2018 BMW M5

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F90 M5 Prototype Reviews

Some Specs:
- Revised S63 twin-turbo 4.4-liter V-8, over 600hp (unofficially north of 615 hp) and 516 lbft @ 1500 rpm.
- 3-mode MxDrive AWD system with 4WD, 4WD Sport and 2WD.
- 8-Speed ZF automatic with fast locking torque converter and with Sport, Sport+, and full manual mode: no upshifts at redline.
- Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tires: 275/35ZR-20 front and 285/35ZR-20 rear
- Weight: about 4200 lbs or 1800kg. AWD system adds about 140 lbs to the car or 63.5kg.
- 0-60 in less than 3.5 secs
- Redesigned and lighter exhaust system is a bit louder than before, and there’s a new button on the console to make it louder still.

Whatcar

The early signs – and that’s strictly all these are – are very good indeed. The new BMW M5 seems to lose nothing by adopting four-wheel drive, and gains one of the most sophisticated and versatile drivelines ever seen on a performance saloon, which seems to be able to make the car’s handling as surefooted or as lurid as the occasion demands. But expect very few of those rivals to have such breadth of ability as the new M5 or to be as usable – or as much fun. After the slightly underwhelming outgoing model, it seems the next M5 is all set to return BMW to the very front of the super saloon pack.

https://www.whatcar.com/news/bmw-m5-review-2017/

Autocar

Is it possible that a four-wheel drive BMW M5 could handle even better than a rear-driven one? It’s very early days for pronouncements like that – but on this evidence, it seems we really can believe it. In ‘4WD’ mode the drive system allows little or no power-on understeer if you drive competently enough; you can slide the car just beyond neutral and, if you’re smooth and slight with your corrections, it’ll keep the lions share of torque at the rear wheels. This is the M5’s standard mode; I haven’t even got as far as switching out the DSC yet. When I do, the car’s handling poise, adjustability and involvement gradually progresses from very good to excellent.
https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/...ype-review-super-saloon-goes-four-wheel-drive

Car and Driver

The M5’s new hardware may be blasphemous, but it’s good. Very good. This car has the potential to be the best M5 since the E39 gave way to the Bangle-tastic E60. This M5 is actually tossable, and it will drift when configured with the all-wheel drive in its Sport setting and the DSC system in M Dynamic mode, which allows for more tire slip. In RWD mode with DSC turned off you can powerslide it like an E90 M3. The redesigned and lighter exhaust system is a bit louder than before, and there’s a new button on the console to make it louder still. It sounds good, with a deep growl, but it’s not obnoxious
http://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/2018-bmw-m5-prototype-drive-review

EVO

New BMW M5 impresses during this first taster, with 4WD usability but a wild side to keep M-car fans happy. Even in the standard ‘4WD’ setting it always feels rear-driven, and if you’re generous with the throttle on the corner’s exit it’ll adopt a surprisingly neutral attitude. For such a big, powerful car it’s not in the least bit intimidating - even with the DSC fully off - despite the physics at work. Select ‘4WD Sport’ and the electronics allow the tail to step out of line given similar provocation, but then pull things straight with only the slightest steering input required.
http://www.evo.co.uk/bmw/m5/19370/2017-bmw-m5-pre-production-review-two-cars-in-one

Motortrend

With our wish list mostly granted, the M5 feels poised for a rematch with AMG. The exhaust sound was exhilarating, and the transmission, set to D3 (automatic, quickest shifts), felt like the old DCT—complete with blip-throttle downshifts and split-second keister-kicking upshifts. Anyone who felt intimidated by the knife-edged demeanor of the wilder, woolier rear-drive M5 is going to feel a lot more comfortable dicing with AMG Hammers in this savvy all-wheeler—and for the masochists who liked that sort of thing, there’s a RWD setting.
http://www.motortrend.com/cars/bmw/m5/2018/2018-bmw-m5-prototype-first-drive-review/
 
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hmmm...sounds promising. While it might be blasphemy I can imagine AWD with loads of electronic witchery could do wonders for the Ms. Simply makes sense to use all 4 tyres for grip...
 
M xDrive explained, by the guys who made it work

Since the confirmation last week that the sixth-generation BMW M5 would be the first with all-wheel drive, some purists in the cybergarage have complained that an M car with xDrive is a contradiction in terms, that the essence of the brand is its rear-wheel drive.
Well as this video shows, the petrol-heads at the M skunk works in Munich feel exactly the same. The brief from head of M Division Frank van Meel was that the new M5 should drive like a rear-wheel car – only with more traction.

