Business Day - Motor News

New BMW M235i’s pace and grace make it the best car in its class

- Michael Taylor

Itried to dislike the BMW 2 Series Gran Coupe because I hate the way it looks. And I couldn’t. I really liked it, to the point that I could overlook its clunky design and easily live with one. It does so many things beautifull­y and nothing poorly. It is mature and calm and comfortabl­e and a real sweetie.

Exclusivel­y driven front wheels have arrived at BMW and they’re not going anywhere. It started with last year’s 1 Series and now it continues with the 2 Series Gran Coupe. Confusingl­y, the harder-core 2 Series performanc­e models, like the M2 Competitio­n and the M2 CS, remain on their rear-drive layouts, but the Gran Coupe has moved on to the 1 Series architectu­re, which is also shared with contempora­ry Minis. And it’s good. It’s very good. For starters, the M235i isn’t precisely front-wheel drive, but it’s a front-wheel drive with a hang-on differenti­al on the rear, so it can switch any front-end slip to rear-wheel drive at will.

Even then, its front-wheel drive bits aren’t normal frontwheel drive bits, with the road grabbed by a mechanical Torsen limited-slip differenti­al, which is normally reserved for far more expensive sporty cars.

There’s plenty of firepower sitting crossways under the bonnet, a 225kW, 450Nm 2.0l turbo petrol motor, which is claimed to be enough to swoop to 100km/h in 4.9 seconds.

It’s also a big performanc­e jump over its 1.5l, three-cylinder turbo petrol motor’s 103kW and 220Nm (nearly four seconds slower to 100km/h than its big brother).

It steps straight over the entry Gran Coupe’s sevenspeed dual clutch in favour of an eight-speed automatic, stiffened up for faster shifting. In fact, the entire M235i Gran Coupe xDrive powertrain neatly echoes the one in the 1 Series hatchback.

It straddles the gap between the 1 and 3 Series, with 4,526mm overall length, 430l of boot space, a cubby hole under the cargo floor and a 40:20:40 split-fold rear seat. The interior is pretty neat, comfortabl­e and well thought through.

For a relatively young market, the M235i Gran Coupe xDrive feels remarkably mature inside, with very little overlooked. Even the poverty pack delivers a 26cm digital instrument cluster, a head-up display, another 26cm screen for the touch-operated multimedia screen, six speakers and wireless phone charging.

The base assistant package includes a reversing camera, front and rear parking sensors, lane-departure warning, autonomous emergency braking, rear cross-traffic alert and speed-sign recognitio­n.

You get much more inside and out attached to the big engine, including a 16-speaker Harmon-Kardon sound system, leather upholstery, electric seats, adaptive LED headlights, keyless entry and bigger 19-inch rubber.

The front seats are immensely comfortabl­e places to be, and the seating position is excellent, as is front visibility.

The multimedia systems are much more intuitive than the Mercedes-Benz system (though less pretty) and there is plenty of storage inside.

It’s even set up for over-theair updates for its multimedia software and its Android Auto and Apple CarPlay navigation info can even be sent to its headup display.

One of the car’s biggest tricks comes from the electric i3, which needed a near-actuator wheel-slip limiter to govern all of its torque. The junior M car uses the same system to control wheelspin.

The Torsen diff is a high-end thing, too, and the all-wheel drive system can send half of the engine/transmissi­on’s torque to the rear end when it needs to.

Even with all of its urge, BMW claims it’s good for 6.7l/100km.

How does the M2350 Gran Coupe drive? Very, very well. From the frameless doors to the fat-rimmed steering wheel, the M235i subtly tells its story as a crisp tourer, rather than an M2style blaster, and it proves it with every corner.

The engine is quiet when it’s cruising and frenetic when it’s not. Yet it’s never uncivilise­d, and its performanc­e is like being mashed to a leather wall and held there, calmly.

Overtaking is simple, cruising is simple, gearshifti­ng is simple and driving fast or slow is just, well, simple.

The trick stuff comes with corners. It does everything with a dignity and aplomb that’s utterly unexpected.

There aren’t many cars this size with this sort of engine capacity that will cover ground with a combinatio­n of the M235i’s pace and grace.

Its body control is brilliant, even in the most comfortabl­e of its three damper stiffness settings. It never falls into the usual BMW overly hard ride in its Sports mode. It just becomes firmer and more precise.

It’s the sort of car that just can’t be unsettled, even with severe provocatio­n, regardless of the road conditions.

The rear seat asks an odd question, though. It’s about the only significan­t oddity. There is far more legroom here (about 11cm) than the old 2 Series, but there’s a big reinforcem­ent beneath the seats that extends forward of the corners, the roofline is low to get into it and there’s not much headroom for adults of any size.

But kids of, say, 14 or so would find it perfectly fine. Should you buy it? If it’s a junior 3 Series you’re after, you probably should. It’s not a case of a car in the class to buy if you love BMW, but more of a car in the class to buy if you want the best car in the class.

It’s also a far more mature, rounded machine than the new 1 Series on which it is based, and it feels like a BMW, rather than a rebodied Mini.

It’s more a fully developed daily driver than the harder-riding A 35 or the CLA 35 from BMW’s arch rivals in Stuttgart and it’s fresher than Audi’s endof-cycle A3 or S3.

So, if you can bear the sight of it (and it’s a lot less unattracti­ve than the 1 Series), why not?

The 2 Series Gran Coupe is expected to go on local sale in the next few months.

THE TRICK STUFF COMES WITH CORNERS. IT DOES EVERYTHING WITH A DIGNITY AND APLOMB THAT’S UNEXPECTED

 ??  ?? The 2 Series Gran Coupe is essentiall­y a junior 3 Series. There’s plenty of firepower in the M235i version. Below: The M235i Gran Coupe xDrive feels remarkably mature inside, with very little overlooked.
The 2 Series Gran Coupe is essentiall­y a junior 3 Series. There’s plenty of firepower in the M235i version. Below: The M235i Gran Coupe xDrive feels remarkably mature inside, with very little overlooked.
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