M3/M4 BMW Cutting Cylinders for M3 and 1 Series


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

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M Gets Small: BMW Cutting Cylinders for M3 and 1 Series
BMW M3 and 1 Series M - Auto News - Motor Trend

BMW plans on bringing two new M cars to market in the 2014 model year; the next-generation M3 and an all-new M coupe based on the second-generation 1 Series. Both the next 3 and the next 1 Series production models will bow in late 2012 for the ’13 model year.

In keeping with M’s new philosophy of cutting cylinders/displacement while cutting weight to maintain performance levels, the next M3 will return to a six-cylinder engine. The question, M division CEO Ludwig Willisch says, is whether it will be an inline-six or a V-6. A V-6 would provide better balance and more packaging versatility, while an inline-six would be lighter, a key quality for BMW’s future, and avoid uproar among Bimmerphiles.

The new six-cylinder M engine isn’t based on the current 3.0-liter family, Willisch says, “and I’m not saying whether it is a twin turbo. It will be a turbo six-cylinder engine. That is, I’d say, almost sure. We’re really at the very, very beginning of the project. M3 hasn’t started yet.”

With a 1 Series M (the obvious name, M1, would also be problematic with hardcore BMW followers), Willisch is looking to recapture the spirit of the four-cylinder, E30 M3.

“It was the first one, and it’s so much fun to drive,” he says of the E30 M3. “And if you just look at the spec sheet, you’ll say, ‘It really won’t move.’ Twenty years ago, it was fine and now you need at least 420, 450 horsepower in order to have decent acceleration. But once you drive it, you’re really impressed because you can brake later, you can corner faster.”

That car also is in the inception stages, with BMW M working on its business case. The 1 Series M will weigh less than 2900 pounds and its turbo four must make at least 300 horsepower, Willisch says. “I would love to have a car like that in our range. It would also be a good thing to get the interest of younger customers again. This would only be a story for the next 1 Series, so you’d be looking at 2014 or so.”
 
A V6 is not going to happen.

I don't know why he brought that up. BMW has been fine-tuning the I6 for decades, and has a perfect 50:50 balance with the engine so far towards the cabin: Not. Going. To. Change.
 
A V6 is not going to happen.

I don't know why he brought that up. BMW has been fine-tuning the I6 for decades, and has a perfect 50:50 balance with the engine so far towards the cabin: Not. Going. To. Change.

50 € with you in favour of the V6. Think about the X5 and X6 M engine, it´s way easier to make the same with two cylinders less than work and a I6 engine, EnI is starting to talk about V6, and from a marketing point of view, this is just introducing a decision that could not like to everyone of the objetive public of the product.

I don´t have any preferences about this, but because of the circunstances, I say it´s going to be a V6.
 
C'mon BMW make it a real Benoni special - a car for the 1-2-3 members of society.

1 litre Brandy
2 litre Coke
3 litre V6

[That's an old South African joke pulling the mickey out of the Ford Essex V6 loving middle-class]

A V6 is wrong for BMW in so many ways - let alone an M car. It's like sleeping with your cousin: legal but altogether wrong.

The problem is, BMW have invested a crapload of R&D into the reverse flow V configuration and who's to say that they wouldn't want to carry this technology downward by simply lopping two cylinders off the block. It's a distinct possibility - no matter how disturbing for BMW afficionados.
 
C'mon BMW make it a real Benoni special - a car for the 1-2-3 members of society.

1 litre Brandy
2 litre Coke
3 litre V6

[That's an old South African joke pulling the mickey out of the Ford Essex V6 loving middle-class]

A V6 is wrong for BMW in so many ways - let alone an M car. It's like sleeping with your cousin: legal but altogether wrong.

The problem is, BMW have invested a crapload of R&D into the reverse flow V configuration and who's to say that they wouldn't want to carry this technology downward by simply lopping two cylinders off the block. It's a distinct possibility - no matter how disturbing for BMW afficionados.



I hope we'll never see a BMW V6.
BMW has been doing great inline 6 engines since the 1930s.
 
A V6 M3? I'll believe it when it is on the showroom floor at my local dealer.

Others like Mercedes, Jaguar, Lexus, Toyota all gave up on the I6 which made BMW that much more unique. They simply have to spend the extra development dollars and keep the I6 viable. Nothing else to say about it.


M
 

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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