The key to achieving that, according to M driving dynamics development engineer (and motorsport enthusiast) Jorg Weidinger, is that all the systems involved are controlled through a single processor, which collates sensor data from the accelerator pedal position, steering angle, road speed, slip at front and rear axles, longitudinal and transverse acceleration, friction coefficient and yaw rate.

The processor analyses the data, compares the results with the ‘target response’ – what the car should be doing under these precise circumstances – and then adjusts the multiplate clutch in the transfer case and the M active rear differential to make the car do exactly that.

Which includes transferring just a little too much power to the rear axle under acceleration out of a corner, so that it’s still possible to ‘steer the car with the throttle’.

“This is not necessarily drifting, it’s really about predictability,” Weidinger said. “The idea is that the driver should always be able to clearly feel and control the rear axle.”

Many all-wheel drive cars switch suddenly and unpredictably from oversteer to understeer right at the limit, he said, which doesn’t inspire a lot of confidence. Early versions of the M xDrive also did it, until they set it up to do without that last little bit of traction under some circumstances, to ensure utterly predictably response to the limit and beyond.

What all-wheel drive does is to lay down the maximum available power from the 441kW V8, especially in the lower gears, on wet or loose surfaces – or on very bumpy roads, which have the effect of unloading the driven wheels and breaking traction. By programming the M xDrive to take care of that, the chassis engineers were able to set the suspension up for pinpoint handling without inducing chatter in bumpy corners.

Weidinger explained that when accelerating hard in a straight line, you want all the traction you can get (especially with 700 tyre-shredding Newton-metres under your right foot!), just as you want all the grip you can get under braking for the next corner – that’s why cars have brakes on all four wheels.

Going into a corner you don’t want, or need, any drive to the front wheels – but as you steer out of the corner with your right foot planted, you can transfer longitudinal forces to the front wheels without understeering, as the transverse acceleration gradually falls away – and if you do it gradually you can still get the tail a little hung out, with minimum counter-steering and without having to lift off the accelerator again.

The early versions, he said, battled with understeer under acceleration until they learned that working off throttle position alone wasn’t enough; the torque distribution software also had to take into account the attitude of the car in relation to the direction it was travelling in, and the transverse acceleration, in order to balance the car on the throttle.

http://www.iol.co.za/motoring/lates...xplained-by-the-guys-who-made-it-work-9336502

[video=youtube_share;X7To3dEsNsw]https://youtu.be/X7To3dEsNsw[/video]
 
BMW M5 Prototype (2018) First Drive [with Video]

Some M Car aficionados will declare the 2018 BMW M5 an abomination because it utilses an all-wheel drive configuration for the first time in the illustrious Bavarian super sedan's history. However, they should try out the new M xDrive system themselves before making a hasty judgement, as our drive in a prototype version reveals that it makes the new M5 a better and still more enjoyable sports saloon to drive than ever before.

Specifications

Engine: 4.4-litre twin-turbocharged V8 petrol
Transmission: all-wheel drive, eight-speed automatic
Top speed: 250 kph (limited)
0-100 kph: "less than 3.5 seconds"
Power: 462 kW at 6 200 rpm (estimated)
Torque: 750 Nm from 1 900 rpm (estimated)

This is our first taste of the 2018 BMW M5, and the big news is that it'll feature four-wheel drive for the first time in the nameplate's now 6-generation history. BMW calls it M xDrive and it has a lot of promise... the mechanical bits include an updated Active M Differential at the back that can apportion output to the rear wheels in any split whatsoever; a transfer case in the middle that uses an electromechanically activated multi-plate clutch to divide torque between the front and rear axles (again to any percentage whatsoever, from fully front-wheel drive to completely rear-wheel drive); and the use of a new development of the company's 8-speed automatic transmission in place of the old dual-clutch M DCT.

Controlling all that is a new in-house programmed brain, which also works with the Dynamic Stability Control (DSC) system. The target is a real M car driving experience, but with a much wider breadth of capability, especially when it comes to less than perfect weather.

The new M5 has a completely adjustable drivetrain. You choose where you want the drive to go via the iDrive selector.

