RE: BMW 330d M Sport Plus | Driven

RE: BMW 330d M Sport Plus | Driven

Monday 22nd July 2019

2020 BMW 330d M Sport Plus | UK Review

The 330d wants to be all the car you'll ever need - and then some. Does it succeed?



It is often said that the BMW 320d is all the car most of us will ever need, and that's certainly true of the current G20 version. It's economical, comfortable and, when you choose to wring its neck, enjoyable to drive. Only its fuel-sipping motor could really be said to leave you wanting more - and (as ever) that's where the 330d steps in, replacing a shy and retiring four cylinders with a commanding and torque-laden six.

Like the other M Sport G20s, this 330d comes finished wearing sportier trim and a set of 19-inch alloys, wrapped in Michelin Pilot 4S rubber. But Plus trim builds on those specs further with adaptive suspension, an M Sport differential and more powerful M Sport brakes. Inside, it's been kitted out with BMW's top-spec 7.0 cabin operating system and head-up display, among other things, resulting in an on the road price of £51,605 - more than £10k up on an entry-level 330d. Chances are that'll make it pricier than the incoming Audi S4 TDI, too, which gets its maker's Virtual Cockpit system and more power as standard.


We know BMW's inline diesel motor is a very good one, though, and in the 330d it produces a not to be sniffed at 265hp and 428lb ft of torque alongside around 47mpg of combined economy and 157g/km CO2. It'll do 0-62mph in as little as 5.5 seconds, but really it's about the arrival of all that twist at 1,750rpm and the smooth, surging hustle of a BMW-made multi-cylinder engine. We've driven the 330i recently, too, and while it doesn't want for accelerative effect, it is the four-pot petrol motor's shortfall in refined, middle-order shove that distinguishes it from the superior feel of a proper engine.

The oil burner is well matched to the G20's high-calibre chassis. When pressing on there's gravelly pleasure to be had from the six, but with everything set to Comfort there's precious little in the way of road, wind or powertrain noise when you want it to be quiet. With the dampers relaxed, the M Sport glides along B roads with the eight-speed auto content to leave the engine's wide torque window to do all the lugging. Click through to Sport and everything sharpens up as you'd expect, although the damping still allows for enough vertical movement to soak up imperfections. Ultimately you'll want to put the steering back into Comfort mode thanks to the gloopy resistance - but that's par for the course.


Throttle response is very good and the engine, while somewhat breathless above 4,500rpm, rotates so energetically within its productive range that it never feels like it's been scalped. Significantly, the motor's pace feels well matched to the damping, which makes for a reactive front end but doesn't leave the car short of cushioning into dips or loose over crests. Maybe it's the added weight of a 3.0-litre unit up front enhancing the mechanical grip of those Michelins, but the 330d swaps directions brilliantly well, with a nicely neutral balance inspiring you to hammer into corners and maintain momentum rather than relying on the engine to lug you out. There's just about enough torque for it to be adjustable under throttle, too, with the diff happy to oblige the more enthusiastic peddler. And rather than bogging down there's enough grunt left over to keep those back wheels pushing on to make the process fluid, something that's heightened by the consistency of the chassis's footing over changing surfaces.

It's all properly convincing stuff, and while we're not going to proclaim the 330d as some sort of black pump-quaffing sports saloon, it speaks to the superlative job done on tuning the car to make the most of its obvious strengths. The limit of enjoyment is mostly to do with the fundamental limitations of what a diesel engine will realistically do - within that threshold, the car is probably as entertaining as anyone could expect it to be. The fact that it does that with the authentic rear-driver character and no little refinement helps the G20 to stand particularly tall. Just as the Audi S4 TDI-shaped elephant is about to enter the room.


SPECIFICATION - BMW 330d M SPORT PLUS
Engine: 2,995cc, six-cylinder, turbo
Transmission: eight-speed automatic, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 265@4,400rpm
Torque (lb ft): 428@1,750-2,500rpm
0-62mph: 5.5 seconds
Top speed: 155mph
Weight: 1,615kg
MPG: 46.3 - 47.9
CO2: 157g/km
Price: £51,605

Inspired? Search for a BMW 330d here





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Author
Discussion

Marvin Trill

Original Poster:

35 posts

131 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
I get the "Diesel is all you ever need." thing, indeed they are efficient lumps. But a weekend over the Cotswolds in a MK7 Golf R confirms to me hot hatches are all the car you ever need.

E65Ross

35,047 posts

212 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
Marvin Trill said:
I get the "Diesel is all you ever need." thing, indeed they are efficient lumps. But a weekend over the Cotswolds in a MK7 Golf R confirms to me hot hatches are all the car you ever need.
You can't compare a fuel source to a type/niche of car.

