M3 SMG reliability
M3 SMG reliability
Author
Discussion

joema

Original Poster:

2,741 posts

205 months

Friday 21st December 2012
quotequote all
I'm looking at M3's. Ideally I would like a manual but quite fancy the SMG, particularly if it's possible to remap.

SMG cars seem a bit cheaper. Are SMG likely to cause more problems, how reliable are they compared to the manual?

cheers guys.

E30M3SE

8,491 posts

222 months

Friday 21st December 2012
quotequote all
The 'boxes themselves are identical to the 6 speed manual 'boxes, but the SMGII has the addition of the electrohydraulic pump, various sensors and an ecu which the manual does not have.

Failure of these components is not unheard of, iirc a new pump will come in at ~£1800, for the part alone.

thatsprettyshady

4,693 posts

191 months

Friday 21st December 2012
quotequote all
I've had 2 m3's both with SMG both have been fine.

The Internet is full of stories about problems with these 'boxes, but I'd say its rather biased against due to people never posting when everything is running smoothly.

Test driving both types of box is key, the SMG a great gearbox and much more "involved" than a twin clutch DSG due to the changes being really thumped home, but it obviously lacks the complete control you would have with 3 pedals.


joema

Original Poster:

2,741 posts

205 months

Friday 21st December 2012
quotequote all
Cheers. Is there any way to tell a bad one?

CLK320

380 posts

199 months

Saturday 22nd December 2012
quotequote all
Any clutch slip is easily noticeable in 1st/2nd. Had it recently....got it changed and my guy said it was on the original clutch at 98,000 miles...testament to how well it changes gear. It does this so well because it has all kinds of clever logic to avoid damaging itself.

Ironically, after i'd had the new clutch it was occasionally failing to make some cross-gate changes quickly because it needed to be 're-learned' or something. 5 minute fix for my mechanic.

So to answer your question...a 'bad one' will probably be mechanically fine....just be wary of any clutch slip at slow speeds or failure to make fast changes in every gear (should take no more than a second or two in any SMG mode...when mine was needing to be reconfigured some changes were taking up to 4 or 5 secs).

I would take the SMG over manual every time because it is a nice balance. I can decide what gear is used, unlike my old auto merc, but don't get an aching left leg in traffic. If I rarely sat in traffic, I would get a full manual, as I occasionally wish i had a pedal on mountain roads. However, if i did that, i'd lose the hilarity of the full throttle changes in S5 mode....all about 'the shove'....amazing.

You should also consider that in the manual the clutch pedal is annoyingly offset, so you feel like your legs are pointing at the front right corner of the car.

CLK320

380 posts

199 months

Saturday 22nd December 2012
quotequote all
Also, get a CS rather than normal M3. It really is worth it, trust me.

CLK320

380 posts

199 months

Saturday 22nd December 2012
quotequote all
Forgot to say....I know a couple of guys who have clocked up over 100k on SMGs with zero issues. Don't believe the hype.

joema

Original Poster:

2,741 posts

205 months

Saturday 22nd December 2012
quotequote all
Going to see another manual tomorrow. Driven one with a short shift and felt great but the car was suspect.

Budget is 10k so cs is slightly more than I want to spend. Shame.

Need to drive an smg but can't today frown

FeelingLucky

1,183 posts

190 months

Saturday 22nd December 2012
quotequote all
Just come out of an M3 after six years.

The whole car was incredibly reliable, only failure outside service was throttle position sensor.

Mine was SMG, loved it, would only have another SMG. If I had my time again,I would go CS, for the quick rack.

Best car on the market under £10k

retrorider

1,339 posts

227 months

Saturday 22nd December 2012
quotequote all
This thread has not made my life any easier, as when my Boxster sells i am also looking at E46 M3's and had decided on a manual, but now i'm not so sure.It will only be used at weekends so what do you guys think ? Thanks in advance...

E30M3SE

8,491 posts

222 months

Saturday 22nd December 2012
quotequote all
Drive both then decide, some don't get on with SMGII and prefer manual.

Rahul uk

235 posts

176 months

Saturday 22nd December 2012
quotequote all
I have just bought an E46 M3 Manual as my weekend car. I avoided SMG because I found the one in my E60 M5 a bit cumbersome when driving slowly (but was immense on full attack). However, do not be under the impression that the manual box is without issue. It can be a bit notchy at times when cold and from what I have been reading a gearbox oil change is recommended to help smooth things out. Once I decided to buy an E46 M3 I knew I would end up spending at least another £1k on the car just to be satisfied everything was as it should be. Will be booking it into Grosvenor Reading in the New Year for them to go over with a fine tooth comb.

