full-time X350d line-up includes two grades, Progressive and Power, which are priced at $73,270 and $79,415, respectively.

    The range-topping Edition 1 will be imported in Power form and upgraded locally, before going on sale in July at $87,500.

  • Aston Martin Vantage AMR 2019: Analogue Thrills

    Aston Martin has officially revealed its new-generation Vantage AMR, adding a first-of-its-kind manual gearbox option to the V8-powered supercar.

    Just 200 units will be produced worldwide, with first deliveries earmarked for the fourth quarter of this year, and with pricing starting at £149,995 in its home market, the UK.

    What is it?

    Matched with the Mercedes-AMG 4.0-litre bent eight, the new seven-speed shifter follows Aston Martin Lagonda president Andy Palmer’s vow to include manual options in the brand’s range.

    “When I joined this company, customers asked and, as a gearbox engineer and racer, I promised that we would always offer a manual transmission in our line-up,” he said.

    “The Vantage AMR not only honours that commitment but sets us apart from our competitors in continuing to offer a three-pedal option.

    “In a world of autonomous robo-taxis, Aston Martin will continue to advance the art and science of performance driving. With the Vantage AMR, we have created a thoroughly modern sports car that rewards effort and focus from the driver; the antidote to driving a computer game.

    Drivetrain

    With 375kW (510PS) and 625Nm on tap, the V8-powered Brit will sprint from zero to 100km/h in a hair under four seconds, for an estimated top speed of 313km/h.

    Developed by Italy’s Dana Graziano, the new seven-speed box features ‘AMSHIFT’ – a selectable mode which uses clutch, gear position and prop shaft sensors to mimic the technique of heel-and-toe downshifts and allow for full-throttle upshifts.

    Don’t fret, purists, you can switch it off for that heroic feeling.

    Now standard is carbon ceramic brakes which have helped to remove 95kg of weight compared to the car’s predecessor, and a new adaptive damping system can be tuned via three driving modes – Sport, Sport + and Track.

    The Vantage AMR will come in four colours including Sabiro Blue, Onyx Black, China Grey and White Stone, however, the final 59 units will be clad in a special paint scheme to celebrate the 60thanniversary of Aston Martin’s victory at the 1959 24 Hours of Le Mans.

    Pricing

    As well as all the aforementioned goodness, Aston has dreamt up five specifications including a limit of 59 of the “Vantage 59” livery.

    Aston Martin Australia is yet to announce pricing and availability.

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  • Kia Stinger GT 2019 Review

    Everybody has heard about the Kia Stinger. Just about everybody is wrong about it, though.

    Why are they wrong? They reckon it came out of the blue. It didn’t. We got flashes of what Kia could do long ago in the form of stupidly-named Pro’ceed GT, a much-lauded bargain performance hatchback. Nobody bought it because people are idiots, but it was the warning shot.

    I’m not sure how or why the Stinger came about. I have no idea how it got signed off given the ongoing slaughter of the sedan market. But, like many cars that don’t appear to make sense, I don’t care. The Stinger arrived in “normal” – albeit rear-wheel drive – forms and along with it came this – the Kia Stinger GT.

    It was one of the most hyped cars on the planet in 2017. The official reason for me waiting this long is to let the hype die down. The actual reason is that I only just managed to get my hands on one.

    Words: Peter Anderson
    Images: Matthew “better than Peter’s iPhone” Hatton

    Look and feel

    About ten years ago, Kia had an epiphany. You can sell good, solid cheap cars (itself an achievement) and lots of them. You can slap a good warranty and after-sales package on them and sell a few more, creating a sense of confidence in your brand from prospective customers.

    But you can sell a lot more of them if they don’t look like complete duffers. So they started listening very carefully to what ex-Audi design chief Peter Schreyer had been saying for a while – make people recognise Kias.

    So after ten years of doing that with front-wheel drive sedans and hatchbacks and a range of SUVs, Kia tackled a shrinking market – rear-wheel drive sedans. I mean, why not?

    The Stinger story started five years ago in 2014. The GT4 Stinger popped up at the 2014 Detroit Show and we all went wild. Then it all went quiet, because Kia said they wouldn’t build it, the sly dogs.

    Cars like this need a very different approach – you can have a lower bonnet, you can lengthen it and you’ll find many rear-wheel drive cars with sporting pretensions have big thick haunches to remind you it’s RWD.

    It’s all here on the Stinger and it looks tremendous. Of course, the GT has a set of huge wheels, that continuation of the rear lights that cuts into the rear guards and an aggro front bumpers. The side profile is properly sporty and has absolutely separated the Stinger from the Kia brand – you say Stinger, people know it’s a Kia.

