Bmw m2

9 min read

If the outlandish XM plug-in hybrid SUV doesn’t do it for you, this very well might. But can M’s new baby live up to its magnificent predecessor?

RICHARD LANE @_rlane_

TESTED 9.3.23, ARIZONA, US ON SALE APRIL PRICE £64,745

For the petrolhead of realistic means, fresh metal doesn’t get much more enticing than a new M car. Especially one with a manual gearbox. Yes, there are the hardcore lightweights from Caterham et al, but special as they undoubtedly are, you can’t use them daily. A rear-wheel-drive, tin-top coupé with a deep genetic predisposition for cornering antics, genuine refinement over distance, all the mod cons and back seats, though?

The second-generation BMW M2, successor to an irrefutable superstar, comfortably fits the description, and there’s lots to like about it. For one thing, it’s faster than you would ever need. It’s also a damn sight more attractive in the metal than in those leaked photos from last year, and it will oversteer for Deutschland.

But let’s put the champagne on ice for a moment, because there are caveats. Interrogate the tech spec and you will realise the ‘baby M car’ idea that BMW so memorably executed with the 1M Coupé of 2011 (which graduated into the best-selling M2 of 2015) is now dead and buried, killed by flab. The automatic car driven here weighs 1725kg (three pedals saves you 25kg), which is hard to compute because it means the M2 now weighs as much as the M4, whose platform it inherits. Put another way, the new M2 comes in exactly 150kg heavier than its usefully lithe forebear. It’s doubtful the original concept behind the M2 was for something crushing the scales 210kg more forcibly than a fat-hipped, PDK-equipped, leather-lined Porsche 911 Carrera S, yet here we are.

Then there’s the price. Even when it went off sale in 2020, the old M2 Competition, if fitted with the dual-clutch gearbox, started at £53,000, yet this new car costs £65,000. Quite the jump. And sure, that’s not all down to BMW. In recent years, the business of building cars has become intensely expensive. There’s also the fact that the new 454bhp M2 is a more capable car than the old one, outgunning by 10bhp even the hardcore CS run-out special. Dirk Hacker, M’s chief engineer, describes the Nordschleife lap-time delta between M2s new and old simply as ‘very big’. Trim is more generous: UK cars will get a 6kg-lighter carbonfibre   roof as standard and adaptive dampers (the old M2 was passive). But still, £65,000. Or, funnily, £66,000 for a manual. The 4.0-litre Porsche 718 Cayman GTS costs as much, and that car is a certified four-wheeled wo

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