RE: The new BMW M3 Touring has officially arrived

RE: The new BMW M3 Touring has officially arrived

Thursday 23rd June 2022

The new BMW M3 Touring has officially arrived

Nothing will ever be the same again...


While plenty was already known about the first BMW M3 Touring - the Nurburgring time, the powertrain and which bits are 3D printed - the full debut and all associated details are still jolly exciting. Not least because we finally get to see it in all its M-enhanced glory. Naturally the Touring is equipped with everything we’d expect of an M car: four 100mm exhausts, pumped up arches, plenty of carbon bits, the grilles… 

Yep, there’s nothing to be tremendously surprised by in how the M3 Touring looks, combining the handsome rear endof the G21 3 Series Touring with the more divisive front end of the G80/2 M3/M4. The details are certainly interesting, though, as this is quite a lot bigger than the regular 3 Series wagon. At 4,794mm the M3 is 85mm longer, and 1,903mm is 76mm wider than the standard car. It’s 1,436mm high - or 4mm lower. 

The roof will be high gloss black as standard (presumably to look like the carbon on both the coupe and saloon), with a body-coloured option available; the roof rails - on an M3! - are high gloss black. Though not typically a big concern for an M car, it seems appropriate to mention boot space here: the Touring offers 500 litres with the seats up, or 1,510 with them down. Hopefully a roofbox can get on those rails easily. 

BMW talks of a high gloss black band around the car, from front spoiler through sills and rear apron. Certainly the Touring hasn’t been spared any of the M3 hallmarks, carrying over the M-specific mirrors, side gills, aero flics and diffuser. The familiar wheels, 19-inch at the front and 20-inch behind, are also fitted, and Touring buyers will be offered the same Cup 2 tyre and ceramic brake upgrades as for the existing models. Which would cause quite the stir at a track day. 

Certainly there’ll be no holding anyone up on circuit, the M3 Touring boasting the same 510hp/479lb ft 3.0-litre twin-turbo straight six as the coupe and saloon. Paired to the eight-speed auto and standard xDrive, the Touring will hit 62mph in 3.6 seconds (just one tenth off the coupe), 124mph in 12.9 seconds and a 155mph maximum; a 174mph limiter raise is optionally available. 

The same trick chassis bits we’ve already become accustomed to - M Traction control, the drift analyser, 2WD mode and configurable everything - are present and correct. As a reminder (it’s been a good few months since there’s been a new M3 derivative), that means variable ratio M Servotronic steering with Comfort and Sport modes, Adaptive M suspension, the M Steptronic with three settings for both manual and auto modes, the M Mode button with Road, Sport and Track presets for the driver assistance, powertrain options and two settings for whichever brake setup you go for. (No wonder they all end up so heavy.)

The hidden bits that make a 3 Series into an M3 will contribute to that total as well (BMW hasn’t yet quoted a kerbweight), with the same upgraded hardware as two- and four-door. So the Touring has its torsional rigidity increased with ‘specific strengthening links’ connecting the strut towers with each other, the nose and the bulkhead, an aluminium shear panel to bulk up the front subframe, additional bracing from front to rear plus a bespoke (and rigidly mounted) rear axle subframe. With a more aggressive setup (camber, castor, kingpin angle) plumbed in to take advantage, the M3 Touring will “maximise lateral dynamic ability while still ensuring well-resolved ride comfort.”

So far, so M3. What marks the Touring out, beyond the obvious shape difference, is the new look interior. The updated cabin will make it to the rest of the range, though this car (and its Goodwood debut on Thursday) will be the best look at it yet. There’s now a 12.3-inch BMW Curved Display for the driver, with a 14.9-inch infotainment screen; the two of them merge “into a single fully digital and high-resolution unit behind a frameless glass surface angled towards the driver. It’s powered by BMW Operating System 8.  

Perhaps those expecting a spec surprise or two will be marginally disappointed, but the combination of perhaps the best sports saloon out there right now with an estate body ought to be enough for most. Especially with a dearth of opposition. Lest we forget, the AMG C63 is no more (at least until the four-cylinder replacement arrives) and the current RS4 is at the end of its life (with the run-out Competition model soon to land). The M3 Touring will cost £80,550, which is actually less than the BMW configurator currently says a saloon retails at - £80,970. It’s almost like they want the Touring to be as popular as possible. The car officially goes on sale in September; if everyone else is anything like us, expect there to be many, many people desperate to get hold of one. 


