RE: 2023 AC Schnitzer ACS2 40i | PH Review
RE: 2023 AC Schnitzer ACS2 40i | PH Review
Sunday 12th March 2023

2023 AC Schnitzer ACS2 40i | PH Review

The new BMW M2 is nearly here. Can AC Schnitzer's take on the 2 Series emerge from its shadow in the meantime?


You can’t deny AC Schnitzer knows its audience. One UK customer with a new BMW M2 on order has already booked in its full makeover, having not yet driven the thing. Some people are addicted to modification – whatever the cost. We’ll find out very soon just how good the new M2 is, and whether anything is actually crying out for improvement. But on the same day Mr Howell was assessing its merits somewhere very sunny indeed, I was trying out an alternative in a somewhat cloudier, and much chillier Northamptonshire. 

This is the AC Schnitzer ACS2 40i, the Aachen tuner’s take on the BMW M240i xDrive. The tweaks on offer are many and numerous; its headline pieces are a quad exhaust with carbon tailpipes (£3,954), 20-inch flow-formed wheels with Michelin Pilot Sport 4S rubber (£4,747), passive sports suspension in lieu of BMW’s adaptive setup (£2,150) and a power boost to 420hp and an M2-beating 443lb ft (£4,269).

Curiously, this demo car misses out on the latter, keeping to the stock M240i’s 374hp and 369lb ft, while bundling everything else – plus aesthetic upgrades, inside and out – into one £14,500 package. Pricing as punchy as the styling itself, you’d rightly argue, but Schnitzer customers largely cherry-pick two or three options rather than going the whole hog. Most bills will be half that.

You’ll clock its enormous wheels (and their terrifyingly slim sidewall) first and foremost, their appearance even bolder than the curious twin spoilers on the boot lid (a relative snip at £544 if you’re speccing stuff individually). They’re larger and more visually dramatic than I’d usually want or ask of an alloy, but at 11kg a corner they save almost 6kg of unsprung mass while also wearing one of the best tyres in the business.

Climb inside and once you’ve brushed your fingers over the metal paddles (£310 and complemented here by a £987 slimmer-rimmed wheel) the next point of note is a louder bark as the engine starts up, the exhaust system bringing a whole heap of extra intent without making this usually subtle sports coupe an outright rascal. 

It works very well with the engine, too, and provides way more incentive than usual to hang on right past 6,000rpm for a lovely crescendo as you pull that newly tactile upshift paddle. The soundtrack is meaner, but to a shorter extent than its slightly brash tailpipes might suggest. I like it. And having heaped plenty of praise on how pure the lighter, rear-driven 4cyl BMW 220i feels compared a stock M240i, I still have to concede that six cylinders in a car so squat remains a special experience and one we ought to cling onto for a little longer yet. Schnitzer’s exhaust only bolsters the argument.

There’s enough torque to overcome the M240i’s weight beside a 220 or 230i, too, even without the optional power boost. It’s only the pungent smell of brakes after a mildly spirited run that truly betrays the extra mass being kept in check here.

However, most transformative of all in this ACS2 is its suspension. The passive setup sits 20mm lower than stock and combines Eibach springs with Bilstein dampers, and right from the off they’ve sharpened some of the M240i’s softer, slightly grand-touring edge. Sure, the ride can feel abrupt at low speeds – particularly on more pummelled urban roads – but with increased pace the car’s body control comes together beautifully and its taut and predictable responses only serve to build your speed further. Its resilience on bumpy, undulating roads means you’re never prodding through the drive mode menus in a vain attempt to soften things off. (Yep, they’ve not actually deleted the adaptive options from the iDrive screen…)

It’s how the suspension works together with Schnitzer’s other mods to form one really impressive whole that I’ll credit most of the ACS2’s enjoyment to, though. Rich communication from its tyres and through the thinner ‘wheel go hand-in-hand with that sharper body control to give it real tactility at all speeds. My favourite is pushing harder through a third gear corner, just feeling the rear wheels begin to overdrive, a rich stream of feedback pouring into your hands as they do. I don’t remember driving the base car quite like this.

