M3/M4 2009 BMW M3: The World’s Greatest All-Around Car!


The BMW M3 is a high-performance version of the BMW 3 Series, developed by BMW's in-house motorsport division, BMW M GmbH. M3 models have been produced for every generation of 3 Series since the E30 M3 was introduced in 1986. The BMW M4 is a high-performance version of the BMW 4 Series automobile developed by BMW's motorsport division, BMW M, that has been built since 2014. As part of the renumbering that splits the coupé and convertible variants of the 3 Series into the 4 Series, the M4 replaced those variants of the BMW M3. Official website: BMW M

ateekt

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Hi guys;

2009 BMW M3: The World’s Greatest All-Around Car! :usa7uh:

A Nice read indeed, enjoy! :t-cheers:

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I took our long-term 2009 BMW M3 sedan out again yesterday, a long afternoon drive and then home, and more than ever I’m convinced this is the single finest all-around automobile in the world. Sure, myriad other cars have their talents—the scream and Gucci-chic of a Ferrari, the awesome power of the ZR1, the try-and-stop-me capability of a Land Rover, the elegance and comfort of a big Benz. But probably no other car combines so many virtues—speed, handling, good looks, roominess, practicality—into one package. And few cars of any kind are executed so well. Driving the M3 is an absolutely blissful experience, flooding your brain with dopamine as if you were arriving to courtside seats at the Lakers game with Jennifer Connelly on your arm.

First, the M3 fits my six-foot frame perfectly, as if it had been hand-cut and sewn just for me by a Savile Row tailor for automobiles. A few tweaks of the seat controls (our test car sports the standard black cloth with leather trim), a shift of the steering wheel, and I’m as well-positioned and locked-in as if I were strapped into a formula race car. The huge aluminum dead pedal provides a perfect brace for my left foot. A swell of lumbar support in the driver’s seat pushes in on my lower back just-so. The beefy, leather M Sport steering wheel is just the right diameter, and it feels great in my hands. The paddle shifters for the dual-clutch transmission move with the wheel—as they should—and sit just behind the rim, an effortless reach for your fingertips. Optional carbon leather interior trim ($500) adds a nice touch of drama to the businesslike cockpit. I still don’t adore the iDrive system, but it’s simpler to use than before and the new high-res display is terrific.

The engine lights off with a push of a starter button. Man, what a motor. The 32-valve V-8 boasts variable valve timing, a throttle butterfly for each cylinder, and an 8400-rpm redline. If 100 horsepower per liter is a magic number, the sign of a true athlete, then the M3’s mill is a gold medalist: the 4.0-liter V-8 makes 414 naturally aspirated horsepower. Mated to it (for an additional $2900) is one of the world’s best transmissions: a seven-speed, DSG auto-clutch manual that’s both smooth when pulling off the line and almost seamless when you’re cracking off upshifts and downshifts.


The powertrain alone would wow any driver, but the M3 is also gifted with a chassis that borders on the sublime. Standard Electronic Damping Control (with Comfort, Normal, and Sport modes) constantly adjusts the shocks, and you feel it in a ride that seems to glide over the asphalt. The chassis tuning is almost magical: Handling is always ultra-precise and controlled, yet the ride doesn’t beat you up, even in Sport mode. The steering is power-assisted (a variable ratio that changes with vehicle speed), but you’d never know it. It’s that smooth and direct. Gobs of grib on tap, too.


The result is a sedan for all reasons. With its practical shape—four doors and a decent trunk—and driving civility, the M3 can easily serve as a family car for transporting the wife and kids to the Saturday play date. Then you—heh heh—can sneak off and, in the same car, have a driving experience on your favorite mountain passes that’ll leave you feeling like you’ve just competed in a Grand Prix. The M3 is that sensational, from the bawl and thrust of its engine to the electric-switch responsiveness of the paddle shifters to the grip and precision of its magic-carpet suspension.


My favorite part is the optional M Drive button (part of the $3250 Technology package), which allows you to tailor everything from engine responsiveness to EDC mode to how much the Dynamic Stability Control system steps in. Set everything up to your liking using iDrive, then a single push of the M button summons all your preselected settings. It’s like finding a $20 bill in your jeans. You’re driving along in standard mode, and the M3 is just blowing you away with how responsive and quick and sure-footed it is, and you’re perfectly happy, and then you remember, “Wait! I still haven’t used M Drive!” Then you push the little M button on the wheel and the M3 instantly becomes . . . even faster and more electrifying. It’s a quick-change act that never fails to thrill.


