Why we ran it: To see whether £65,000 is too much for a 4 Series without an ‘M’ on its rump
Month 5 - Month 4 - Month 3 - Month 2 - Month 1 - Specs
Life with an Alpina B4 S: Month 5
The true colours of Alpina’s twin-turbo six-cylinder coupé have come to the fore in this 7900-mile test of everyday life - 4th September 2019
"That has to be the perfect long-termer.” If I’d made a euro every time somebody told me something to that effect during the past few months, I still wouldn’t be able to afford one of the Amazakouewood, 1968-spec reissued gearknobs from Alpina’s online shop. But I’d be extremely close. It costs 138 euros, not least because the wood for each knob is sourced from West Africa, dried out for weeks, then laboriously finished and painted before Alpina’s carburettor-crankshaft crest is fixed in place. As a metaphor for the detailed approach the tiny German manufacturer makes when building fast cars, it takes some beating.
And, save a few niggles, the commenters were right. A healthy weekly average mileage made it clear that the B4 S is a spectacularly good long-term test car. Why? Because almost nothing catches it out, as I’ll now explain.
It has been to mainland Europe twice, on each occasion reminding me that too many of the fast cars many of us aspire to own have forgotten the importance of rolling refinement. They’ve prioritised speed, aggression and outright body control, and yet 80% of the time we drive these cars, we’re doing so with minimal commitment. We want it to be effortless. The B4 S isn’t perfect in this regard and there have been times when I’ve wished it was wearing 19in alloys and taller sidewalls instead of dinner-plate 20s, but the fluidity of the car’s high-speed ride and its soft long-distance manners have been revelatory compared with the latest products from Porsche, M division and AMG. Those cars can take an attritional toll. If anything, with the B4 S, I often arrived feeling fresher than when I departed.
Soft merino leather and clear analogue dials help, but the Alpina also converted me to two elements almost always absent from modern cars: non-tinted rear windows and light upholstery. I was sceptical about the ‘Opal’ leather at first and it required care to keep clean, but the sense of space it imparted was calming on big journeys, cosy at night alongside the blue dials and orange cabin underlights, and a far cry from all the glum interiors we see today. Cruising along, it gave the B4 S the charming air of an old classic. Think BMW 507.
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Re torque bolts loose...
could the reason be that someone who built the Engine forgot to Torque wrench them...?, something as simple as that?, Runflats..., why do most not like them?, I’ve been driving on them for years on three different BMW’s, the M3 was epic on them, so was the 530i, and the two 320i’s were also, I liked the firmness of the side walls, gave plenty of confidence in the bends, loads of info, plenty of feel,and they lasted well 30,000 + miles, I guess it’s a choice thing.....?
The last...
The last beautiful BMW...
That price as tested......
.....does seem a bit bonkers.
At £79K it's practicaly competing with the RS7 and similar 600HP monsters.
Better to cut back on the options and stay nearer £65K - at that price it looks unbeatable.
Price correction
Hello rf – that’s a typo, sorry. Should be £72,880. Takes a bit of the sting out of it…