Bangkok Post

PUMPED - UP M5

More power, lower and fififir mer suspension and sharper steering inject even more driver reward and drama into the M5

- MATT PRIOR

Another week, another Competitio­n version of a BMW. But unlike the M2 Competitio­n we reviewed in Sunday’s Brunch yesterday, the M5 Competi

tion is an addition to the range rather than a replacemen­t for the regular M.

There are a few prongs of thinking on this one. The biggest is that an M5 has a broader range of use than an M2 anyway, so there’s a reason for keeping both models in the line-up.

The standard M5 is for those who just want to potter around in a fast approximat­ion of comfort and the M5 Competitio­n is for those who want a bit more focus and driving keenness.

Not many M5 owners are track-day goers, unsurprisi­ngly, given that it’s a 1,940kg, 5m-long saloon car. BMW reckons that, typically, 50% of a market will drive hard enough to pick the Competitio­n version, though.

Other lines of thinking: I suspect there’s rather more margin on an

M5 than an M2, so you can sell ’em both. And it’s not like there’s much of an engine difference between the two, either.

What do you get? More power, albeit only 25hp, and the same amount of torque as before from the brawny 4.4- litre V8. That makes the headline figures 625hp at

6,000rpm and 750Nm in a flat line from 1,800rpm to 5,800rpm, a 200rpm extension over the standard M5.

The engine is largely mechanical­ly the same as it was. A bit of additional cooling accounts for the 10kg extra the Competitio­n weighs over the standard M5 but, like the additional poke, I doubt that’s what you’ll notice the most about this new variant.

More likely is that you’ll feel the 7mm drop in ride height and new damper hydraulics and springs that are about 10% stiffer all round and are combined with an increase in camber at the front, with modified toelinks and anti-roll bars at the back.

We rather like the regular car. What it does especially well is take you from one place to another very quickly and in quite a lot of luxury. If you want to overtake, or filter into faster-moving traffic, the oomph arrives in reassuring surges, so the car’s capability makes it a particular­ly easy car to rub along with.

But it ain’t a sports car. I hesitate to use the words “sports saloon”, really. Nothing of this size really can be, but some do the noises and responses that make you go gooey better than others. And so far there has been an argument that a Mercedes-AMG E63 does that slightly better than the BMW. I’ve felt that the BMW is a more accommodat­ing and easy-going, and ultimately a more capable car all round. But that AMG V8 makes the right noises. And I think that’s what BMW is trying to address with the Competitio­n. It has worked.

We’ve tried the M5 Competitio­n in two places: first, a very long, very warm race track, half of which comprises corners. Second, on some very narrow, quite bumpy roads around it. Neither is the autobahn or wide, sweeping Germanic country road that would be best suited, you imagine, to an M5. (But they did quite suit the M2 Competitio­n we tried in the same place.)

The surprise, then, was that it was great. I know you’re not going to take it to a race circuit. But do, just once, please, to be amazed at what it can do. If there’s another 1,900kgplus car that can seat five people and yet go and stop and corner like an M5 Competitio­n, and come back after six laps and tinkle and ping away in the pit lane like you’d just taken it to the shops, I’ll be amazed.

You can have carbon-ceramic discs as an option on the M5 and, usually, given it’s predominan­tly a road car, I’m not sure I’d bother. But they resist fade and deal with the tremendous temperatur­es generated by a saloon that can go from standstill to 100kph in 3.3sec incredibly well.

And the Competitio­n is good fun, too. Not just in reminding you what feats it’s possible to make heavy engineerin­g do. It’s well balanced, it steers quickly and keenly, and its four-wheel-drive system feels predominan­tly rear biased, but quickly and relatively smoothly pushes power to the front when it starts to slide, to give reassuring, smooth, handling neutrality.

On the road, though, is where it matters and where there’s also some extra welcome keenness. Ride comfort doesn’t feel like it has taken too much of a dive — although if you make the adjustable dampers any firmer than Comfort on the road, you’re bolder than I am.

But it’s different, rather than worse. Body movements in the M5 Competitio­n are sharper, but they’re over and done with more quickly, so in a way, the body feels flatter, and the worst edges are still rounded off.

The most striking thing was driving over some really poor surfaces in an M2 and then an M5 Competitio­n: that’s where you can feel what great work the adaptive dampers are really doing to keep the body mostly flat.

The steering’s sharper and keener as well. The steering itself is the same, but the camber increase, plus the lower, stiffer suspension just brings with it much better precision to a rack that’s usually pleasingly weighted but doesn’t give much back. There’s still not ‘feel’ here, but there is lovely self-centring and a positivity and accuracy to it.

So, in short, the M5 Competitio­n turns up the excitement and involvemen­t where you’d want it to, and doesn’t turn down the comfort too much while it’s at it. I’ve always thought that if you just want rapid comfort from a 5 Series, you’d be better off without an M.

So if you want the best super-saloon and, perhaps, something approachin­g a sports saloon, the Competitio­n is the M5 variant to have.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The interior is largely unchanged.
The interior is largely unchanged.
 ??  ?? Competitio­n rides 7mm lower than the standard car.
Competitio­n rides 7mm lower than the standard car.
 ??  ?? The 625hp bi-turbo V8 has 25hp more than a regular M5.
The 625hp bi-turbo V8 has 25hp more than a regular M5.
 ??  ?? M5 Competitio­n should cost at least 14 million baht in Thailand.
M5 Competitio­n should cost at least 14 million baht in Thailand.

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