Crucially, you’re rewarded more the harder you lean into its rev range and grip limits, not always a given in performance cars nowadays – especially those with turbo engines driving stocky kerbweights. Sometimes holding back a bit reaps more reliable rewards. The ACS2 flips that on its head and simply eggs you on to delve deeper into its abilities. I could probably have done with a stock M240i for a definitive conclusion on the matter, but it’s safe to say those perturbed by the latest M2’s chunky price and even chunkier styling can find solace in applying the Schnitzer treatment to its softer sibling.

Of course, that’ll depend on how many of the tuner’s options boxes they tick – this demo car would certainly fight an M2 for attention as it stands while also equalling it on price. As it goes, I don’t mind the twin spoilers, though a less angsty colour scheme would do the whole aesthetic numerous favours. But if it were my order, I’d skip the exterior makeover by picking and choosing the more dynamic elements that AC Schnitzer has really nailed. Limit yourself to the suspension, steering wheel, alloys and tyres – neatly sharpening up an M240i without taking a scythe to its useability – and you can keep the bill below £8,000. Stick those on a lightly used car rather than a new one and you’ll only just land the wrong side of £50,000.

Our experience of the M240i thus far is that it stops a few feet short of true greatness and interactivity. Some wise cherry-picking of the Schnitzer options list appears to nudge it over the threshold. Whatever verdict we read on the M2 in the coming days, that’s welcome news indeed.


SPECIFICATION – 2023 AC Schnitzer ACS2 40i

Engine: Straight-six, 2998cc, turbocharged petrol
Transmission: eight-speed automatic, all-wheel drive
Power: 374hp @ 5,500-6,500rpm
Torque: 369lb ft @ 1,900-5,000rpm
0-62mph: 4.3sec
Top speed: 155mph
MPG: TBC
CO2: TBC
Weight: 1680kg (DIN)
Price: £63,630 (£14,500 pack plus new donor car) or modifications available individually

Author
Discussion

Billy_Whizzzz

Original Poster:

2,572 posts

168 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
Tuned lesser models that match or increase power over the halo model miss the point: there’s far more to driving than power and big wheels. Although the proper M cars are flawed at times, they are night and day compared to the M Lite models with their aftermarket maps, diff and wheels. If you want more power, get the real thing.

GreatScott2016

2,332 posts

113 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
Billy_Whizzzz said:
Tuned lesser models that match or increase power over the halo model miss the point: there’s far more to driving than power and big wheels. Although the proper M cars are flawed at times, they are night and day compared to the M Lite models with their aftermarket maps, diff and wheels. If you want more power, get the real thing.
Brilliant post thumbup

Tiglon

587 posts

67 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
3 comments in and no one has mentioned the "4.0i" badge?!

anonymous-user

79 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
Tiglon said:
3 comments in and no one has mentioned the "4.0i" badge?!
yeah i was about to thats very weird to me ! i hate badges at the best of times but thats awful

Dombilano

1,381 posts

80 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
Thinner rimmed steering wheel, looks like its just the side grips that have been thinned out, top and bottom are still fat. Sorry, phat.

Dog, your dinners ready

mooseracer

2,685 posts

195 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
LBW2020 said:
Tiglon said:
3 comments in and no one has mentioned the "4.0i" badge?!
yeah i was about to thats very weird to me ! i hate badges at the best of times but thats awful
Came to post the same thing!

mooseracer

2,685 posts

195 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
Billy_Whizzzz said:
Tuned lesser models that match or increase power over the halo model miss the point: there’s far more to driving than power and big wheels. Although the proper M cars are flawed at times, they are night and day compared to the M Lite models with their aftermarket maps, diff and wheels. If you want more power, get the real thing.
The above holds true, but only if you think a tuned "lesser" model somehow gives you an M

There's plenty of space in the market for tuner cars. Alpina, for example*, can give you M rivalling power but with the package taking a slightly different direction.




  • *Yes I know that they are now part of BMW.


Edited by mooseracer on Sunday 12th March 08:51

Court_S

14,627 posts

202 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all


That’s a particularly awful angle of this car. The back end is far too busy and looks like an absolute mess.

cerb4.5lee

42,311 posts

205 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
mooseracer said:
LBW2020 said:
Tiglon said:
3 comments in and no one has mentioned the "4.0i" badge?!
yeah i was about to thats very weird to me ! i hate badges at the best of times but thats awful
Came to post the same thing!
Maybe it will be getting the 4.0 V8 S65 engine put in it at a later date?! biggrin

cerb4.5lee

42,311 posts

205 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
EmailAddress said:
Somehow, this looks slightly better. Yet putting a person in it still makes them look like a Lego figure in a Playmobil vehicle.
I'm glad I'm not the only one to think this as well.

