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BMW M850i xdrive

Can new flagship coupé offer comfort and handling?

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IS it better to be brilliant at one thing, or pretty good at everything? BMW thinks the latter, based on its approach to the fresh 8 Series Coupé.

The German firm reckons its all-new 8 Series, which will later spawn both Convertibl­e and four-door Gran Coupé models, can compete with the Mercedes S-class Coupé on the posh, cosseting side, yet square up to the Aston Martin DB11 for the sporty stuff.

BMW’S latest all-rounder takes the form of a front-engined, four-wheel-drive four-seater. Its wheelbase is 123mm shorter than the S-class Coupé’s, but 17mm longer than a DB11’S. It perhaps lacks the grace of those competitor­s in the style stakes, but it has huge presence in the metal (and carbonfibr­e, in the case of the optional lightweigh­t roof). It looks brawny and aggressive in all the right places, with broad shoulders and 20-inch alloy wheels filling the swollen arches. LED lights are standard, with laser lights available as an option – the slimmest on any BMW.

Inside, the 8 Series looks and feels worthy of its £100k asking price. You sit low and the centre console is high, while quality feels superb.

It is fitted with the latest version of BMW’S idrive infotainme­nt system. The big change is a revised home page; previous BMWS display a series of large icons for the major functions, but the 8 Series shows these as shortcuts on a sidebar, opening the space up for a choice of customisab­le tiles with the major functions. It’s such a slick system that the absence of Android Auto compatibil­ity is only slightly irritating. The instrument­s are displayed on a 12.3-inch screen that, while it looks sharper than that in a 7 Series, still isn’t as pretty as Audi’s Virtual Cockpit. BMW’S gesture control has been tweaked, too, to the point where it’s almost no longer a gimmick.

Once on the move, it doesn’t take long to realise that the 8 Series easily covers the ‘comfy GT’ side of the brief. The cabin is hushed and the ride is very smooth. It can occasional­ly feel crashy over potholes and drain covers, but otherwise it’s a peaceful drive.

All models get a slick eight-speed automatic transmissi­on. This box is mated to a choice of one petrol and one diesel engine from launch. Eventually a hot M8 will join the range – likely using the same engine as the current M5 – but for now the range kicks off with the

“Once on the move, it doesn’t take long to discover that the 8 Series covers the comfy side of its brief”

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