By default, the DSC system is on and M xDrive is simply in "4WD" mode. Pressing the DSC button briefly activates M Dynamic Mode (MDM) and 4WD Sport for the xDrive, while the driver can choose between those 2 xDrive settings and full-on 2WD if they hold down the DSC button long enough to disable it completely.

Under the bonnet is an updated version of the previous M5's twin-turbocharged 4.4-litre V8, which BMW is staying tight-lipped about, suggesting it's only a little more powerful than before, if a lot torquier. We're estimating 460 kW and 750 Nm, though with a claimed 0-100 kph time of "less than 3.5 seconds", that latter figure might turn out to be a little pessimistic.

After all, the new M5 is only a smidgen lighter than the old one (the xDrive hardware adds weight, while the carbon roof and new G30 body take it away again) so even with all-wheel drive we think it'd need a good deal more torque to achieve that off-the-line acceleration.

Most of the interior of the prototype model is covered, expect the old DCT gearknob to look a little different this time around.

The interior of the prototype was covered up for the most part, but the usual M trinkets are present and correct, including a lovely new steering wheel with repositioned M1 and M2 buttons, gorgeous bucket seats trimmed in leather and a chunky new gear selector with the Drivelogic toggle switch built in. The instruments have been restyled too and the centre console is a little different to that of the regular 5 Series.

We're going to focus mostly on the xDrive system here, as details about the rest of the car are scant and we only tested the M5 on track. First up was a few laps of a high-speed circuit on a damp, but slowly drying track, following a BMW M4 GTS driven by none other than Timo Glock, one of BMW's works DTM race drivers. He wasn't hanging about, but the M5 made it relatively easy to hang on to his tail thanks to the lusty V8 of course, but also the traction afforded by the chassis.

DSC intervenes subtly

In 4WD mode with the DSC turned on, progress is swift and effortless, and very safe. The DSC kicks in early, reacting quickly to changes in grip level, though it's so smooth that the only tell-tale is the orange light flickering in the dashboard. This set-up will be great for everyday use in all conditions on the road.

Keeping up with ex F1 driver Timo Glock in an M4 GTS was easier than expected with the huge torque delivery of the M5.

Moving into the MDM and 4WD Sport setting, the M5 feels much more like you'd expect a car bearing that hallowed badge would. More power is sent to the rear axle by default and it undoubtedly feels like a rear-wheel-drive car to start with. Only when you considerably exceed the grip levels of the rear tyres do you detect a smooth transition of torque to the front axle, but you need to be trying pretty hard to get to that stage, and the DSC system allows a gratifying amount of slip too, which is enough to get a bit of a thrill from the car without relying completely on your own skill level. This is the setting keener drivers are likely to use most of the time, even on the public road.

Huge amounts of traction and grip

We'd expect only the more experienced drivers to turn off the DSC completely, but it can be done without any fear, as our test on a soaking wet handling circuit revealed. There are huge amounts of traction and grip and the new M5 really does telegraph its limits remarkably well, whether the surface underneath is wet or dry. In 4WD mode, it still grips and behaves relatively neutrally. Indeed, if you want to slide it about in this setting then you really have to provoke it.

The 4WD Sport mode is rather different, as the car can easily be coaxed into a controllable, yet lurid-looking, power slide at will. It's huge fun in the right conditions and it's possible to push things very far and still recover the slide. That's probably partly to do with the new electrically assisted power steering system, which is more direct than before, but also, reckons BMW M's engineers, the revised Active M Differential. Whatever they've done, it's simply brilliant...

Even in the wet the M5 wasn't much of a handful. We look forward to a drive on regular roads to see how easy it really is to drive.

And the controllability of the base chassis is underlined when you switch it into 2WD mode and tackle the same piece of track at the same speed. Sure, it goes more sideways quicker if you want it to and you need to be ready with the opposite lock sooner, but it's still relatively friendly to drive fast in wet conditions.

Summary

Now, we have not yet driven the new BMW M5 on the public road, we don't yet know all its technical specifications and it may turn out quite expensive, but one thing we can categorically state is that the new M xDrive four-wheel-drive system enhances the driving experience no end, potentially helping the M division create the... best... M5... yet.

http://www.cars.co.za/motoring_news/bmw-m5-prototype-2018-first-drive-with-video/43428/

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2017 BMW M5 shown ahead of full reveal

Front end of BMW's next super saloon has been exposed in a promotional image for the new instalment in the Need For Speed video game franchise

The new BMW M5 has been shown in promotional material released by the Need For Speed video game franchise.