Author
Discussion

joe1145

Original Poster:

198 posts

122 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all
All I've got to say is yes please. I don't care about anything people will moan about. It's an M3 touring, and if I had the money I would already have an order in!

driftingphil

138 posts

148 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all
First of many comment I expects! Dam I go beaten to it..

Anyway officially end of any reason to buy an rs4 or rs6..

V12GT

325 posts

91 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all
Am I getting used to it, or does that grille look less awful than it did?

Otherwise, yes please!

driftingphil

138 posts

148 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all
V12GT said:
Am I getting used to it, or does that grille look less awful than it did?

Otherwise, yes please!
I don't think you'd be able to see the grille from behind the steering wheel anyway.

dasbimmerowner

364 posts

142 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all
I just can't get on with the front end on the current M3. I much prefer the M340i in that regard, especially in facelift trim. I'm just a bit underwhelmed in truth, not liking the wheels on it doesn't help matters either. I know they're just aesthetics, but for me to love a car I've got to like the way it looks as well as liking the way it goes.

cerb4.5lee

30,738 posts

181 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all
No carbon roof?! Is it really a proper M car then?! biggrin

I'll go for the tried and trusted RS4 instead thanks. hehe

All joking aside, this is better late than never though to be fair I reckon.


Zedboy

816 posts

212 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all
As always the touring version looks the best ... I can really see why they designed that grill for this version. Love it. Great backside too!

GT9

6,679 posts

173 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all
BMW are properly trolling angry old men aren't they.

That grille on an estate car with 500 bhp or so under the bonnet, and a young woman in the driver's seat.

Excellent work!

leglessAlex

5,476 posts

142 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all
driftingphil said:
V12GT said:
Am I getting used to it, or does that grille look less awful than it did?

Otherwise, yes please!
I don't think you'd be able to see the grille from behind the steering wheel anyway.
This is how I see it, or rather, this is how I plan on avoiding seeing it.

I’ve asked to be added to the list, but depending on how many the UK get I might be too late. I don’t really mind waiting a few years if I can get one, however.

InitialDave

11,930 posts

120 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all
The nose is still ugly, but aside from that, I like it.

Gunk

3,302 posts

160 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all
Personally I think it’s very over styled, I’d rather have an Alpina B3 touring, it just doesn’t try quite so hard.

ArnageWRC

2,067 posts

160 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all
I'd be happy to have it; and the front end doesn't bother me as much as it first did; probably down to the fact I'm used to seeing it on GT3 BMW race cars. This or the RS 4 or 6 would be a tough choice.

numtumfutunch

4,731 posts

139 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all

Yes please.

Can I spec a tow bar and a cubby in the back for doggy travel sickness pills?

Roma101

838 posts

148 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
quotequote all
numtumfutunch said:
Yes please.

Can I spec a tow bar and a cubby in the back for doggy travel sickness pills?
I hope so, otherwise it’s off the list for me and a big oversight IMO.

StRemy

358 posts

33 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
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This is probably faster, both in straight line and around corners, but I like the RS 4 better.

Maxymillion

488 posts

225 months

Wednesday 22nd June 2022
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I can't wait for someone like Schirmer to totally gut one, do their full business on it, then slap it on the 'Ring.

Terminator X

15,108 posts

205 months

Wednesday 22nd June 2022
quotequote all
Wibble. I can even forgive the front end!

TX.

Edit



Edited by Terminator X on Wednesday 22 June 01:25

forzaminardi

2,290 posts

188 months

Wednesday 22nd June 2022
quotequote all
It's excellent simply for (finally) existing but the Alpina is surely a classier way to go fast in a 3 series wagon?

pacdes

495 posts

162 months

Wednesday 22nd June 2022
quotequote all
Grill looks much better on a van. Good to see they've found a home for it.

Edited by pacdes on Wednesday 22 June 01:23

tannhauser

1,773 posts

216 months

Wednesday 22nd June 2022
quotequote all
The grille I actually don’t mind, it works much better on the M cars with the horizontal slats.
But it is over-styled. Those wheels. And those badges hurl

Not to mention those hideous dials.