    The interior is less adventurous, but boy is it good. Apart from the boring steering wheel, it’s got its own feel. The seats are fantastic (if a bit wide for me) and the penalty for the sleek roofline is paid here in the front seat. Even with the seat wound all the way down, the standard (in Australia) sunroof cuts into headroom. I hate sunroofs and I’m not even particularly tall.

    Anyway. It looks great inside and out. No complaints.

    Driveline

    Kia Stinger GT 2019

    Motivation comes from Kia’s Lambda II 3.3-litre twin turbo V6, spinning up 272kW (370PS) and 510Nm. That’s an amazing amount of power and comfortably the most powerful engine in the current Kia range. The only thing more powerful in the Hyundai-Kia firmament is the 5.0-litre V8, but only a few cars in the US and Korea gets that engine.

    Hyundai and Kia make pretty much everything in their cars, and that includes the eight-speed transmission that sends the power to the rear wheels.

    You can cover the benchmark 0-100km/h (0-62mph) time in 4.9 seconds and on to a top speed of 270km/h (167mph).

    Chassis

    The V6 captures plenty of the attention, but this car really does have the full package. A proper mechanical limited-slip differential looks after the fun end of the transmission, promising plenty of fun.

    The front brakes – with four-piston Brembo calipers, no less – are a whopping 340mm while the twin-piston rears grab 250mm discs.

    Kia, predictably, spent a lot of time at the Nurburgring, honing the MacPherson strut front and and five-link rear. The GT has those big struts you can see in the photo above, as well as beefed-up anti-roll bars.

    Rolling on 19-inch alloys, the front tyres are 225/40 up front and 255/30 at the rear and they’re from Continental.

    Driving

    There was something bugging me about the Stinger. Not in a bad way – you probably already know that it’s a very good car. It’s heavy, and you can never get away from that feeling. The way it stops, turns and goes was awfully familiar.

    In another way, the way you get in and get comfortable was very familiar and it dawned on me far more quickly – this car feels like Audi’s previous generation A7. You step down, duck under the roof rail and settle in snugly. It’s a good feeling and an important one. Nobody thinks twice about dropping $120,000 on an Audi but plenty will baulk at $60,000 for a Kia. They shouldn’t, and this feeling proves it.

    It’s not like the Audi, it just feels like it. I like that.

    My wife returned from a drive in it – nothing special, just running around for her day – and she reckoned she had found what had been gnawing at us both. This car feels a lot like her old BMW E90 330d M Sport. Fast, torquey, predictable and, in her words, “Stuck to the road.”

    That’s high praise. The E90 was a terrific car, the 330d was fast but kept to itself.

    The key to the Stinger is the way it grips and goes. That limited slip diff means you can really hoot into a corner, the rear staying nice and stable. Power out with the traction on is also very stable, but the traction control is a bit of a killjoy. A bit more play in the tail would be most welcome.

    The day I really got stuck in to the GT was a bit damp after a lot of rain the previous day, and it coped admirably. Despite carrying a ton of speed into the corners, the fronts would hang on gamely, chirping slightly under heavy braking.

    With the drive mode select turned up to Sport, the dampers were firm but compliant, keeping the tubby Stinger on the straight and narrow without upsetting its balance.

    And one of the best things about the car is that as a daily, it’s superb. Calm, composed and muscular, it gets on with the boring stuff without demanding anything of you.

    Redline Recommendation

    Kia Stinger GT 2019

    The Stinger is a great car. It really is. But it’s a GT car. Don’t buy it thinking it’ll be a hoot on a track day, it’s really more about a good winding road rather than chasing tenths. It will be wonderfully lairy with the traction switched off – there are plenty of flattened fences that will attest to that – and you’ll have a ball.

    But as a road car, this is a gutsy, bold move from Kia. It’s the top of their current GT range (Picanto and Cerato reviews will be along shortly) and it’s worth every single penny.

  • Mini Cooper S 2019 Review

    It’s too big, blah, blah, blah. Minis are supposed to small blah blah blah. The Cooper S is nothing like the original.

    All of these things are true or based in truth. The new Mini is big car, monstering our Volkswagen up! and the Suzuki Swift Sport we had a few weeks ago. It’s also nothing like the original which is a great thing – having an accident in a Mini now is much safer, even when you take into account over five decades of safety innovation. Crashing a new Mini is not the death sentence of an old one, a car that survived into the 1990s.