Only one image shows the M5, but the full front-end styling of the car can be seen, with a more aggressive set of air intakes in the front bumper clearly visible, as well as the kidney grille-mounted M5 logo.

The M5 was also previously revealed in CAD images leaked by a company employee.

Full front and rear styling renderings of the car show the performance saloon's bumper treatment. The images were first revealed to a host of The Cammed & Tubbed Podcast.

BMW M5 prototype review: super saloon goes four-wheel drive

The launch timing of this next-generation M5 shows BMW's plans to produce M variants far earlier in models' lifecycles than it has done previously.

Just as the regular BMW 5 Series underwent a subtle styling overhaul between this generation and the next, the new M5 appears to be fairly restrained when compared with the more extreme M4. However, more significant updates have taken place under the bonnet.

https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/new-cars/2017-bmw-m5-shown-ahead-full-reveal

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New BMW M5 To Be Unveiled This Month

After an obscene amount of teasers and even prototype drives with heavy camo, BMW M seems finally ready to show us their most advanced M car to date.

According to BMWBlog‘s sources, the F90 M5 is about two weeks away from its official web debut, just days before the world premiere at the Frankfurt Auto Show. The chance of a leak between now and then are pretty massive and I would not be surprised if we see something as soon as this week.

So what do we already “know”?

Expect 441 kW output
8-Speed M Automatic box
M xDrive all-wheel configuration
Sprint to 100 km/h in less than 3.5 seconds, with the Launch Control function activated

http://www.zero2turbo.com/2017/08/new-bmw-m5-unveiled-month.html
 
BMW releases teaser of the new all-wheel-drive M5…

BMW has taken to social media to release a short teaser video of the new, all-wheel-drive M5 ahead of its full reveal, likely later this month.

The ten-second clip provides us with a glimpse of the F90-generation M5 – in “First Edition” guise – blasting along a desert road.

The (sadly low-resolution) video provides a fleeting look at the new performance sedan’s front end, one of its front alloys and a brake calliper. Oh, and we also get a quick taste of the new M5’s exhaust note.

What’s under the bonnet? Well, the Munich-based automaker has already confirmed that power will come from a turbocharged 4,4‑litre V8 engine, which will feed all four corners (via an eight-speed automatic transmission) thanks to a new, switchable M-specific xDrive system. And, yes, it will have a so-called drift mode…

The video also suggests that the new BMW M5 will be fully revealed on August 21.

Watch the teaser below…

http://www.carmag.co.za/news_post/bmw-releases-teaser-of-the-new-all-wheel-drive-m5/

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2017 BMW M5 to be fully revealed on Monday 21 August

BMW's forthcoming super saloon will have more than 600bhp and will go head to head with the next Mercedes-AMG E63

The most powerful and technically advanced BMW M5 yet will be revealed on 21 August, and in the run-up to the event, BMW has released a new preview video.

The upcoming Mercedes-AMG E63 rival can be seen driving at pace through a desert, with shots of its carbon-ceramic brakes and a close up of its front left corner. The shot shows the car's aggressive set of air intakes in the front bumper, as well as the grille-mounted M5 badge.

The clip comes two months after the model was featured in a trailer for the Need For Speed video game franchise. The M5 was also previously revealed in CAD images leaked by a company employee.

https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/new-cars/2017-bmw-m5-be-fully-revealed-monday-21-august
 
All-New BMW M5 Leaks Ahead of Debut

Just a few hours before its official debut, a video and some pictures of the all-new BMW M5 have surfaced online. Feast your eyes upon the latest incarnation of the mighty BMW M5.

What we know so far is that it is powered by a twin-turbocharged 4.4-litre V8. BMW has not released any figures, with only a suggestion that it has more power than the outgoing model. If we were to hazard a guess, 460 kW and 750 Nm sound like fair ballpark figures. With launch control dialed up and using the XDrive all-wheel drive, BMW is claiming a 0-100 kph sprint time of under 3.5 seconds. When it comes to market, it will go up against the Audi RS6 and Mercedes-AMG E63 S.