Maccmike8

1,576 posts

79 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
£4300 for a remap. Jokers.

Speed1283

1,193 posts

120 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
Not that some still care, but I'm assuming the remap (and maybe the exhaust) will void the BMW factory warranty?

Not sure I'd want to take the risk on a new car but probably less of an issue once out of the first three years.


carlo996

6,815 posts

46 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
Why can’t BMW create a decent setup on the M cars. Every one of them I’ve tried has been too stiff. There’s a lot of value in this, ditch the aesthetics and upgrade the suspension etc, a great Q car.

el romeral

1,973 posts

162 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
LBW2020 said:
yeah i was about to thats very weird to me ! i hate badges at the best of times but thats awful
Agree, numeric badges which seem to promote another engine size than the one which is fitted, do not sit well with me. This one is the worst yet. Bring back the old style badges where for example, a 635 was a 3.5 liter.

shantybeater

1,202 posts

194 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
Rear end of the new 2 series really is horrible...

Water Fairy

6,472 posts

180 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
GreatScott2016 said:
Billy_Whizzzz said:
Tuned lesser models that match or increase power over the halo model miss the point: there’s far more to driving than power and big wheels. Although the proper M cars are flawed at times, they are night and day compared to the M Lite models with their aftermarket maps, diff and wheels. If you want more power, get the real thing.
Brilliant post thumbup
Poor post. IMHO. Tuner cars are subjective and individual and THAT is the point. The above post just shows that Mr Wizz doesn't understand tuning and why people mod stuff. It's each to their own at the end of the day.

blue al

1,355 posts

184 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
Water Fairy said:
GreatScott2016 said:
Billy_Whizzzz said:
Tuned lesser models that match or increase power over the halo model miss the point: there’s far more to driving than power and big wheels. Although the proper M cars are flawed at times, they are night and day compared to the M Lite models with their aftermarket maps, diff and wheels. If you want more power, get the real thing.
Brilliant post thumbup
Poor post. IMHO. Tuner cars are subjective and individual and THAT is the point. The above post just shows that Mr Wizz doesn't understand tuning and why people mod stuff. It's each to their own at the end of the day.
Exactly the point, and sometimes it’s possible to modify way past the halo model’s dynamic strengths in every respect, not just shove, but suspension etc

Billy_Whizzzz

Original Poster:

2,572 posts

168 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
Water Fairy said:
GreatScott2016 said:
Billy_Whizzzz said:
Tuned lesser models that match or increase power over the halo model miss the point: there’s far more to driving than power and big wheels. Although the proper M cars are flawed at times, they are night and day compared to the M Lite models with their aftermarket maps, diff and wheels. If you want more power, get the real thing.
Brilliant post thumbup
Poor post. IMHO. Tuner cars are subjective and individual and THAT is the point. The above post just shows that Mr Wizz doesn't understand tuning and why people mod stuff. It's each to their own at the end of the day.
Mr Whizzzz absolutely understands what tuner cars are. Alpina are the exception and at least now in certain cases use a ‘proper’ S engine. Remapping a boggo engine isn’t very interesting or nuanced or even very good in BMWs case compared to what M do where an S engine is comprehensively mechanically re-engineered.

DamnKraut

487 posts

124 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
Black on black on black - only sensible colour choice as anything else would show too many design details on this "masterpiece" inducing hurl by the bucket load.

ZX10R NIN

30,200 posts

150 months

Sunday 12th March 2023
quotequote all
Water Fairy said:
GreatScott2016 said:
Billy_Whizzzz said:
Tuned lesser models that match or increase power over the halo model miss the point: there’s far more to driving than power and big wheels. Although the proper M cars are flawed at times, they are night and day compared to the M Lite models with their aftermarket maps, diff and wheels. If you want more power, get the real thing.
Brilliant post thumbup
Poor post. IMHO. Tuner cars are subjective and individual and THAT is the point. The above post just shows that Mr Wizz doesn't understand tuning and why people mod stuff. It's each to their own at the end of the day.
Have to agree sometimes the M version doesn't work for people which is why firms like Alpina/AC/Brabus exist.