RE: Finally! An E46 M3 Touring you can actually buy
RE: Finally! An E46 M3 Touring you can actually buy
Friday 27th March

Finally! An E46 M3 Touring you can actually buy

BMW never productionised a much-loved concept; 25 years on, a UK specialist is making the dream a reality


The fact that so many people have built their own M3 Tourings when BMW wouldn’t shows just how popular the idea always was. Ever since the first concept was shown (and driven) at the turn of the century, fans were desperate for the real thing, only to remain disappointed all the way until 2022. And a G81 Touring, cool machine though it is, patently represents a very different kind of M3 wagon - two turbos, four-wheel drive, standard auto - than an E46 equivalent. 

Now, more than a quarter of a century after BMW’s concept, a limited run of complete E46 M3 Tourings is being made. We’ve all seen plenty of labour-of-love projects over the years - one or two probably in Readers’ Cars, actually - but this is the first time there’s been a batch of them lined up. The glorious Laguna Seca Blue creation you see here is the work of Petroyle, a restoration specialist based near Oxford. While their work covers a lot of brands, they love an old M car at Petroyle (the LSB coupe you see here is owned by the boss), and it’s the years of BMW experience and expertise that’s gone into the Touring project. 

Clearly, the significant change from a factory E46 M3 to a Touring is in the bodywork. When Petroyle suggests that ‘integrating the flared wheel arches, signature side grilles and custom rear bumper requires extensive engineering and meticulous fabrication’, you sense even that might be underplaying the task somewhat. But with that done for the first car, the process is in place for those examples that follow. Interestingly, the Touring-specific panels - rear bumper, front wings, sills - are made from carbon fibre, which is good from a rigidity point of view, but is said to be ‘more cost effective than steel’ in this instance as well. It also means keeping the kerbweight close to that of an M3 coupe (which is 1,570kg). The quarter panels are still steel, like the concept, plus those who want a carbon roof to create a Touring CSL are able to do so. And before you say anything: yes, the boot floor has been reinforced. In fact, the entire structure is stiffened up, so hopefully it’ll really drive like an M3 Touring and not just an engine swap project.

Build 001, colour and trim aside, is intended as an exact remake of the original M3 Touring concept, down to clear glass and properly sized wheels (that so many people get wrong on similar builds). While Petroyle does have donor machines ready to build M3 Tourings from, it also has access to zero-mile S54s for those that want ‘a truly factory-fresh experience.’ Imagine that. Or for something wilder, the later S65 V8 and S85 V10 can go in. 

Obviously paint, leather and materials are all customisable to your heart’s desire. While Laguna Seca Blue and Cinnamon would hardly be an original choice given this car already exists, it’s easy to imagine one or two more being commissioned. Look at it! Often custom builds feature something that easily identifies as not from an OEM, but everything about the Petroyle M3 Touring that can be seen - the little details like ride height and wheel fitment, for example - appear as if from the factory. And very cool as a result.

‘The E46 M3 Touring project represents an exciting new chapter for the business - an opportunity to bring our renowned craftsmanship into the modern-classic arena’ says the marketing material. ‘We are excited to apply the same precision, passion and expertise that define our restoration work to the creation of each bespoke M3 Touring.’ Petroyle will only make 50 Tourings, the build cost is from £130,000 - or about what a new CS might set you back - and, yes, being the envy of all your M3 owning friends seems guaranteed. Even those with Tourings. We’ll get behind the wheel as soon as possible.


Author
Discussion

Howrare

Original Poster:

321 posts

231 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
Yet another automotive reason to work harder! Love it

ultrastapler

226 posts

180 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
love it. especially the blue and tan

BOR

5,099 posts

280 months

Friday 27th March
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Nice, but you would really have to want one at that price.

Building it in CSL spec might have made a bit more sense.

Alpenus

222 posts

55 months

Friday 27th March
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Not a fan of the clear glass

Iamnotkloot

1,875 posts

172 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
It’s lovely.

sutts

1,104 posts

173 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
Extraordinarily desirable.

SR

530 posts

230 months

Friday 27th March
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Want!

Mr-B

4,677 posts

219 months

Friday 27th March
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Would rather have that than the current incarnation.

pb8g09

3,093 posts

94 months

Friday 27th March
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Mega want. Would have this over a new one immediately.

MDMA .

10,276 posts

126 months

Friday 27th March
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Doesn’t look like they’ve contoured the rear doors into the rear quarters. I know Renner’s build does this (as per the original).

kambites

70,921 posts

246 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
MDMA . said:
Doesn t look like they ve contoured the rear doors into the rear quarters. I know Renner s build does this (as per the original).
Yes the rear arches do look a bit awkward where they hit the doors and just... stop. Lovely looking thing otherwise, though. Certainly more appealing to me than a modern M3, not that I could afford either!

I don't think they'll have any trouble selling 50 of them at that price.

VladD

8,150 posts

290 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
The E46 M3 is a design icon. The estate version just looks st to me.

MDMA .

10,276 posts

126 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
kambites said:
Yes the rear arches do look a bit awkward where they hit the doors and just... stop. Lovely looking thing otherwise, though. Certainly more appealing to me than a modern M3, not that I could afford either!

I don't think they'll have any trouble selling 50 of them at that price.
Doesn’t look right to me. They need to sort those back doors out. I might be wrong, but they look like standard touring doors. The last inch or so needs all new metalwork in to flare them out correctly. That’s how the original one was done.

Looks ok though.


ChrisCh86

1,095 posts

69 months

Friday 27th March
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£130k?!

AutoAlex's build was circa £70-80k apparently.


Lovely car though

GTRene

21,324 posts

249 months

Friday 27th March
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lovely, imagine that with the s65 or s85 option.

Mad Maximus

973 posts

28 months

Friday 27th March
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That colour combo. My days.

SE2

376 posts

161 months

Friday 27th March
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The only thing I'd change there is to have the Laguna leather as well.

jon-yprpe

455 posts

113 months

Friday 27th March
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Beautiful. I bought my M3 off Gregg and he’s a top bloke. I love the stance of the touring, must find out what suspension/spacers combo they have.

Assume those are 18s and not 19s…

MattsCar

2,159 posts

130 months

Friday 27th March
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Is it not pointless in the sense that people won't use them as an estate car, i.e lobbing 6ft long planks of wood in the back?

If you want something unusual/ Skunk works, buy a Z3 coupe that will appreciate considerably more than this over time.

GTRene

21,324 posts

249 months

Friday 27th March
quotequote all
I'm not a fan of those M3 seats, maybe put some Tillet bucket seats in with brown pads?

or some recaro's say something like those?