RE: BMW 340i manual (F30) | Spotted

RE: BMW 340i manual (F30) | Spotted

Tuesday 9th August 2022

BMW 340i manual (F30) | Spotted

Why maybe the least desirable 3 Series spec of them all makes for a perfect PH fast four-door


Suggested specs are a big thing nowadays. Of course, friends have always liked to advise on which wheels to go for with a new car and which options are a must have; but now mags will tell you suggested extras and ideal specs, with even configurators encouraging which boxes to tick. It’s all in the name of resale, of course; a manufacturer doesn’t want you choosing a car you’re going to give back to them in three years that they can’t shift. And, well, a lot of what’s suggested tends to be sensible stuff (that often should be standard), so it’s wise to follow the advice.

But what happens when a buyer goes completely against all the recommendations? We see it with supercars all the time, but less so with ordinary cars when people can’t (or won’t) deviate from the norm. So let us present what might be the least desirable (to the majority) F30 BMW 3 Series in the classifieds - which looks absolutely brilliant.

There won’t have been many for whom a 330i or 330d of the previous generation wouldn’t have been enough, blessed as they both are with ample power and torque for a small BMW saloon. But this is a 340i, the flagship six-cylinder model that arrived with the 2015 mid-life update and boasted 326hp and 332lb ft. That meant 0-62mph in 5.2 seconds, and 155mph potential - a fast car, then.

Well, that was with the eight-speed auto that the launch cars were equipped with and the vast majority of 340is would have been sold with. This one kept the six-speed manual, which will have been a bold decision when new; now, less than five years after its first registration, there’s no such thing as a new, manual 3 Series - leave alone one with six cylinders. And that really is just the beginning of an incredible specification, one that goes against all conventional wisdom.

Note the smaller 18-inch wheels and clear glass, for starters. The cream leather is a novel choice, too, especially with the flat red paint. Also inside it looks like this 3 Series was specced without the stereo upgrade (as there are no A-pillar speakers), without heated seats (the button is missing) and with the smallest possible screens. Below the driver's dials sits an analogue MPG readout like the good old days, and even the iDrive display has thick black borders which - truth be told - we didn’t think was possible on the flagship model. It’s like all the money the first buyer had available was spent on getting the biggest engine possible and not the fripperies, which is pretty cool. Then got their 3 Series in red with cream, like it was a Ferrari.

Now the manual 340i is for sale, offered at BMW Salisbury with, it seems, just that one owner from new. (The spec box at the bottom has ‘0’ for previous owners). It’s covered 56,000 miles since 2017 and looks well for it, wheels unkerbed and interior largely unblemished. If you had to guess, it’s easy to picture one person doting on their 3 Series and using it regularly but not excessively. And probably enjoying the novelty of a 300hp+ BMW with a manual gearbox and rear-wheel drive.

Of course, this won’t be to all tastes. And even at half its new price, £19k isn’t the sort of money to throw away on a curio. A lot of cars have a lot of the same options because those are what’s popular with the majority of buyers. Red has seldom looked good with all-red rear lights, and we’d argue the same is true here. But as the manual gearbox dies out, so its appeal increases to its advocates. As the antithesis of the usual sports saloon seen in the UK, we can’t help but love this 340i. Get the boot badge off and the ultimate Q-car is yours.


SPECIFICATION | BMW 340i M SPORT

Engine: 2,998cc straight-six turbo
Transmission: 6-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 326@5,500-6,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 332@1,380-5,000rpm
CO2: 179g/km (NEDC)
MPG: 36.7
First registered: 2017
Recorded mileage: 56,000
Price new: £38,125
Yours for: £19,000

See the original advert here

Author
Discussion

richinlondon

Original Poster:

593 posts

122 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
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That’s fantastic, been specified by a 50 yr old + buyer who just knows what he/she likes and isn’t bothered by ‘fripperies’

GregK2

1,653 posts

146 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
quotequote all
Half a job on the exhaust tips..

tenmantaylor

406 posts

98 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
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Such a shame, if it was the same running gear in a blue touring body with black heated leather, HK, pan roof, and professional sat nav I'd pay more than double the option cost extra...

Clivey

5,110 posts

204 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
quotequote all
Judging by our (manual) M140i, that engine / gearbox combo makes this car so refreshing next to the sea of boring inline-4 turbo, automatic, AWD clones that have become the default format now.

Shame about the low spec…but you *could* retrofit a lot of the desirable stuff it’s missing.

Gecko1978

9,671 posts

157 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
quotequote all
Clivey said:
Judging by our (manual) M140i, that engine / gearbox combo makes this car so refreshing next to the sea of boring inline-4 turbo, automatic, AWD clones that have become the default format now.

