RE: Alpina B3 Bi-Turbo: Review

RE: Alpina B3 Bi-Turbo: Review

Thursday 3rd October 2013

Alpina B3 Bi-Turbo: Review

Two turbos have to be better than one, right? Alpina's B3 says hell yes



With the engine switched off, the Alpina B3 Bi-Turbo's tacho needle points to a script that reads - with boundless good sense - 'OFF'. At idle it points to 'READY'. Although it's actually related to BMW's Eco Pro start-stop system in this context it seems to serve as a titillating, knowing hint at the fun and excitement that will ensue.

BMW has gone back to single turbos, not Alpina
BMW has gone back to single turbos, not Alpina
Even before you've lowered yourself into the superb cabin - standard BMW 3 Series, lifted by the familiar blue dials and premium hide - the sharply-cut front splitter, 20-inch Alpina Classic wheels and four stubby exhaust pipes have put you in mind of a focused performance car. As has the knowledge that up front rests a 410hp, torque-rich six-cylinder bruiser.

Although the powerhouse is based on the N55 engine fitted to PH's new 435i long-termer, Alpina's engineers have reverted back to twin-turbocharging rather than following BMW in its switch to a single blower, instead preferring the instant spool up that comes with a pair of smaller turbos. ZF's superb eight-speed auto switches gears while power is sent rearwards to an open differential. A limited-slip differential is optional, which, as we'll find out, is just as well.

Looks pretty discreet, doesn't go like it
Looks pretty discreet, doesn't go like it
Two times the fun
What would be the point of an Alpina if it didn't ride? In typical fashion the B3 Bi-Turbo is wonderfully supple in Comfort mode, soaking up lumps and bumps with cushioned control. Despite the 20-inch wheels and 30-profile rubber, the ride quality really is right out of the top drawer. Even when knocked into Sport or Sport+ - the 3 Series' optional adaptive damping is standard fit here - there's enough compliance for daily use.

In Comfort mode the steering is spookily light. Around the straight-ahead position there's often a sense that the steering column has been disconnected entirely from the wheels. The Sport modes address this with added weight, but never do you have total faith in the steering and nor is there any degree of feedback.

Muddied waters
On a twisting, narrow road that can become an issue because you find yourself unable to place the car with total accuracy. Allied to a chassis that, even in one of the Sport modes, feels a little blunt you do find yourself having to second guess your steering inputs and correct your lines. The B3 soon feels uncomfortable being hustled down a demanding stretch of blacktop for there isn't the precision and iron-fisted body control to make such a thing enjoyable. On open, flowing roads the B3 feels much more at home and is monstrously quick.

If it's subtle on the outside it's lush in here
If it's subtle on the outside it's lush in here
That engine really is spectacular. It both revs out cleanly and punches hard from low down and delivers 911-baiting straight line performance. Only the slightly lazy throttle response in Comfort mode irritates. With the traction control system disabled entirely it also overwhelms the rear tyres with alarming ease. Feed in the power any more keenly than a wizened nun might do and the inside rear wheel just spins hopelessly. Rarely has available power so comprehensively outweighed traction levels in a vehicle as refined as this one. With the systems on power is cut a little indelicately. That optional limited-slip differential would ultimately save you money in tyres bills.

Born slippy
As ever, the ZF gearbox can't be praised too highly. Alpina's curious nipple buttons on the back of the steering wheel are certainly unique, but when pressing on a larger paddle would be easier to locate and therefore more effective.

Thinking man's M3 reputation remains intact
Thinking man's M3 reputation remains intact
The B3 Bi-Turbo isn't Alpina's interpretation of what the F30-based M3/M4 will be like. It's much more idiosyncratic and cosseting than a typical M-car. For the quality of the ride, cabin, engine and transmission it is difficult to express just how brilliant a B3 Bi-Turbo, particularly in Touring guise, would be as a daily ride, but it doesn't back up that appeal with genuine sports car tactility.

Ultimately, the Alpina is ready to dissect a continent rather than destroy your favourite B-road or blitz lap times on a certain German race track.



ALPINA B3 BI-TURBO
Engine:
2,979cc, six-cylinder, twin-turbo
Transmission: 8-speed ZF automatic, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 410hp@5,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 443lb ft@3,000rpm
0-62mph: 4.2sec
Top speed: 190mph
Weight: 1,680kg
MPG: 37.2mpg (claimed)
CO2: 177g/km
Price: £54,950



   

Photos: Autocar

Author
Discussion

mrclav

Original Poster:

1,290 posts

223 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
Mmmm - tasty.

paulmon

2,135 posts

241 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
Want the touring version of this so much it hurts but unless Alpina start offering silly lease deals then its never going to happen. weeping

arkenphel

484 posts

205 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
I've never thought of the 3 series as a B-road blaster, even in e46 form. It feels far too large, and my E92 M3 is something that i would certainly not wring out on a B-road. A-roads are the natural environment for these cars IMO.

