Kapi-Mana News

BMW reveals new stand alone M vehicle

- NILE BIJOUX

The first standalone product from BMWMthis century has been shown in full – meet the XM. Or, rather, meet it early next year when it arrives in New Zealand during the first half of 2023.

It’s a huge SUVwith huge power, a pairing which probably won’t come as much of a surprise these days. Mwants to take on the likes of the Aston Martin DBX, Lamborghin­i Urus and Porsche Cayenne Turbo GT, not to mention having a go at Ferrari’s brand-new Purosangue.

To get there, it is deploying a new plug-in hybrid powertrain consisting of an updated version of the familiar 4.4-litre twin-turbo V8 and an electric motor mounted inside the transmissi­on. All in, the XMoffers 480kW and 800Nm of torque.

If the powertrain sounds a bit familiar, that might be because it will be used in BMW’s upcoming entry in the World Endurance Championsh­ip and 24 Hours of Le Mans race in 2024.

But back to the XM. BMWsays it will crack 100kph in 4.3 seconds thanks in part to all-wheel drive, which will happily route everything to the rear wheels if you so choose, and the instant twist of the electric motor. That figure is probably conservati­ve, BMW’s performanc­e claims usually are, but even so, it’s a little down on the Urus’ 3.6s sprint, or the Purosangue’s 3.3s ...

TheXMmight not beat them in a straight drag but it will be able to do all that stuff and make it home without an extra fuel stop. BMWNew Zealand didn’t specify fuel consumptio­n but overseas reports indicate aWLTP consumptio­n figure of 1.5L/100km, with CO 2 emissions of 33g/km, pretty mega for a 2.7-tonne hyper-SUV (that weight being a likely culprit for the overfour-second 0-100kph time). Allelectri­c range is rated at a maximum of 88km.

If that sounds a bit slow to you, worry not. Mis planning to up the ante with the Label Red edition for late next year, which will boast 550kW/1000Nm along with a healthy drop in the 0-100kph time.

Part of the weight figure comes from the 25.7kWh battery, but some also comes from the chassis. The XMshares some bones with the X7 M50i, including its vast 3105mm wheelbase. It also gets a complex five-link rear suspension set-up, a doublewish­bone front end, rear-wheel steering, active air suspension and 48-volt active anti-roll bars.

As for styling, it’s pretty apparentMw­anted this thing to stand out. There’s amassive grille up front rimmed in gold, split headlights, angular intakes and gashes in the nose and a massive bonnet.

Gold continues along the profile, wrapping under, around and above the windows, accenting a sloping roofline and referencin­g the old M1.

Two sets of two vertically stacked exhaust pipes punctuate the rear bumper, while the boot is curiously devoid of a BMW badge, perhaps to hammer home that this is a standalone­M product. Wheels range up to 23 inches in size.

Inside are two rows of seats, the rear set getting plenty of room thanks to that X7wheelbas­e. Up front is the now-standard pair of 12.3-inch and 14.9-inch screens, a relatively convention­al steering wheel and a tall gear selector, both of which coming from theM parts bin.

Standard specificat­ion includesMm­ultifuncti­on seats, model-specificMl­eather steering wheel, M-specific graphics including shift lights for the BMWCurved Display and a BMWHead-Up Display. Buyers will also get ambient lighting, four-zone climate control and the awesome 1500-watt Bowers and Wilkens Diamond surround sound system.

Final price will be revealed closer to the 2023 launch date. We’d expect it to sit above the iX M60, which starts at $238,900.

 ?? ?? This leviathan is the XM, the first product from M this century that isn’t directly based on an existing BMW.
This leviathan is the XM, the first product from M this century that isn’t directly based on an existing BMW.

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