    The third generation New Mini, know as the F55, has been around since 2014, which comes as somewhat of a shock to me. It is kind of hard to tell things are changing because the three generations of BMW-owned Mini look so similar.

    As it has been around for a while, it’s time for a freshen-up which has meant a new interior, a few fix-ups and a general tweaking to make things a bit faster and, hopefully, more fun.

    Look and Feel

    Mini Cooper S 2019
    Mini Cooper S 2019
    Mini Cooper S 2019
    Mini Cooper S 2019
    Mini Cooper S 2019
    Mini Cooper S 2019

    As you can see, it’s…quite familiar. The facelift meant a few things, but the most obvious are those Union Jack taillights. I got into trouble on Instagram when I took a photo of them and said they were naff. Torrents of mild and amusing abuse followed and for once, people weren’t laying into the Mini’s funky looks.

    I quite like the wheels on this Cooper S. I reckon they look really cool and reinvent the Minilites a little bit. The self-conscious retro-ism of the old wheels was getting annoying. This BRG-style colour is pretty much perfect and goes with those rear lights.

    The centrally-mounted twin exhausts look stupid, though – tiny pea-shooters.

    Drivetrain

    Looks like a fish with the bonnet up…
    Mini Cooper S 2019
    Seven-speed twin-clutch

    The Cooper S still has the 2.0-litre modular four-cylinder turbo, one-upping the three-cylinder turbo of the standard Cooper. Codenamed B48, it’s scattered through the BMW range as well in various states of tune.

    Here in the Cooper S you have 141kW (PS) and a very handy 280Nm. That’s good for a half-decent 0-100km/h (0-62mph) time of 6.8 seconds, which will slay things like the Fiesta ST. As it should given how much more it costs.

    The front wheels get their power from a seven-speed twin-clutch or, as you’re more likely to choose, a six-speed manual. Most buyers choose the seven-speed, which is why I drove that one.

    Chassis

    Mini Cooper S 2019
    Mini Cooper S 2019

    The Cooper S rolls on those very handsome 17-inch alloys wrapped in 205/45 Michelin Primacy tyres.

    Obviously, the S is a bit lower and stiffer than the standard Cooper, but not by much. It also scores adaptive suspension, which is quite impressive in a car this small and goes some way to justifying its higher pricing. Here in Australia, the Mini Cooper S costs the same as a Golf GTI or Hyundai i30 N.

    Driving

    Mini Cooper S 2019

    Minis are great. They’ve got this little bounce in their roll, the way they get about is cheerful and fun. I’m quite happy in a 1.5-litre base model, particularly if it’s a manual, because it’s a great car to get around in.

    I love the driving position. Low and with those massive side windows, the pushed-forward A-pillars widen your field-of-view. You can see where the front wheels are going to go and the view ahead is not the postbox slot of a racy front windscreen.

    The current Mini is the basis of a whole new run of BMWs and, obviously Minis. With the recent Life Cycle Impulse (LCI) update, the Mini seems to have calmed slightly. I can speculate as to why – with more money being spent on the UKL2 platform and with Mini’s burgeoning range and BMW’s move to a transverse-engined architecture, lots of cash has gone to making it ride well.

    As I’ve already said, I liked the way the Mini bounced around. My wife, however, did not. She really hated what we came to call “the Mini bounce” (super-creative, I know) and felt that the car wasn’t tied down.

    The 2019 Mini Cooper S feels much more tied down than before. Firing through the bends – tight or long – the front end sticks and digs in as you lean on it. But now, it feels more like it’s holding the road rather than riding over it a bit. It’s a great feeling and helps you push on.

    And that’s a good thing. It still feels like a Mini – short wheelbase, pointy front end and in the S, lots of power. The seven-speed twin clutch is deceptively good – I had to check it wasn’t the ZF auto. Fast, positive shifts, no dithering like the old one and no lurching in reverse. It’s clever and lets you get on with the job of going fast.

    And again, you can go fast because while the chassis is a little more settled, the brakes are always there for you. Great pedal feel means you can hammer them has you hook the car into the turn and have the confidence that you’re going to get the stopping performance you need.

    Redline Recommendation

    The Mini has always been fun. And this Cooper S is a blast. I had the JCW Millbrook a few weeks after the Mini and thought that in some ways (apart from cost) the Cooper S is really close. Yeah, it doesn’t have the huge power, adaptive damping and LSD but it’s got all the things that make a Mini good.

    And that’s one of the reasons I like the Mini – they’re fun to drive, even a Countryman is good fun. The Cooper S might just be the sweet spot.

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