For all of the above reasons, and more, I vote the M3 the world’s finest all-around car. Sure, our long-term Nissan GT-R is dazzling to drive, and much quicker, but it’s nowhere near as livable as the M3, a machine that’s plenty quick already. At $54,850 base and $68,270 as-tested, our M3 sedan delivers the driving grins of sports cars costing three or more times as much, plus a versatility that enables it to play the role of The Only Car in the Family. It looks great, too, I might add—clean and sleek but bulging with muscle (tastefully, not via rear wings and giant hood scoops).

I can’t think of another automobile that does so many things so well—and in such a right-sized package. If you put an F1 car and a premium sedan in a blender, the M3 would be the cocktail that pours out. Mmmm, nothing else like it. A toast then: To the BMW M3, the greatest all-around car in the world.

2009 BMW M3: The World?s Greatest All-Around Car | Car News Blog at Motor Trend
 
When it comes to a 4-door sports sedan.....

WHAT ELSE? :t-cheers:
 
^ C63 does come close, but M3 sedan and M5 sedan remain to be the benchmark :bowdown::bowdown: Thanks for the read Ateekt!
 
It's mighty alright.....4.2 secs to 100 is pretty benchmark setting, so to speak :D
F10 M5 has to have it's eyes on the Panamera Turbo, being slower than that will highly disappoint :eusa_clap
 
Journalist seem to start warming up to the current M3. Just like they did with the E46. Evo has an inspiring article about the E92 in the latest issue, they too are starting to sing its praise.
 
It's mighty alright.....4.2 secs to 100 is pretty benchmark setting, so to speak :D
F10 M5 has to have it's eyes on the Panamera Turbo, being slower than that will highly disappoint :eusa_clap

It's actually 4 seconds flat with Sports Chorno plus.

:t-cheers:
 
B.t.w., "World's greatest all-round car", that sounds like something one would expect an Audi to be called... at least by many magazines.
 
That's because 'world's greatest all-round' car doesn't make any sense. What's an all-round car? The car isn't flexible in boot space, cannot go off road and cannot properly house five grown men....

They just really like the M3 sedan ;)
 
That's because 'world's greatest all-round' car doesn't make any sense. What's an all-round car? The car isn't flexible in boot space, cannot go off road and cannot properly house five grown men....

They just really like the M3 sedan ;)

Very true. The M5 touring is a better all rounder, if not the X5-M
 
B.t.w., "World's greatest all-round car", that sounds like something one would expect an Audi to be called... at least by many magazines.

That's because 'world's greatest all-round' car doesn't make any sense. What's an all-round car? The car isn't flexible in boot space, cannot go off road and cannot properly house five grown men....

They just really like the M3 sedan ;)

Actually, it's the greatest All-Around car, not All-round! :t-cheers:
 
Ah, that changes everything :D

Oh, but I understand what they mean and I agree.
 
That's because 'world's greatest all-round' car doesn't make any sense. What's an all-round car? The car isn't flexible in boot space, cannot go off road and cannot properly house five grown men....

They just really like the M3 sedan ;)

It is the one car you want if you can have only one. Of course it changes from person to person. And it is the M3 sedan with a a proper manual transmission for me. And I bet it is so for majority of the enthusiasts.
 
That's because 'world's greatest all-round' car doesn't make any sense. What's an all-round car? The car isn't flexible in boot space, cannot go off road and cannot properly house five grown men....

They just really like the M3 sedan ;)
This is what I get a feel, it's happening also. I think the RS4 can do all this "all-around" stuff, much better. :usa7uh:
 
I'd still go for a coupé with DCT over a manual sedan. I'll be like half a second faster then....
 

BMW M

BMW M GmbH, formerly known as BMW Motorsport GmbH, is a subsidiary of BMW AG that manufactures high-performance luxury cars. BMW M ("M" for "motorsport") was initially created to facilitate BMW's racing program, which was very successful in the 1960s and 1970s. As time passed, BMW M began to supplement BMW's vehicle portfolio with specially modified higher trim models, for which they are now most known by the general public. These M-badged cars traditionally include modified engines, transmissions, suspensions, interior trims, aerodynamics, and exterior modifications to set them apart from their counterparts. All M models are tested and tuned at BMW's private facility at the Nürburgring racing circuit in Germany.
Official website: BMW M

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