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11-23-2022, 06:14 PM | #1 |
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E92 - viable purchase in 2023?
I realise this has been done to death but I'm going through the (e)motions of E92 M3 lust at the moment. This is not strictly an M3 vs M2 thread, its also just about do current owners feel the E92 is still relevant and still a low enough risk proposition in 2023 given the age of the cars.
I currently drive a reasonably modified 2018 M2 LCI, and I absolutely love the car. I do a few track days a year, and I live in a remote town so have access to quiet roads for the occasional blast. I also have two kids under 3 so I am lucky to drive the car 2-3 times per month in recent times. This infrequent use is an important factor when it comes to he potential decision to flip it for an E92. M2 is my first even non-manual car. I like DCT, its effortless and fast, and delivers some involvement when using paddles or the shifter. However I also own a 23 year old POS ute that is manual and when I drive that I still get a weird pleasure from the 3 pedal experience. The M2 sounds fantastic in N55 format, with a DP...but, its still turbo and its still 95% exhaust/turbo noise and not enough engine. I suspect - and I am yet to test drive any E92's due to where I live and the scarcity of manual cars for sale - that those very visceral elements that are lacking in the M2 could be satisfied in the M3. What I am concerned about is the potential loss of dynamics and capability vs the M2. The M2 is faster in almost all aspects, I suspect it handles better in twisty roads and is a more competent car all round. This might cause some argument but on paper at least that's the case, including lap times from circuits etc. Almost every review you watch seems to say the DCT is better matched to the S65 than the manual in order to extract the most out of it. That is also cause for hesitation for me. So then, perhaps a manual M2 would be better. Then there is the fact that the manual box in both cars is described as average at best. The age of the cars, and potential costly repairs for things breaking is the other factor - again it will be a weekender, I wont track it so perhaps it will be ok. I have read all the threads about crucial maintenance items, seems its all fairly well documented path so no nasty surprises. Critical items aside, I'd also throw some money at brakes and suspension and swap my Recaro's in from the M2. I would like to hear people's thoughts on this. Is the gap in capability vs other great modern cars enough to overwhelm the sheer joy of the engine sound/character? Obviously a test drive is the logical next step...there are more private sale cars around but I'm not the type to go wasting someone's time. Will wait for the right spec to appear at a dealership and then book a test. The solution would be a Lotus Exige 410 but the $$$ simply can't stretch that far
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Last edited by specka; 11-23-2022 at 06:21 PM.. |
11-23-2022, 06:43 PM | #2 |
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Coming from a turbo car the loss of torque is really noticeable, do miss it at times. You will be downshifting more to get moving.
You really have to rev it out for that great soundtrack. Wouldn't worry about DCT vs manual. If you want a stick, it's just fine. Last edited by Frostynorth; 11-23-2022 at 06:53 PM.. |
11-24-2022, 09:27 AM | #3 |
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I think you will love the e92 M3 DCT.
I have a modded 991 Turbo S and prefer driving my mostly stock e92 DCT comp package carbon roof for pleasure drives. The "lack of torque" is not an issue because my mindset changes when I get into the e92. I drive the DCT is "manual mode" and it holds the gear until I want it to shift. Extracting full power/potential takes some effort which js fun. Only time I use auto mode is traffic or if I want to rip off a 3.9 second 0-60 which it will still do 10 years old 57k miles according to my dragy (1-ft rollout) with the help of euro MDM and some PS4S tires at 28psi rear. I can go all out on the street with this car and not worry about going to jail. I also used to heavily track a 991 GT3 and I would bring the e92 with me as well to these track days and would switch back and forth and yes the e92 is slower but just as much fun. It was slow enough to give me more time to consider all inputs and to be able to clear my mind on track and as a consequence, became a better driver, according to my driving coach. Track setup was basic on the e92. I bought a set of stop tech brakes and used the street performance pads and no squeal on the street or track (I accel through the 1 marker and threshold left foot brake - dont think the stock brakes are up to this abuse). Set of camber plates to dial in alignment and some Cup2's. That's it. Retired from the track and swapped back to stock brakes so the only mod is the camber plates as it does need a little more neg camber up front for the way I drive. Stock brakes / pads are fine for street. M2 is a cool car and like most modern sports cars prob faster everywhere but cannot provide the emotion of the e92. It is on a special class of cars with large displacement NA motors that rev past 8k rpm. And yes the DCT is THAT good - a little idiosyncratic and sometimes clunky in auto mode but that's what makes it special. Like the PDK-S in the GT3, redline wot shifts rip through your fingers through your arms into your spine. One last thing, on stock suspension (I have comp 10mm lower) the ride quality is very comfortable and the seats are also amazingly comfortable. Prefer these seats to any other I have had including the M8 and X5M. By the way I was going to replace the e92 for an M8 but ended up dumping the M8 after 6 months since the e92 was soooo much better. M8 is quick off the line but so what. Everywhere else it has compromises. Glad I hung on to the e92 and didnt sell it during the time I had the M8. Anyway I can rant on on how amazing and special the e92 DCT is but you should experience it yourself. Yes go to a dealer and yes let it warm up properly and then rip on it for a while with an open mind perspective for a high revving motor. Good luck.