As I get older, I'm drawn more and more to these Alpinas. Must be a pipe and slippers thing...

jas xjr

11,309 posts

239 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
fifty five grand , no ta

lufbramatt

5,342 posts

134 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
Pistonheads journo man said:
curious nipple buttons
laugh

Wills2

22,780 posts

175 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
jas xjr said:
fifty five grand , no ta
And that is before you add the Alpina interior as it comes with standard bmw stuff so you can and 5-6k to that price plus I hear no discounts either.

I'd love one but they are very pricey.


BMRuss

1,547 posts

190 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
Not bad in red either wink


Amirhussain

11,487 posts

163 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
BMRuss said:
Not bad in red either wink

Oooh, I REALLY like that.

astirling

419 posts

172 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
jas xjr said:
fifty five grand , no ta
Cheaper than the M3 will be...and I'd have one of these over an M3 any day! Although I would expect the lease deals/discounts on an M3 will make them more comparable in price.

Wills2

22,780 posts

175 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
astirling said:
jas xjr said:
fifty five grand , no ta
Cheaper than the M3 will be...and I'd have one of these over an M3 any day! Although I would expect the lease deals/discounts on an M3 will make them more comparable in price.
The price you pay is what counts, an m3 will be cheaper on the invoice note than one of these.

Plus the M3 comes with much more kit than an Alpina, it's a myth that Alpinas are loaded with kit and lashings of high grade nappa leather you have to add all that.


jas xjr

11,309 posts

239 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
for that kind of money i would like something a bit more exotic

jamespink

1,218 posts

204 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
jas xjr said:
for that kind of money i would like something a bit more exotic
Exotic as in flashier or exotic as in, goes, rides, handles, stops, feels, holds its value, looks better? I think you would struggle with the latter...

jamespink

1,218 posts

204 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
jas xjr said:
for that kind of money i would like something a bit more exotic
Exotic as in flashier or exotic as in, goes, rides, handles, stops, feels, holds its value, looks better? I think you would struggle with the latter...

jas xjr

11,309 posts

239 months

Thursday 3rd October 2013
quotequote all
some form of pork would do it . maybe a donkey

I WISH

874 posts

200 months

Friday 4th October 2013
quotequote all
PH slipping into the same behaviour as most car mags.

It is INFURIATING when EVERY pic in an article shows the car in motion ...... so you have absolutely no idea what the wheels look like.

The printed car mags do it all the time. The journalist and the picture editor know what the wheels look like .... they either drove the thing or took the photos or have at least seen other shots ..... but they don't consider it appropriate that their readers have the same privilege.

It might be more "arty" to show a car zooming along apparently at great speed ...... but some of us (most of us?) would prefer to see the extra detail in at least a couple of stationary shots.

Please stop doing this!

sperm

Bonefish Blues

26,641 posts

223 months

Friday 4th October 2013
quotequote all
Amirhussain said:
BMRuss said:
Not bad in red either wink

Oooh, I REALLY like that.
Red seems to make it rather more "nasal" to my eyes.

NGK210

2,911 posts

145 months

Friday 4th October 2013
quotequote all
VW fits four tail pipes to the new Golf R and this forum erupts with hoots of derision and salvoes of contempt, but there's nary a whisper when Alpina does the same. Bias, much?

And those wheels look like hideous relics - is Alpina guilty of design-pfennig-pinching or misguided nostalgia for 1990s-style bling?

WCZ

10,517 posts

194 months

Friday 4th October 2013
quotequote all
the new D3 will be the best diesel car ever, you heard it here first.

Wills2

22,780 posts

175 months

Friday 4th October 2013
quotequote all
NGK210 said:
VW fits four tail pipes to the new Golf R and this forum erupts with hoots of derision and salvoes of contempt, but there's nary a whisper when Alpina does the same. Bias, much?
I think anything with over 400hp that does 0-60 in 4 secs and has a 190mph top speed can get away with it.

Although I do prefer just two exhausts, one either side like the Audi RS cars.

B10BRW

356 posts

221 months

Monday 7th October 2013
quotequote all
Rather optimistic MPG claim, I only manage 30 with my B3S Bi Turbo cry, but then I only have a six speed gearbox smile