RE: BMW M3 CSL | PH Auction Block
RE: BMW M3 CSL | PH Auction Block
Yesterday

BMW M3 CSL | PH Auction Block

Be upstanding, please, for the special one


Though only for America, the new manual-only, rear-drive-only M3 CS Handschalter is a nice move by BMW. Not a car it had to make, and which will only sell in small numbers, but one that represents a nod to enthusiasts who’ve had little to be excited by of late. It’s those buyers like us who’ll go to extremes when buying and maintaining cars, often with main dealer agents, so they must be worth keeping on side. 

It’s good timing, too. As both Mercedes-AMG and Audi Sport fumble around with exactly how to do an electrified fast car lineup, so BMW M seems to be striking just the right balance. If it’s not too fawning, they look like the brand most concerned with the wants and needs of enthusiasts, just as it was when the M3 CSL came along in 2003. Back then, there wasn’t a Black Series AMG nor a great fast Audi like the R8; BMWs really were the choice for those who cared deeply about driving, to the extent that the CSL was compared with the 911 GT3 and 360 Challenge Stradale in the early '00s. It really was considered of that calibre. Still is, in fact - look at how the values of all the road racers have climbed in recent years. 

Now, reminding you in 2026 of what went into making an M3 CSL is like telling you what goes into a G&T; the clue’s in the name and, well, it’s been around quite a while now. Suffice it to say that a little extra power, a chunk less weight and an induction sound to die for worked a treat for one of the modern M car greats. M3s prior to the E46 are 30 years old now; the V8 that came after was much heavier. When people talk about the heyday of the early '00s, the sweet spot between modernity and engagement, they’re talking about cars exactly like this.

 

While the CSL’s near-50 per cent premium over a standard car looked hard to justify 20-odd years ago, the owners of the 422 right-hand-drive cars have had the last laugh. (In fact, that sentiment probably applies to all 1,383 examples.) Because the market loves the rarity, the look, the sound and the badge, with CSLs regularly for sale at six figures - with most standard cars between £20,000 and £30,000. For many it represents BMW M at its very best, and they’re willing to pay accordingly. Even the rubbish SMG can be manual gearbox swapped. 

This particular CSL, to be auctioned on PH next week, looks a beaut. It was bought from its first owner in 2004; the second owner was so enamoured with their CSL that they kept it for 22 years, before selling earlier this year. There are decent careers, marriages and royal reigns that last for much less time. During that time, they covered more than 80,000 miles, had it tended to at BMW dealers and also kept the bodywork tip top with independent specialists and main dealer support. 

All of which means the thing looks ruddy fabulous right now. There really can’t be many better-looking BMW two-doors. With 90k on the clock, the airbag recall complete and a recent Inspection II service at BMW, this CSL should want for nothing bar the best super unleaded - and roads - you can find. Hardly like a few more miles is going to harm the CSL mystique now…


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

nismo48

Original Poster:

6,540 posts

232 months

Yesterday (18:14)
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That looks a well loved example

Lefty

20,262 posts

227 months

Yesterday (18:17)
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Love these, they feel surprisingly different to a “normal” e46 M3. Very special things

Jte3397

844 posts

121 months

Yesterday (18:45)
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Lovely car. Usual st written about "manual gearbox swap" though. It's the same gearbox with a spring, pedal box and other bits added to convert to manual.

Yes, I do have a SMG in mine. I like it actually but get why people don't.

cerb4.5lee

42,513 posts

205 months

Yesterday (19:09)
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My OCD has always hated the front bumper with these. I'd love one though nonetheless(but I think I'd rather a manual gearbox, even though BMW's manuals are mostly crap to be fair).

Portofino

5,259 posts

216 months

Yesterday (19:39)
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Jte3397 said:
Lovely car. Usual st written about "manual gearbox swap" though. It's the same gearbox with a spring, pedal box and other bits added to convert to manual.

Yes, I do have a SMG in mine. I like it actually but get why people don't.
Yep add quotes manual, but thats only after a conversion has been done…..

mwstewart

8,425 posts

213 months

Yesterday (19:56)
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The E46 M3 manual gearbox is awful. The SMG was fun.

darreni

4,423 posts

295 months

Yesterday (19:59)
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I'd never change mine to manual, a well set up & correctly calibrated CSL box is a joy.

Dombilano

1,397 posts

80 months

Yesterday (20:00)
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Love to see one thats been used, its a car, a bloody good car. On the move, a single clutch gearbox is no worse than most double clutches, leave it be.

birdcage

2,916 posts

230 months

Yesterday (20:05)
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I’ve had two and would buy another in a heartbeat if I hadn’t had open wallet surgery performed on me by various entities.

Wonderful car, gearbox is great.

Mahalo

1,306 posts

204 months

Yesterday (20:22)
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I have had one since new (well in actually fact, two as I rejected the first one on delivery as the carbon fibre roof had a defect in it) There is a lot of crap written about it by people who have never owned one or lived with one day to day. I used to commute into London with mine and it is clearly a special car even when driven in rush hour traffic. I went on the drivers course which came with the CSL at Prodrive and have over the years enjoyed the car in many different occasions and settings. As others have noted the manual gearbox in the E46 was not great and the SMG (specially adapted for the CSL) is part of the cars character (which it has in abundance) Usage/reliability wise, the only issue I have had with the car is the rear diff needed replacing due to an oil leak. BMW paid most of the cost as the car has a full BMW M dealer service record from new.

GreatScott2016

2,357 posts

113 months

Yesterday (21:16)
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Yep, that looks lovely, a brilliant era for BMW and peak design. Where did it all go so wrong? frown

TrevorHill

828 posts

16 months

Yesterday (21:21)
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mwstewart said:
The E46 M3 manual gearbox is awful. The SMG was fun.
Someone needed to say it. Awful gearbox, quite a few engine issues and they tend to rot from the rear forward.

Still a well cared for CSL is a thing of beauty.

Mr Tidy

30,176 posts

152 months

Yesterday (22:29)
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TrevorHill said:
mwstewart said:
The E46 M3 manual gearbox is awful. The SMG was fun.
Someone needed to say it. Awful gearbox, quite a few engine issues and they tend to rot from the rear forward.

Still a well cared for CSL is a thing of beauty.
IIRC the manual M3 had a Getrag gearbox and I've found them a bit hit or miss in the 7 manual BMWs I've had with them.

I've never had an M3 but the CSL seems a bit over-rated to me given what they sell for these days!

My Z4M has a ZF gearbox which is better than any Getrag I've had and has a few CSL bits, without any boot-floor issues but was cheaper than a standard M3. If you are really keen you can buy a carbon roof for the Z4 and Geoff Steel sell carbon air-boxes.

Still it will be interesting to see what this sells for.



0836whimper

979 posts

223 months

Yesterday (22:48)
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Loved the car, loved the SMG, was an event. Clunky about town, but that’s not what it’s for. Felt like a race car when you could drive it hard. Drama.

georgeyboy12345

4,432 posts

60 months

Yesterday (23:18)
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With a proper manual ‘box this is pretty much motoring perfection.

Slippydiff

16,109 posts

248 months

Yesterday (23:51)
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In the words of Mr B Ecclestone when asked by Muddly Talker "When he bought McLaren", he replied "I don't remember buying McLaren".

I'd say the same of the "carbon fibre rear bulkhead" in an M3 CSL ... but as ever, I'm happy to be corrected.

Epic cars, epic gearbox, epic seats, epic front bumper, epic engine (and induction noise) in fact there was very little to criticise, apart from the hopeless brakes.
All in all, peak BMW M Power.