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11-24-2022, 01:45 PM | #4 |
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I have both. You'll be trading torque, nimbleness, possibly reliability, feeling of smaller size and less weight for a more exciting engine when driven hard, better soundtrack front to back especially with intake plenum and exhaust, sharper throttle response, steering feeling, more stability, and mushy brake feel.
The gas milage is better on the m2, it has more tech, but the m3 has more premium feeling interior. I installed Carplay headunit on the m3 to bring it up to date. I feel more on the edge of my seat in the m3 when I rev it out, but the m2 feels more exciting ripping around tight corners around town even at slow speeds. Short wheel base of m2 and the newer diff really is the star for the m2. |
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11-25-2022, 07:11 AM | #5 |
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It is a must to rev out the e92 M3 to hear the induction sound & feel the power as well as specialness of this motor.
You need access to open roads to have fun in the M3. It does not feel special driving in city traffic! The M2 might be more fun for city driving but never feels special no matter how you drive. M3 is an emotional car & not a numbers car. If you get the M3, budget for $5000 for repairs/maintenance/preventative rod bearing service. |
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11-25-2022, 08:54 PM | #6 | |
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11-26-2022, 03:58 AM | #7 | |
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I am 2 hours from a city and have a lot of good open roads, but more importantly a lot of very twisty ones that are pretty sketchy but incredible fun. For any Australian's think Reefton Spur, Kinglake, Lake Mountain. I had to replace the factory suspension to get the car dialled in for these types of roads, but with amazing results. I think the term "special" depends what you mean - if its some sort of association to the M3 pedigree, or the nicer interior then I'm not looking for that. I certainly don't need it to be a 'nice place to be' for daily driving. The sound is the exception, its one those non-performance related items that still sits high on the list of priorities! If its a better/more dynamic chassis, more communicative steering and overall a more 'connected' drive as people seem to be indicating, then I think it could be the one. fwiw I find the M2 feels very special being driven hard on track or in the Alpine roads, it needed a few mods but it is an absolute blast to drive. But in relative terms to the E92 I have to concede to not knowing yet. Soon though!
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11-26-2022, 04:02 AM | #8 | |
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If you had to pick just one based on the driving experience, which would you choose?
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11-26-2022, 12:23 PM | #9 | ||
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I think if I knew the e90 m3 was going to be reliable I would go with that if I could only have one, I think it does seem more special. Where else can I get a car that seats four or five, and in my case that has four doors, sounds this good, with these two transmissions, that likes to rev to the moon? They don't make them like this anymore. The m2 is entertaining more often though. The m2 is like a slice of pizza, the m3 is like a steak. If you're not the type of person who will rev out the E9x m3 to 8k+ I wouldn't get it. It gives you more the harder you push the engine. Often I see people worried about stressing the engine and short shifting at 5k. You need to be willing to downshift to the appropriate gear to get the car moving the way you want. It's a more jekyll and hyde type of experience. |
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11-26-2022, 02:05 PM | #10 |
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The m2’s true improvements over an e9x are the short wheelbase and improved agility, and the torque. The e9x wheelbase means that agility can’t really be replicated.
The torque issue is so overrated in my view and represents a personal choice for drivers. “Easy access” to power is like all things that are easy - less memorable and special. The engine of the e9x M3 is really its central identity. Nothing compares unless you’re looking at Audi R8s, GT class Porsches and exotics. When people use the word special for this car, this is what they mean. Once you sit in it and run through 3 gears at full throttle, your senses will ALL be engaged and you will be hooked. What I said earlier about the m2 agility is true, but what many don’t mention about the M2 is that’s it’s considerably more “refined” - less vibration from engine, steering, transmission (manual and DCT). This reflects the chassis it’s based on. Many people don’t know this, but M division initially refused to work on the f8x chassis because of how floppy and isolating it was. M had to gain approval of BMWs board to essentially reengineer the subframes of f8x cars and other aspects before they started on the M division products. This caused many issues in BMW as BMW wanted to avoid the investment to do so, and follow the AMG approach for how M cars are designed and engineered (to the benefit of profitability and at the cost of engineering intergirty). It was solved eventually, but at the compromise of the rawness offered by the car (more isolating experience, even if more agile), and weight. When you realize that the m3 has many inches of wheelbase over the M2, a V8, and yet weighs about the same, you start to wonder. |
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11-26-2022, 02:57 PM | #11 |
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I had a champagne quartz F80 for 2 years as a daily. Bought it just off lease with 11K. Great car, lots of tech, torque, and the DCT was epic. But the more I drove that car the more I started to realize it wasn't checking every box. Plus the cost of ownership wasn't conducive to our budget if I parked it and daily something else.
