Car (South Africa)

BMW M4 Coupé DTM Champion Edition M-DCT

Limited to just 15 units in South Africa, this is the most exclusive (and most expensive) M4 around

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BMW has made something of a habit of conjuring up limited-edition models that resonate with aficionado­s of the Bavarian brand. These sought-after special editions are generally all spoken for before they even set a tyre on our shores, with a handful invariably later landing up on the second-hand market at ludicrous prices.

The latest in a long line of veritable collectors’ items from the 101-year-old German automaker? The BMW M4 DTM Champion Edition you see here was conceived as a respectful nod to BMW Motorsport works driver Marco Wittmann, who snatched his second DTM driver’s title in the 2016 season finale at the Hockenheim­ring.

Just 15 of the 200-unit production run have been set aside for South Africa and we find ourselves behind the Alcantara-clad wheel of one (sorry, dear reader, it’s been sold, too) at Aldo Scribante Racetrack on the outskirts of Port Elizabeth. A fitting venue to be sampling something with proper motorsport roots.

You see, the bewinged DTM Champion Edition isn’t a mere stickers-and-plaque job. No, this rather distinctiv­e model gains more under-bonnet muscle, additional Dtm-style foiling – including so-called “aero flicks” sited ahead of the front wheelarche­s – swathes of exposed carbon-fibre and individual­ly adjustable three-way coilover suspension. Oh, and the obligatory stickers. Lots of them.

In fact, it’s based largely on the M4 GTS – a highly visceral machine that came close to winning the most recent iteration of CAR’S annual Performanc­e Shootout in January 2017 – and that means it employs a clever water-injection system boosting the standard M4’s turbocharg­ed 3,0-litre inline-six’s peak outputs some 51 kw to 368 kw and 50 N.m to 600 N.m.

The result is a 0-100 km/h sprint time of just 3,8 seconds, a figure beaten in-house by only the V12-powered M760LI, albeit by just one-10th of a second. And each paddle-induced upshift from the seven-speed dualclutch transmissi­on (BMW no longer offers the M3 and M4 in manual locally due to a lack of demand) is accompanie­d by a lively kick in the back. Soft this thing most certainly is not.

Diving into the first of the 2,48 km track’s handful of deceptivel­y tight corners reveals a razor-sharp turn-in, oodles of front-end grip – hat-tip to the Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 high-performanc­e, mixed-size rubber – and a distinct absence of body roll. The six-pot delivers a surge of mid-range grunt and a noticeably raspier exhaust note than that of the standard M4, but will gladly rev through to its 7 600 r/min redline, while the standard carbon-ceramic brakes serve up progressiv­e bite and consistent stopping power.

In short, it’s raw, utterly engaging and a little jittery over less-than-perfect surfaces. Just as you might expect a touringcar racer to be, then. And, just like the GTS. In fact, the only real difference­s between this Dtm-badged model and the GTS are that the former features a fixed carbon-fibre rear wing (the one on the GTS is adjustable), a non-adjustable front splitter (the GTS version can be manually extended and retracted) and sticker-bombed Alpine White paintwork. The roll cage, lack of rear seats and myriad weightsavi­ng measures – in spite of standard equipment such as a navigation system, adaptive LED headlamps and parking sensors – have all been carried over.

So, as expected, the raucous, two-seater DTM Champion Edition is right at home on a circuit. But, this RWD track toy certainly doesn’t come cheap. In fact, its R2 309 006 price tag places it right at the summit of the M4 food chain – above the standard model, Competitio­n variant and soon-to-arrive CS derivative – and, fittingly, pretty much on par with its GTS twin. Whether it’s worth a whopping R1 051 570 more than the standard M-badged version is an entirely different question.

Ultimately, though, the DTM Champion Edition is not something you’d likely buy to drive every day, since a great deal of sacrifice comes bundled with its inherent edginess. Still, as with the GTS, this special edition is as raw an M4 you can get this side of the GT4 racer. If you could buy it, that is.

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 ??  ?? clockwise from left Starspoke alloys are wrapped in Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 rubber; chunky M Sports steering wheel is trimmed in grippy Alcantara; lightweigh­t, figurehugg­ing M Carbon bucket seats are fitted as standard and are surprising­ly...
clockwise from left Starspoke alloys are wrapped in Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 rubber; chunky M Sports steering wheel is trimmed in grippy Alcantara; lightweigh­t, figurehugg­ing M Carbon bucket seats are fitted as standard and are surprising­ly...
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