Recent Updates

 

09/19/2024 12:00 PM

What is Apple CarPlay and how does it work?

 

09/19/2024 12:00 PM

Tesla deals could push EV sales to record levels in September

 

09/19/2024 12:00 PM

Old family recipe: Soft-top Ferrari Roma meets legendary 275 GTS

 

09/19/2024 12:00 PM

Avatr targets UK launch in 2025 with BMW X5-sized electric SUV

 

09/19/2024 12:00 PM

The Saga saga: Proton's unusual arrival in the UK

 

09/19/2024 12:00 PM

The best used hatchbacks - driven, ranked and rated

 

09/19/2024 12:00 PM

New Renault 5 in final UK tests ahead of imminent launch

 

09/19/2024 12:00 PM

MG ZS

 

09/19/2024 12:00 PM

Five days left! Enjoy free access to the Autocar Archive

 

09/18/2024 12:00 PM

Mika Meon

<<    91   92   93   94   95   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 6250   Next >
BMW 4 Series
Thursday, Sep 12, 2024 12:00 PM
BMW M440i Cabriolet in blue   cornering front BMW's warmed-up four-seat convertible is among the last of a dying breed – but it's still excellent There's a slightly unexpected air of the commemorative around the latest BMW 4 Series. Back when even Ford, Peugeot and Vauxhall were offering their humdrum hatches with a folding roof, you wouldn’t have thought the market for an everyday convertible could ever dry up. But here we are in 2024, with scant few options outside the supercar and top-drawer sports car segments for adjusting your mullet on the move. The Lexus LC? Dead. Audi A5? Gone. TT? See ya. Hell, even the Volkswagen T-Roc Cabriolet is for the chop in the coming months, and there’s a good while to wait until the Mini Convertible returns. No word yet on a reborn Vauxhall Cascada. Were it not for the new Ford Mustang, Mercedes-Benz CLE and this freshened-up BMW 4 Series, you’d be pretty much stuck for an everyday, drop-top four-seater south of £70,000. And even within this niche, consolidation conspires to quash variety. The 4 Series is no longer available with a diesel engine, and petrol options are now limited to the rear-driven 420i with 184bhp, or the 369bhp four-wheel-drive M440i driven here. You can, though, still have both as a coupé, a cabrio or in four-door Gran Coupé form. The 4 Series is, of course, the lower, wider-striding, meaner-looking alter ego of the 3 Series - with stiffened, extra-tantalising handling poise and an air of exclusivity about its two-door cabin, the combination of which has been the BMW coupé calling card since the early 1970s.And rather than any recent forerunner coupé, it’s a 1970s antecedent of the 4 Series that BMW’s designers were referring to with the new car’s oh-so-contentious, upright and in-your-face radiator grille: the Wilhelm Hofmeister-penned E9-generation 3.0 CSi. Read on to find out if the new range-topping M440i xDrive can do justice, on the road and against the timing gear, to such a celebrated ancestor.
< Prev    of 6250   Next >
Leave a Comment
* Name
* Email (will not be published)
*
Click on me to change image  * Enter verification code (Click on the CAPTCHA to refresh the image!)
* - Reqiured fields