Now there is a special e92 in the garage that isn't a daily. I don't want to be the fastest and would rather focus on the road and the theater of driving, so the loss of torque and tech isn't missed. Sound being a big factor and this is where these cars shine. Especially if you sprinkle in some upgrades to increase the induction and exhaust soundtrack. Sure you can daily them and sit in traffic, but keeping them for sunny days and special occasions fills my cup. I love this car. My wife loves this car.
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11-27-2022, 08:55 AM | #12 |
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I pined and lusted after M2s all through the development and prelaunch phase. I wanted to order one, was bummed no individual option existed. Life changed and I was glad I didn't buy at the time.
A cheap manual E92 fell into my lap and Ive put thousands in. Many days I hate it especially when I am fixing it, but then it wins me back every time I get it perfect again. I would say it depends on your day to day needs for a car. DCT is always faster and like another member said it has versatility. The S65B40 engine is fast enough revving, and if your skills allow, the car is a "two-hands on the wheel" fast. In my area the speeds are low and the cops and speed camera a plenty. I use cruse control and drive as slow as possible because I am burning 12-16L/100km depending on how much I feel like burying the peddle. The car is at home at 70km/h and higher, and somewhat hates life below that or in stop and go. it is very much the wrong car and I start to hate it again... it is a nice place to be inside, but there are more comfy and more economical cars for traffic. People mention making the car louder, and maybe I got old but I like things stock ish so that when I do drive flat out, I don't get too much attention. Maybe it's my appearance but certain age demographics get uppity with event the slightest blip of the throttle to 3500rpm to shift down to 2nd lol. The engine has plenty of bark but the sound deadening in the cabin is intense. The E92 M3 is very much a windows down radio off car for me. People like the E93 for this reason. Overall it is bomb at grand touring and highway commutes. I winter beat mine and it is great. My roads suck so I run Bilstein B6 shocks rich are ideal for these conditions and cabins runs. I still sit in it lusting at clean E46s which are true nimbleness and agility. I had a cage-less SpecE46 street car build that I miss dearly. The M2 is gonna offer more performance and probably more economy in traffic rush hour commutes. If you don't mind driving slow and getting passed by everyone in Kias or shit boxes with low end torque, GET ONE. This car will be slower in every way. I don't care about getting buzzed on the track by M2s F8X M3s ect I am having a BALL. Budget $3k a year for pro-active maintenance / repairs LOL Edit: for traffic and rush our commutes I prefer motorcycles or this shitbox Toyota Echo NCP13 that is a marvel to drive and burns exactly half the gas. Perfect short trip car. The performance yields from mods are enormous. I swear I got 15hp (Back) from fresh plugs. To get that on the S65 is like, $350 for under drive pulleys, $200 for a tune from DINAN and a $100 drop in filter. I was peeping the DINAN throttle bodies for a casual $2000 for 6-9hp. with a $3800 core charge... If you want a tuner car, the E9X M3 kinda sucks beyond going straight Forza motorsport/Track Tool/Racekor. It is a very special car when stock as it maintains the two-faced duality. You can cruise/dub or your can hang gear and roll on and off the gas for epic sounds. Way more tactile. Last edited by BIGMIG; 11-27-2022 at 11:14 AM.. |
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11-27-2022, 06:31 PM | #13 |
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They're both great cars. I think the fact that you're cracking your brain over an M2 vs something 10 years older is testament to how great the E9x M3 is. Something to consider - in another 10 years will people still be comparing the next H-gen M2/M3/M4 vs the E9x M3?