CLK320

380 posts

199 months

Saturday 22nd December 2012
quotequote all
Rahul uk said:
However, do not be under the impression that the manual box is without issue. It can be a bit notchy at times when cold and from what I have been reading a gearbox oil change is recommended to help smooth things out.
joema - don't know if you already know but both SMG and manual suffer from 'bunny hops' when cold in 1st (and occasionally 2nd) - I think the root cause is the engine not the gearbox. Every morning, I'm into 2nd as soon as possible because 1st is almost undriveable. I've known 4 other E46 M3 owners (manual and SMG) to confirm this isn't just my car....the engine is essentially similar to a race car engine, so it hates being cold, driving slow, etc.
If you test drive one from cold, expect the hopping initially, with it disappearing after about 1 or 2 mins.

0836whimper

982 posts

224 months

Saturday 22nd December 2012
quotequote all
CLK320 said:
joema - don't know if you already know but both SMG and manual suffer from 'bunny hops' when cold in 1st (and occasionally 2nd) - I think the root cause is the engine not the gearbox. Every morning, I'm into 2nd as soon as possible because 1st is almost undriveable. I've known 4 other E46 M3 owners (manual and SMG) to confirm this isn't just my car....the engine is essentially similar to a race car engine, so it hates being cold, driving slow, etc.
If you test drive one from cold, expect the hopping initially, with it disappearing after about 1 or 2 mins.
Yes, most are like that. It's normal.
Savour it, appreciate that it's one of the last highly tuned naturally aspirated bespoke M engines that hasn't had all character engineered out for the sake of scoring a couple of extra daily use points and you soon soon forgive smile

CLK320

380 posts

199 months

Saturday 22nd December 2012
quotequote all
0836whimper said:
Yes, most are like that. It's normal.
Savour it, appreciate that it's one of the last highly tuned naturally aspirated bespoke M engines that hasn't had all character engineered out for the sake of scoring a couple of extra daily use points and you soon soon forgive smile
It's bloody annoying at my work's multi-storey underground car park. It's always freezing when you're leaving on Winter evenings and you have to use 1st for a while uphill on all the steep ramps to get out of the car park...... the bunny hopping makes it look like you can't drive!

But even with this considered, I wouldn't have anything else right now. Show me a car for 10-15k with better character/pace/looks/practicality and 'reasonable' costs vs these abilities.

M3CS

380 posts

199 months

Saturday 22nd December 2012
quotequote all
Guess I should change my user name from CLK320!

horico

246 posts

240 months

Saturday 22nd December 2012
quotequote all
CLK320 said:
It's bloody annoying at my work's multi-storey underground car park. It's always freezing when you're leaving on Winter evenings and you have to use 1st for a while uphill on all the steep ramps to get out of the car park...... the bunny hopping makes it look like you can't drive!

But even with this considered, I wouldn't have anything else right now. Show me a car for 10-15k with better character/pace/looks/practicality and 'reasonable' costs vs these abilities.
Just chill out with it running for a few seconds and things will improve. Also, some say the bird feeder air box mod helps, I don't know if it was my mind playing tricks but mine seemed to improve when cold with the mod.

As for SMG v manual it's personal choice. If it breaks, it's unlucky. With a M3 you'd reckon on having a bit of spare cash in case it needs something like brakes, clutch or SMG pump. Also, at that budget you should get a sub 10 year old car so still in the subframe goodwill period. Any older and get it checked on a ramp or budget £800 or so for a re-inforcement from Redish Motorsport. BMW will pull your pants down without the goodwill.

joema

Original Poster:

2,741 posts

205 months

Sunday 23rd December 2012
quotequote all
Well I bought a silver manual today. Pick it up in jan! Thanks for the help all. Can't wait

thatsprettyshady

4,693 posts

191 months

Sunday 23rd December 2012
quotequote all
Congrats on the purchase, you'll love it!

161BMW

1,823 posts

191 months

Monday 24th December 2012
quotequote all
My old man had a brand new 2004 E46 M3 Coupe SMGII in Mystic Blue Metallic Paint. He had from 2004 - 2007. No issues what so ever and great to use especially in Manual mode S5. I mainly used S3 to save wear on the drivetrain but am not sure if this helps or not I think it does ? Really easy to get the hang off and adds to the character of the M3 and really fun in Manual mode. Avoid auto mode as is boring.

I have a M3 CS Coupe with BMW Manual Gearbox. I think Manual V SMGII affects the character of the car. SMGII great fun for full bore up shifts and downshifts. Manual is more fun more of the time perfecting the gear changes. SMGII makes most sense when driving fast. SMGII can up shift and downshift pretty much faster than any human being.