BMW Z4 M - just too much for Mother Earth

Published Oct 23, 2006

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BMW Z4M Roadster

Would suit:

Nutters.

Price:

£42 795 (Roadster R570 000, Coupe R543 000 in South Africa).

Performance:

250km/h, 0-100km/h in five seconds.

Combined fuel consumption:

23.2mpg

(12.22 litres/100km).

There are two frailties to which no one ever admits: a) not having a sense of humour and b) being a bad driver (never mind that there is abundant evidence to the contrary, not least among those who claim professional prowess; think Ralf Schumacher.

Similarly, as a manufacturer that bases much of its appeal on the power and handling of its cars, BMW can never hold a hands up and confess that it can't figure out how to make that most quintessential of sports cars: the compact convertible.

The company has been in deep denial now for more than a decade. Let's examine its track record:

- The Z3 had Triumph Spitfire-era suspension and looked like something in which you might keep your make-up.

- Then it spent a fortune product-placing the overblown Z8 in the James Bond movies but only sold about a dozen to very rich beauticians and ageing roués.

- Now the current Z4, which admittedly is a good deal better, still looks like it was styled by someone who fell asleep at the drawing board and slipped.

And all that "flame surfacing" silliness doesn't do it any favours; the diagonal crease that continues the line of the windscreen down the side of the front wing to the lower front wheel arch actually makes me quite angry, for instance, and don't get me started on those banana-shaped sills.

The result, with its probing snout and mincing rump, has to be one of the most childish-looking cars since the Austin Metropolitan and that never even had the performance to match the pose.

Well, it does now. BMW has unleashed the snarling dogs of its M (for Motorsport) department on the Z4. They have - I believe the correct Autocar term is "shoehorned" - the verging-on-legendary straight-six from the current M3 (soon to be superseded), tweaked the styling with some extra fangs at the front folded an aggressive double crease in the bonnet, added new 18" wheels and four exhaust pipes, lowered the suspension and given it the brakes from the lightweight road-racer M3 CSL.

It now comes in both convertible and coupé versions (I tried the soft top but the coupé is more distinctive) to challenge Porsche's Boxster and Cayman.

Both the coupé and convertible have 234kW which, I found, was about 200 too many, at least as far as the British national speed limit was concerned. This is another of those cars, like the 911 Turbo I tried recently, that is simply too fast for Planet Earth.

Reining it in

It's not so much that it has an absurdly high top speed - after all, aside from my mum's 10-year-old diesel Clio, every car on the road can theoretically bust 70mph (112kmh) - but the way it revs so eagerly, steers so sharply and pumps its torque so instantaneously to the rear wheels makes it quite a handful.

You are constantly trying to rein the thing in as it soars towards the horizon or lunges for the car ahead. Plus, though it feels like it was built with the precision of an atomic clock, I, unfortunately, don't have the reactions to match it.

Unless you are really on top of your game, it is too easy to clunk your gear changes and send the thing into a drive-shaft-shunting funk.

The suspension's awfully hard, too. Maybe I'm getting old but I didn't find the Z4M all that amusing so it seems there is at least one person who will admit to having no sense of humour and being a bad driver. - The Independent, London

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