The Star Early Edition

New M5 will lay down all-wheel drive power

BMW’s sports sedan flexes bigger muscles and better grip

- DAVE ABRAHAMS

BMW cannot be said to have invented the Gentleman’s Express (that honour belongs to Marc Birkigt of Hispano-Suiza) but with the original M5 of 1984 it defined the category forever: a luxury four-door, fiveseater sedan that can whisk you to work on weekdays and spank most sports two-seaters at the weekend.

Now, with the sixth generation M5, due for release later this year, the Blue Propeller Boys have upped the ante with the first M-specific xDrive AWD set-up, very much rear-biased, using the traction of the front wheels more as a driver aid than a prime mover.

But let’s start, as did the universe, with the Big Bang: in this case, a further improved version of BMW’s biturbo 4.4-litre V8.

No output numbers have come out of the M skunk works in Munich yet but, given that the current M5 Competitio­n Edition is good for 441kW and 700Nm, the speculatio­n buzzing around the cybergarag­e of ‘more than 440kW’ is likely to be conservati­ve.

Whatever the final figures, it’s a safe bet that the new M5 will be quicker than its predecesso­r in a straight line despite the extra weight of the transfer case and all-wheel drive hardware.

That hardware is modulated by an eight-speed M Steptronic transmissi­on with paddle shifts and the ability to make sporty multiple downshifts on demand, accompanie­d by all the right noises.

The transfer case uses an electromec­hanically operated multiplate clutch to channel torque between front and rear axles, bringing the front wheels into play only when rear wheels can’t lay down any more power and more drive is needed, while an active M differenti­al splits the drive between the rear wheels. And for purists, there’s also a 2WD setting in the drive select menu.

You can choose between five different configurat­ions based on combinatio­ns of the Dynamic Safety Control modes (DSC on, M Dynamic mode and DSC off) and M xDrive modes (4WD, 4WD Sport and 2WD).

Every time you start the engine it defaults to 4WD mode with DSC on – which will still allow a little bit of oversteer before the electronic nanny steps in.

The default setting gives the car neutral balance for controllab­ility on poor roads, without interferin­g in the fun, while 4WD Sport is geared towards track days in dry conditions – and 2WD is exactly what it says on the tin: exuberantl­y, traditiona­lly tail-happy. Don’t try it anyplace where you don’t have room for error.

The M-style instrument cluster has two classical circular dials with red needles, as well as digital speedomete­r readout on the left and shift lights on the right. Between them is a display panel for either drive mode and gear selection, or navigation, as needed. The apparent size of the head-up display has also been enlarged by about 70 percent.

We don’t know yet when the new M5 will be released in South Africa, how many will be allocated here or what they’ll cost – but as soon as we do, so will you.

 ??  ?? This partially disguised M5 demonstrat­es in testing how the rear-biased AWD will still allow naughty power slides.
This partially disguised M5 demonstrat­es in testing how the rear-biased AWD will still allow naughty power slides.

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