A fair few of the cars that BMW’s M division has produced over the years have a particularly special way of worming their way into our testers’ hearts. Here are some of our best M memories.
Steve Cropley, BMW M1
Back at the end of the 1970s, when the BMW M1 was new and still being made at Lamborghini, I borrowed an early production version for a first drive story. With a photographer, I collected it from BMW’s famous Four-Cylinder building on the Munich ring road on a Friday afternoon and headed up-country in search of scenery and great driving roads. My cameraman had spotted a town called Rottenburg on our map and thought it might be a wheeze to go to such a place. (We were young, remember.)
What we hadn’t taken into account was that this was the beginning of Germany’s Ascension Day long weekend: everyone with a car and an address in the country was heading out of town, just like us. In our powerful, expensive and rare car, I drove through the dense traffic at a careful 160km/h (100mph) and my abiding memory is of being passed by dozens of hero-drivers in Volkswagen Golf GTIs, who slowed from their habitual 200km/h (125mph) to stare in puzzlement at the two idiots dawdling in a supercar that could go 90mph faster.
My memory is of the M1’s magnificent straight six and consequent very brisk performance. We never hit the official 192mph but we did see 180mph a few times, at which the car was nice and stable. Most of all, it was that car’s all-round capability that made it special. In an era of crudely built Italian supercars, this one had efficient door seals, wipers that worked, decent ventilation, good visibility and enough ground clearance. Such things may sound pedestrian, but it’s amazing how important they become when you don’t have them. Thus, first and foremost, for me the M1 will always be the place where modern supercars truly began.
Piers Ward, BMW M5 Touring [E60]
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Nice article.
Cannot get on board with the M1 being an "M" car in the spirit that this retrospective intends. For me an M car is a motosport development of a mainstream model which the M1 isn't, as capable and useable as it might have been in the day (and I really wouldn't give one if BMW had, or does, a M version of the 1er that is called an M1...if only for the fact it would get the "purists" wailing as if they are the guardians of all things M...M for muppet maybe).
M Coupé is the one for me. Only car I ever regretted selling. I even have a soft spot for the Z4 M Coupe.
Really nice piece. Enjoyed reading it. That M635CSI just looks gorgeous.
E46 M3 , to me, just awesome,to others?, well that's their opinion which they are entitled to, I've never driven a car since, with exception of a Supercar Trackday (Lamborghini, McLaren Porsche GT3) that was so planted to the road when going fast, and so relaxed dawdling along at 60mph.