A hot hatch is all you need unless you need an estate car.

9k rpm

518 posts

210 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
£50k is ridiculous! For £50k you could have a mildly used Bentley with only 100k miles.

I wonder how much these will be discounted and what the PCP payments will be...... no one buys these with cash they can’t afford to.

wink

Bodes well for the M340i.

Skyman

1,257 posts

224 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
Marvin Trill said:
I get the "Diesel is all you ever need." thing, indeed they are efficient lumps. But a weekend over the Cotswolds in a MK7 Golf R confirms to me hot hatches are all the car you ever need.
Nonsense comment.

anonymous-user

54 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
Marvin Trill said:
I get the "Diesel is all you ever need." thing, indeed they are efficient lumps. But a weekend over the Cotswolds in a MK7 Golf R confirms to me hot hatches are all the car you ever need.
A day at Spa confirms to me that an F1 cat is all the you ever need.

SidewaysSi

10,742 posts

234 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
I think it's a good looking thing. Also seems to get great reviews.

Think I need give one a go soon to see if it is any good.

The Vambo

6,643 posts

141 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
From the ultimate driving machine to like a Lexus but uglier.

Who the eff signed off that? laugh


sidesauce

2,468 posts

218 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
yonex said:
Marvin Trill said:
I get the "Diesel is all you ever need." thing, indeed they are efficient lumps. But a weekend over the Cotswolds in a MK7 Golf R confirms to me hot hatches are all the car you ever need.
A day at Spa confirms to me that an F1 car is all the you ever need.
24 hours at Circuit de la Sarthe in a Porsche 919 confirms to me Le Mans Prototypes are all the car you ever need.

dukebox9reg

1,570 posts

148 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
Seems very rich to me. I'm sure not long ago you'd get into a M3 for that.

As a daily fast derv I'd struggle to walk past a S4/S5.

Shiv_P

2,736 posts

105 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
Hmmm that's a heavy list price, although I'm sure a lot of options can be knocked off. But the performance is considerably less than new S4 and higher list price??

Marvin Trill

Original Poster:

35 posts

131 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
Skyman said:
Marvin Trill said:
I get the "Diesel is all you ever need." thing, indeed they are efficient lumps. But a weekend over the Cotswolds in a MK7 Golf R confirms to me hot hatches are all the car you ever need.
Nonsense comment.
How so ?

mrclav

1,287 posts

223 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
sidesauce said:
yonex said:
Marvin Trill said:
I get the "Diesel is all you ever need." thing, indeed they are efficient lumps. But a weekend over the Cotswolds in a MK7 Golf R confirms to me hot hatches are all the car you ever need.
A day at Spa confirms to me that an F1 car is all the car you ever need.
24 hours at Circuit de la Sarthe in a Porsche 919 confirms to me Le Mans Prototypes are all the car you ever need.
A blast in Peru for the Dakar Rally in a Toyota Gazoo Racing Hilux confirms to me that specialised racing pick-up trucks are all the the car you ever need.

DanGroves

15 posts

83 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
Meeeeoooooowwwww!!

spookly

4,018 posts

95 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
£51k for a diesel 3 series.... is it April 1st again??

Sofa

425 posts

92 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
Um, the whole article is about an M-Sport Plus spec car... but all the photos are of a car which isn’t even a normal M-Sport?

Did someone forget to take photos of the press car? laugh

scottydoesntknow

860 posts

57 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
It's a good looking car. But over £51k for a diesel 3 series yikes

GTiWILL

780 posts

78 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
spookly said:
£51k for a diesel 3 series.... is it April 1st again??
Cars are bloody expensive now. It’s possible to spend £22,000 on a new Toyota Yaris if you’re so inclined.

Skyman

1,257 posts

224 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
Marvin Trill said:
Skyman said:
Marvin Trill said:
I get the "Diesel is all you ever need." thing, indeed they are efficient lumps. But a weekend over the Cotswolds in a MK7 Golf R confirms to me hot hatches are all the car you ever need.
Nonsense comment.
How so ?
Because there is more to life than a hot hatch. How obvious is that. Hope that responds to your epically daft question. And, fyi, I have a Golf R.

anonymous-user

54 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
Ultimate £50k German diesel. That'll be a Mercedes Unimog - who needs roads? Better residuals, but PCP might be tricky.

JamesRR

279 posts

85 months

Monday 22nd July 2019
quotequote all
If the author thinks that a 330d has ‘just enough torque to be throttle adjustable’ then they aren’t driving it properly. My F30 320d has a fair whack less torque than this and is definitely throttle adjustable. Even an E46 M3 has less torque than my car and I’d hardly say it was anything but throttle adjustable.