If you compare a stock E9x M3 vs M2, the M2 will feel newer, tighter, more solid, with more tech. As it should, that's what progress is all about. The E9x M3 can be modded to replicate some of these newer tech in the M2. Solid subframe bushes, android iDrive screen, better brakes and suspension, etc. With the help of the aftermarket you can even fix some of the perceived reliability issues with the E9x M3 - leaky DCT pan, throttle actuators, rod bearings, etc. I have a pretty highly modded E92 M3 and I don't find myself lagging behind the M2/M4s in the canyons. On track is another matter entirely, the fastest E9x are still about 5s slower than M2/M4 on a 2 and a half min track. But you will never be able to retrofit the S65 V8 into an M2. The S65 V8 is a truly special engine. It will never have the torque surge of the N55/S55 turbo but its screaming, high revving, instant throttle response nature is something from a bygone era and will never be replicated by BMW again. However there is a price to pay for this experience, and that's fuel consumption. Reliability wise, it's give or take between the S65 and S55 - rod bearings on one, crank hub on the other. End of the day, it's your money. For me, I find my M3 to be the perfect single do-everything everyday car. A PGT car would be more outright special and faster but still lacks the drama of the S65 V8 and is missing two seats entirely (not to mention costing 3-4x the price). It's a tough choice you need to make but both are great drives. |
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11-30-2022, 07:15 PM | #14 | |
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11-30-2022, 07:27 PM | #15 | ||
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12-01-2022, 11:33 AM | #16 |
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Sounds like everyone covered everything so I'll just say a few words.
If you want the E9X M3.
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12-03-2022, 09:50 PM | #17 |
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I only find the engine and throttle response in the car to be "visceral". The steering (servotronic is awful) clutch, gearbox and turn in due size and weight sap all the rawness out of the car. I see the E90 as a comfortable highway and city cruiser with tons of practicality save gas mileage.
I suspect the 1M, E46 M3 and the Z4M are better BMW's if you are looking for classic analog feel vs an M2. My Z4M Roadster is way, way more analog, visceral and fun to drive than my E90. I'm dying to try an E46. |
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12-04-2022, 03:16 PM | #18 | |
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Personally modern turbo M cars do not excite my senses like the e9x M3 does. I owned an f80 prior to my e92 m3 and did not enjoy it. The new M's traded character for power. I can totally tell the difference. Regarding performance, e92 m3 is a fast car with just a few mods (ohlins/cat delete/tune). It sounds like you may be over stating the performance angle, or under estimating M3 here. I run with local guys who have 991 GTS, 718 Boxster spyders on local mountain runs up in New York state and there is no doubt my car belongs and they both would have to really really push it to pull away or have my car be outclassed. Properly modded e9x M3's are not slow. If you're going for all out lap times then sure, you will lose but real world use cases, I doubt you will get out of a modded e92 and feel its outright "slow" e9x m3's are also incredibly easy to drive fast. They are very balanced overall and the limits are very approachable. I'd bet if you put me in my old 475 whp f80 M3, and me in my current 375 whp e92, i would be faster in the v8 on most circuits. It puts power down seamlessly, the chassis never feels overwhelmed or upset. It exhibits neither excessive understeer or oversteer and allows me, an amateur to push it 8/10th in total control. I've had very few "pucker up" moments in this car. Summary here is, in my opinion the e92 offers a level of excitement and fun that modern turbo BMW's cannot come close to. These are feelings that are hard to articulate on a car forum but the s65 is a very special engine full of character, godly intake and exhaust sounds, throttle response, and revs. Honestly just cruising on the highway at 80MPH, the engine feels totally alive in your lap, its hard to explain. |
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12-11-2022, 11:11 PM | #19 | |
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DCT's throttle response isn't as sharp as the MT, and the diff lock is less aggressive on the DCT. What 6MT loses due to the slower gear changes are made up by 6MT's gear ratios which allow one to stay at high rpm longer. Combined with the fact that 6MT is lighter, acceleration figures are identical between the two. Also, maintaining MT is much cheaper and easier since you don't need a special equipment to change the transmission fluid. What DCT has over MT is ease of driving. If you are not a skilled MT driver, you may have more fun with DCT.
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12-12-2022, 12:50 AM | #20 | |
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What special equipment are you talking about? I’m planning a DCT service soon and was going to use the same fluid transfer pump I use for my MT services, thoroughly cleaned out of course. |
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12-16-2022, 08:32 AM | #21 | |
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01-22-2023, 09:37 PM | #22 | |
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Did you end up getting an E92 M3? Would love to hear how you’ve gone through your process especially being Melbourne based. I’ve got the real itch to get an e92 M3 but am really not sure it’s a the car for me and I would enjoy it more than my current M2. Seems like there’s generally mixed sentiments when comparing the OG M2 to the E92 M3. |
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