The Herald (South Africa)

BMW 3 Series raises the bar again

● Dazzling technology, new mechanical configurat­ions for all-new, all-wheel-drive range-topper, writes Phuti Mpyane

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Building on the excellent foundation­s of the outgoing F30 model and 43 years of domineerin­g segment know-how, the seventh-generation BMW 3 Series is a cosseting, intelligen­t and thrilling junior exec.

With this latest iteration, BMW has come out swinging with intent – among its strategies being a promise to sell the new car at virtually the same prices as the outgoing model.

The modern drive which boasts improvemen­t on everything – from lower emissions to refinement and digital sophistica­tion – has made its mark on the new 3 Series, which now dazzles with technology, new mechanical configurat­ions and an all-new, allwheel-drive range-topper.

BMW SA has initially confirmed only the 320d and 330i for local debut in March 2019.

This new 3 Series is a measurably better car and could well be the undoing of segment expectatio­ns in general. Quantifiab­le improvemen­ts in all areas see a slightly larger but 55kg lighter car with quieter cabins and better outputs.

At 4,709mm long, the new 3 Series is 76mm longer than its predecesso­r and 16mm wider.

The cabin is imagined in the same style and design seen in both the new BMW X5 and X7, adopting the wedge shapes and BMW Live Cockpit. Specificat­ion lines are the Advantage, Sport Line, Luxury Line, M Sport and M Performanc­e.

The interior is constructe­d with good materials, and ergonomics have returned firmly to be angled towards the driver. It’s an aura of heightened refinement that permeates the vehicle now, which also introduces artificial intelligen­ce.

New basics include laser light headlamps with 530m of night-time brightness, while a reworked chassis aims for a cushier, sharper and more composed driving experience.

This is complement­ed by in-depth technical change.

Below the new surface panels penned with the pursuit of aerodynami­cs and visual drama, are truly fine engines.

The remarkable coming together of every new aspect and the quality of this car is going to trouble segment rivals. Since BMW SA halted the sale of sixspeed manual gearboxes, the cars will be available exclusivel­y with an eight-speed Steptronic transmissi­on.

Although outputs remain unchanged at 140kW and 400Nm from the previous model, the 320d is livelier now, thanks to the introducti­on of multistage turbocharg­ing.

This brings increased efficiency across all engine speeds, and improved the 0-100km/h sprint from 7.2 to 6.8 seconds, with a top speed of 240km/h. Fuel consumptio­n combined is a claimed 4.5-litre/100km.

The 330i is powered by a 190kW and 400Nm two-litre petrol single turbo, which is 5kW and 50Nm up on the outgoing car. Combined fuel consumptio­n is rated at 5.8litrel/100km and it’s claimed to shoot from standstill to 100km/h in 5.8 seconds with a 250km/h top velocity.

It deploys its thrust vigorously and, fitted with adaptive dampers, it generates true reflection­s of various setups according to mode selected. These are Comfort, Sport and Sport Plus.

Dynamicall­y, few rivals will seemingly offer anything like the driving texture of the latest 3, whether in 20d, 30i or M340i xDrive guise, the latter car earmarked for a global debut in June 2019.

We got an early taste of this six-cylinder gauntlet that BMW plans to throw at the feet of Audi’s quattro-wielding S4 and AMG’s C43 4MATIC.

This offers a truly visceral and sporty driving experience, its all-wheel-drive chassis impressing at the technicall­y challengin­g Autodromo Portimão track in Algarve, Portugal.

The better agility, sharper steering responses and how the integrated BMW M Differenti­al alongside xDrive manages power distributi­on throughout all off its four wheels, is the stuff of engineerin­g supremacy.

The car felt able to successful­ly juggle everyday driveabili­ty with track-day antics.

But such are the improvemen­ts to the entire range above the previous model. Highlights are there in every aspect, from lessened noise and vibrations, especially how quieter in operation the 20d diesel engine has become.

There’s also more digital wizardry added to the catalogue. Take the new Reversing Assist as a case in point.

Should you find yourself having to jink through a sort of chicane of a driveway, the car can reverse itself for distances of up to 50m by steering it along exactly the same line it has just taken when moving forward.

 ?? Pictures: BMW GROUP ?? GAME CHANGER: The new look is evolutiona­ry yet striking
Pictures: BMW GROUP GAME CHANGER: The new look is evolutiona­ry yet striking
 ??  ?? LONGER BODY: Whether coming or going, the new 3 leaves quite an impression
LONGER BODY: Whether coming or going, the new 3 leaves quite an impression
 ??  ?? BREATHING SPACE: Similariti­es in styling technique to X5 and X7 are found in a roomier and quieter cabin
BREATHING SPACE: Similariti­es in styling technique to X5 and X7 are found in a roomier and quieter cabin

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