Shame about the low spec…but you *could* retrofit a lot of the desirable stuff it’s missing.
I was just thinking this might be a tuners dream car

anonymous-user

54 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
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Its borderline perfect, just what you need, i am not sure about the Red though....hmmmm

mfmman

2,383 posts

183 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
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I have a 2017 F30 in Msport trim, albeit a 330i and auto

Almost the same spec although a more conventional silver with black interior. Rides nicely on the 18" wheels and to my mind looks better than the 19". No heated seats or up-specced audio, only addition to mine AFAIK is a sunroof. I wouldn't but the previous owner must have liked them.

I quite like this one with the exception of the cream

Iamnotkloot

1,415 posts

147 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
quotequote all
I’ve been through and out of my red car phase, so that’s a no from me. Having said that, it is in a cool spec and looks pretty neat.

big_rob_sydney

3,400 posts

194 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
quotequote all
At 5 years old, how has it managed to hang on to 50% of its purchase price? I would have thought at 5 years old, and being literally near the bottom of the BMW tree, it would have retained much less than 50%.

FaustF

679 posts

154 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
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Absolutely love that, not the best colour but for everything else I'd live with that minor foible

Limpet

6,304 posts

161 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
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Great car in a great (and relatively rare) colour. Shame it’s absolute poverty spec though. No HK (so the stereo will sound like a £49.99 micro system from Argos), no pro nav, no heated seats. I see no heroism in austerity, particularly when it has no measurable impact on the way the car drives. Give me the toys!





Edited by Limpet on Tuesday 9th August 08:25

Jon_S_Rally

3,394 posts

88 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
quotequote all
I'm sure some of PH's small-wheel, low-spec obsessives will be stroking themselves silly over it, but I don't see the appeal personally. If I was buying it, I'd be straight on eBay looking for parts to upgrade it. I'm sure the big engine/manual 'box combo would be quite fun, but 100% needs the bigger wheels and a few interior upgrades.

croyde

22,843 posts

230 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
quotequote all
Makes me laugh that 18ins wheels are considered small these days.

My old e36 rode on 15ins wheels. It handled but also dealt with crappy roads and speed bumps really well.

Real driving conditions are rarely racetrack smooth.

I've owned cars with toys, you read the manual, you play with them for the first few days then they are left alone.

A car is for driving.

I like this car, a lot.



Edited by croyde on Tuesday 9th August 08:29

SmartVenom

462 posts

169 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
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Looks to me like a 5 year lease deal coming to an end. Low optioned because the lease companies rip you off on options.

Clivey

5,110 posts

204 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
quotequote all
big_rob_sydney said:
At 5 years old, how has it managed to hang on to 50% of its purchase price? I would have thought at 5 years old, and being literally near the bottom of the BMW tree, it would have retained much less than 50%.
Firstly, because the car market is crazy right now but other than that, because it’s a 340i; the top of the regular 3-Series range. It’s the same reason that the best E46 330i / Ci models haven’t really depreciated in the last decade (some examples can still fetch around £9k). Plenty of us BMW fans would step right past a lot of this car’s rivals because they don’t offer what this 340i does in terms of powertrain layout. It’s the last RWD, straight six petrol 3-Series that’s not an M car.

Clivey

5,110 posts

204 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
quotequote all
Jon_S_Rally said:
I'm sure some of PH's small-wheel, low-spec obsessives will be stroking themselves silly over it, but I don't see the appeal personally. If I was buying it, I'd be straight on eBay looking for parts to upgrade it. I'm sure the big engine/manual 'box combo would be quite fun, but 100% needs the bigger wheels and a few interior upgrades.
It really doesn’t need 19”s. Our old F30 had the same 18” wheels as this one and I thought the tyre-to-sidewall ratio looked perfect, especially at the rear…and especially with some sporty tyres on it. Actual race cars (e.g. BTCC, GT3) use 18”s with some sidewall, not dubs with condoms stretched around them.

323ti

128 posts

121 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
quotequote all
326bhp, does that mean it has the N55 engine or is this already a low-tune B58?

J4CKO

41,452 posts

200 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
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Does the 3 series suffer the same poor steering and easily confused suspension as the M140i ?

I am not set on the colour scheme but as a manual with the 3 litre six I bet that is actually a superb car, the ZF8 is fantastic as an auto box and I like auto boxes but I dont want one give the amount and type of driving I do, manual all the way.

Thats the kind of car, with maybe a few modifications could be a keeper, maybe a little more power, and LSD and upgrade the suspension if its as poor as the one series. Could kind of create a low key, modern Lotus Carlton type thing, turbo six with 400 ish bhp, manual and RWD.

numtumfutunch

4,717 posts

138 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
quotequote all
richinlondon said:
That’s fantastic, been specified by a 50 yr old + buyer who just knows what he/she likes and isn’t bothered by ‘fripperies’
Disagree, it's a company or ex lease car as discussed

Interior needs pro nav which also makes the instruments nicer and from bitter experience the standard stereo in these cars is below terrible. My leased 335d was silver so metallics must have been 'free' making the flat red paint tough to fathom

Manual box for the win though

Wab1974uk

989 posts

27 months

Tuesday 9th August 2022
quotequote all
Such a shame they don't offer a manual in the current 340i.