Evo

DIAL M FOR MAGIC

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IF YOU’RE GOING TO ANNOUNCE TO THE WORLD that you’re entering the motorsport arena, what better way to do so than with a homologati­on special mid-engined sports car designed by one of Italy’s highest profile designers, to be built by a bona fide supercar maker? That was the original idea for the M1…

But while the Paul Rosche-developed 273bhp M88 3.5-litre straight-six delivered the performanc­e and Giorgetto Giugiaro’s design the wow factor, Lamborghin­i, who had been contracted to build the sleek coupe around the Giampaolo Dallara-designed chassis, couldn’t deliver on its side of the deal so at the 11th hour BMW asked Baur to assemble the 453 cars.

From that point forward, BMW M took on the responsibi­lity of building its own road cars, starting with the E12 M535i, the first recognised series-production M-car. While its powertrain was stock BMW (the 3.5-litre M30 straightsi­x) its chassis featured M-developed springs and dampers along with unique wheels and aerodynami­c bodywork add-ons. There would be one further M535i (the E28) before the first fully fledged M-car, the E28-gen M5, was launched featuring a further developmen­t of the M1’s straight-six, which also saw service in the M635i coupe (technicall­y the first series production BMW to be badged an M-car, as it was called the M6 in America and Japan).

Initially built at BMW Motorsport Preussenst­rasse plant in Munich, in 1986 M5 production moved to Garching, where its successor, the E34 variant would also be built, as a saloon and a very limited run Touring model. For the E39 M5 (5-litre V8, 400bhp) production moved to Dingolfing alongside regular 5-series models and that remains the case today for the twin-turbocharg­ed V8 F10. Even when the E60 M5 saloon and Touring and M6 coupe and cabriolet models gained a V10 engine they were still built alongside regular 5- and 6-series derivative­s.

There is one car, of course, that perhaps above all others defines M. An homologati­on special in the definitive sense, the E30 M3 has earned every bit of its icon status and remains the go-to car in which to experience the purest M-car DNA.

Its five-year production run saw continuous updates and iterations, with incrementa­l increases to engine capacity and performanc­e, chassis tuning and aerodynami­c evolution, making trying to select the best E30 M3 a near impossible task. The 2.5 Sport Evo is the pinnacle of the model’s developmen­t, but many argue for the original, while the Ravaglia edition (or mainland Europe’s equivalent Cecotto edition) combines the best of both for some.

Unlike the M5, the 3’s evolutiona­ry journey was rapid, with six-cylinder engines used for the E36/ E46 and a V8 for the E90 before the F80 returned with a straight-six, albeit turbocharg­ed. For 2021 six-cylinder turbo power remains, but it also gains four-wheel drive for the first time. The M3 has also donated much of its hardware in previous years to M’s more extrovert models in the Z3 and Z4 M coupes and roadsters and the diminutive 1M, all a sideline of the division at its bonkers best.

All 21st century M-cars have turned to turbocharg­ed power, from the pugnacious form of the 1M to the transforma­tion of the M6 into the M8 and the Gran Coupe beyond that. Inevitably BMW’S X range, too, has been through the M workshops in recent years; the market for high performanc­e SUVS and the profits they deliver are too hard to ignore. Yet their introducti­on hasn’t distracted Markus Flasch, BMW M’s CEO, and his team from focusing on what nearly 50 years of motorsport engineerin­g has taught them. The M2 Competitio­n and M2 CS, the reigning evo Car of the Year, are conclusive proof of that.

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