12-10-2023, 11:18 AM | #45 | |
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Only thing that has me thinking twice about going that route is, am I really contemplating a 4 cylinder engine over an M2...especially if the prices are that close? |
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12-10-2023, 11:23 AM | #46 | |
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I’m looking to maximize my street experience. |
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12-11-2023, 09:22 AM | #48 | |
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Add the 2024 Z4 M40i to your short list...
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12-11-2023, 09:51 AM | #49 |
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The article stated, “transmission was engineered specifically for this new Z4”. What!! We always say m2 and m3 got the old manual but to build a new manual for even a lower demand z car sounds crazy! Put one in the LCI M2
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12-12-2023, 01:09 PM | #50 |
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I have a BGTS 4.0 and drove the G87 at a BMW event on a small autocross course. Both are really, really fun cars. The G87 slides much easier and has monster power (for me). The GTS feels very precise and nimble in comparison. The GTS also sounds amazing if that matters to you. I don't think you can go wrong here. If you can deal with the extra cost and don't care about backseats, the GTS is probably the better driving experience. It's an awesome, awesome sports car. But there is nothing wrong with the G87. It's the better bang for the buck.
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12-12-2023, 03:12 PM | #51 | |
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Drives: G87 M2; E92M3 MT&DCT; M3 euro
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Pass me if you can.
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12-12-2023, 03:20 PM | #52 | |
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12-12-2023, 03:21 PM | #53 |
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This gives me hope that BMW will actually make a good manual for once. For many years they've offered a manual for the sake of having a manual but this day and age it's just not enough. It has be a good manual.
What I cross shopped: 1) G80 M3/G87 M2 manual 2) Emira manual 3) Supra MKV manual 4) 992 Carrera T manual 5) 718 GT4 manual |
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12-19-2023, 09:19 PM | #54 |
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Supra GRMN
Rumored to be getting the S58 and MT. https://www.instagram.com/wilcoblok/...RvPMxcD/?hl=en https://www.instagram.com/wilcoblok/...Gf9MgUP/?hl=en https://www.instagram.com/wilcoblok/...tRxsRbL/?hl=en |
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12-20-2023, 12:54 PM | #55 |
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"Cross-shopped" is a strong term, in some sense for me. It's more like I just kept eliminating cars from the list once in a while.
I currently drive a 2016 F30 340i 6 MT. Ordered that car over 8 years ago, tracked ships in the Atlantic, all that. Now, with it approaching 95k miles, it's starting to grow a list of items for maintenance/repair/etc. that are normal, but also a decent chunk of change. Queue the "do we just buy a new car now, or do we spend the money and keep it for a few more years?" internal debate. We leaned towards the "buy now" side and so then started making a list. My personal non-negotiable was a manual transmission. From there, it was about what choices are left, and where that leaves us with budget, power, feel, etc. I started with one of those "new cars that still have a manual transmission" lists, and I vetoed some of them, and my wife vetoed a lot of the others. One example was similar to a comment mentioned by someone else earlier in this thread: you're too old to be driving around the Type R. Welp. Scratch that off. Eventually, it really came down to a few "possibilities", but narrowed down to what I may actually purchase: - G87 M2 - Porsche 718 Cayman base - Supra Half of the Supra was a lateral move from my current car (essentially the same engine/power, etc.) but in a sportier package. Porsche was intriguing, but couldn't justify the base still being approximately $25k more than the essentially fully-loaded M2. It would've been a different (and great) driving experience, but I also know I'm daily driving this new car, and putting miles on it over time. I'm about as "driver enthusiast" someone can get that will never track the car, not really heavily modify the car for performance, etc. It's more car than I need, but I like the fun of driving with a car that is capable of more than I will need, sounds and feels great, etc. So here we are...deposit paid, allocation received, and waiting impatiently. |
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12-21-2023, 03:17 AM | #56 |
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Shruuugg? Lack of power wasn't the Supra's problem, IMO. For me, the problem was that it was a miserable DD. The price differential between the Supra and G87 wasn't enough for everything you had to give up.
Given the rumors are that the GRMN will likely cost more than the G87, and probably will be torque limited just like the G87, AND still be a crap DD, I'm not compelled. I know, I know, the GRMN is supposed to be a more pure track car, not a DD, but in those cases we should be comparing it to CS variants instead of base G87. |
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12-21-2023, 02:42 PM | #57 |
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Because of the new car situation (a drag-on from Covid days), I was mostly shopping cars that weren't sitting on a lot or drive-able. I did something I swore I would never do as a result, paying to get "on the wait list" for an upcoming car.
I have mostly been a Japanese car buyer. That mostly ended up being a "bang for the buck" sort of thing. These days, they are offering mostly neither in the "sporty car" market. The car in the "fleet" that was looking to be replaced was a (rare) Infiniti Q60S with a manual transmission. It was a well-liked car, but was involved in an accident, and while it was expertly repaired, while we were waiting, we started looking at other cars (and this was when supply was terrible). One of the issues with the Infiniti was that got it frequently left behind in the garage was its limited cargo space (it has a Miata-like trunk and it is difficult to get stuff in the back seat to try and compensate). Also, the cockpit was very claustrophobic. It was a decent performer, but not that exciting to drive and had a very sloppy gear shift. Good points, rear-wheel drive, manual transmission, comfortable and nicely appointed interior. Could carry more than two people for a short trip. I say all this, because all of the pluses and minuses of the existing car weighed heavily in our search criteria. So cross-shopping wise, we were looking sporty, manual trans, rear-wheel drive, not really a pure two-seater. So that had us looking at the (upcoming then) Dark Horse Mustang, Challenger Scat-Pack wide-body, M3 or M4. All good cars. The Challenger (which we could drive) was ruled out because of the size. It was just too big of a car for what we wanted. The Mustang just turned out to be expensive for a highly-optioned car. It was still in the running, but local dealers figured that they had customers by the short and curly's and were upcharging for a Mustang (pretty common car in general) that was already expensive and I couldn't drive either. M3s and M4s were simply pushing my price limits when optioned. I could make a reach and get one, but the M2 was still in the ballpark configured as I wanted and somewhat smaller (which I liked). The G87 M2 was equally not drive-able. But, we had driven a regular 2 series and liked a lot of things about it. I knew that M3s were good stuff and the M2 was getting a lot of those bits. So, I took a chance and waited for one. The Infiniti was fine to drive for as long as we needed to wait. The dealer charged no extra fees like the Ford guys. I received the car and couldn't be happier. My favorite bit is the split personality. It can be more comfortable than the Infiniti was (the chassis couldn't cope very well with the big "S" tires) and way more of a performance car at a push of a button. Probably more performance that I'll use, but hey, I'm considering things like track days when I have something like this! |
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