What is it?
The global car market is probably more homogenised than it ever has been. You can buy a BMW 3 Series in London, in LA or in Tokyo just like you can a Big Mac. Nevertheless, subtle differences remain, and those are often the most tantalising. You can order a beer in a Belgian McDonalds, and you can order a manual BMW M4 at a German BMW dealer.
The reason why BMW won’t bring over the manual BMW M3 and M4 is easy to guess and a quick browse of the classifieds for previous-generation M3s and M4s confirms it: not very many people want to buy one.
That logic makes sense, but when Toyota has announced it’s coming with a manual version of the Supra and Porsche is bringing out what is effectively a rear-wheel-drive manual version of the 911 Turbo, one might wonder if BMW should reconsider. After all, it does build right-hand-drive manual versions for Australia and Japan, so all the engineering work is done.
BMW probably won’t change its mind, so the more pertinent question is whether we’re missing out on something. When I went to drive the tweaked BMW M135i recently, BMW wheeled out a manual M4 from its German press fleet for me to try.
A brief refresher on the M3 and M4: in most regions, BMW offers them both in ‘plain’ and Competition versions. The non-Competition was always intended as the purist’s choice, with a manual gearbox and rear-wheel drive only. In the UK, we get only the Competition, which has 30bhp extra, comes with only the admittedly brilliant eight-speed automatic, gets some additional equipment and can be optioned with BMW’s fiendishly clever xDrive four-wheel drive system.
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The reason for low manual variant sales of the F80/F82 are more complex than the manual not being a good car. In the UK most of these cars were bought using finance, the residual values were forcast to be higher on the DCT this gave buyers an expensive optional extra and lower monthly payments whilst being encouraged by BMW sales people that it was a better car. Supposedly a win-win, BMW managed to sell 98% of these cars with the expensive twin clutch gearbox. Unfortunately most buyers based their decision on cost rather than driving the cars and comparing, most buyers did not have the opportunity to drive a manual because they amount to just 2% of cars. Are they any good, they're brilliant using a slicker uprated 1M gearbox from ZF, no complaints from 1M owners and no complaints from M2 CS owners!!
Surprised you can't notice 60lb ft or so less. I always remember BMW gearboxes described as rifle bolt when reality was too heavy too notchy and slow causing revs to drop.
Major kudos to BMW for offering this with a manual. I'm in the US, so it's available, but I will not buy a car that fakes its engine sound - that completely ruins it for me. I live in a high-traffic area, so I'm all too familiar with using a manual in heavy traffic. I have a manual 'box car, but my daily Giulia has - only because there was no manual available - the excellent ZF 8-speed automatic with paddles. I always use the paddles - but I'd much rather have a manual 'box even in my daily. The lack of a manual is the main reason I ever consider selling it.