The reveal will be happening on the 21st August 2017 and we'll update you as more pictures and details emerge.

http://www.cars.co.za/motoring_news/all-new-bmw-m5-leaks-ahead-of-debut/43830/
 
Officially announced:

The new BMW M5 is the most exciting and emotionally enthralling high-performance sedan from this model range ever released by BMW M. The sixth generation of this fantastically sporty machine will be launched in 2017 complete with the M xDrive system, whose all-wheel-drive technology enables the business sedan's dynamic prowess to be experienced in even greater depth. Quite apart from its notably enhanced performance, the new BMW M5 also boasts far greater everyday practicality and supreme poise. It therefore constitutes another evolutionary step in every respect for an exceedingly successful vehicle concept that first emerged in 1984 with the launch of the original BMW M5.

A superior drivetrain: M xDrive

High-performance driving dynamics on the one hand paired with the everyday practicality and qualities of a business sedan on the other: this neatly sums up M's traditional approach to model development - one which strives to harmonise individual drive components into a flawless whole.

"The core component of M xDrive is a central intelligence unit with M-specific software delivering integrated control of longitudinal and lateral dynamics. The new drivetrain technology - making its debut on the new BMW M5 - therefore combines all of the agility and precision of standard rear-wheel drive with the supreme poise and traction of the all-wheel-drive system," explains Frank van Meel, Chairman of the Board of Management of BMW M GmbH. "As a result, the new BMW M5 can be piloted with the familiar blend of sportiness and unerring accuracy on both the race track and the open road - and in various weather conditions, too."

The M xDrive system enables a wonderfully fleet-footed rear-biased set-up by only bringing the front wheels into play when the rear wheels aren't able to transmit any more power to the road and additional tractive force is required. Even when it is being driven in a particularly sporty manner and unleashing high levels of power, the new BMW M5 with M xDrive behaves predictably and can be controlled with ease by the driver, paving the way for an even richer experience of the business sedan's extraordinary performance capabilities.

The driver can choose from five different configurations based on combinations of the DSC modes (DSC on, MDM, DSC off) and M xDrive modes (4WD, 4WD Sport, 2WD).

The configurations allow the drive system's characteristics to be tailored to both the driver's personal preferences and the nature of the journey. Purists can opt for classical rear-wheel drive by completely deactivating the all-wheel-drive system.

All in all, the new drive system engenders class-beating handling dynamics accompanied by unrestricted everyday usability. This is made possible by a central intelligence unit with M-specific software for integrated control of longitudinal and lateral dynamics. The result is optimum performance in each of the different configurations. With the advent of M xDrive, the engineers have succeeded in fusing the classical qualities of standard rear-wheel drive with the benefits of the sports-focused BMW xDrive.

This all adds up to a sense of dynamic flair that astounds even seasoned DTM drivers: "I'm a big M5 fan," explains BMW works driver Timo Glock, for example. "I often drive long distances and I need plenty of room for my family, but I wouldn't wish to give up the chance to explore the car's sporting character. With M xDrive, not only can the new BMW M5 be steered with the usual precision and agility, it also offers me something I really appreciate, living in Switzerland: a noticeable boost to traction and controllability - even when driving in particular environmental conditions, such as wet weather and snow, and in both everyday driving situations and when pushing the car to its performance limits."

Sportiness and smoothness: eight-speed M Steptronic transmission with Drivelogic

In the new BMW M5 the task of relaying the engine's power falls to an extremely slick eight-speed M Steptronic transmission with Drivelogic. Thanks to its incredibly short shift times and optimal ratio spacing, the transmission combines with the new M xDrive system and the further improved turbocharged V8 engine to form a perfectly orchestrated whole.

In addition, the transmission offers impressively smooth start-off characteristics, makes manoeuvring easier and has a wide ratio spread that helps to keep fuel consumption low. The driver has the usual choice of three shift programs, as well as the option of changing gear manually using shift paddles on the steering wheel and even performing sporty multiple downshifts. The eight-speed M Steptronic forms part of a new, finely honed overall package that turns the BMW M5 into a high-performance sedan offering genuine everyday practicality, and also resolves the apparent contradiction between sportiness and comfort.

More powerful and more efficient: the newly improved turbocharged V8 engine

Lurking under the bonnet of the new BMW M5 is the latest version of the 4.4-litre V8 engine featuring M TwinPower Turbo technology. The further improved high-revving engine outperforms its predecessor in terms of power output and torque. The enhancements implemented by the engineers include higher injection pressure, new turbochargers, more powerful lubrication and cooling systems, plus a modified, lighter exhaust system, which generates an even clearer rendition of the unmistakable M soundtrack. Thus equipped, the V8 propels the sedan to still greater feats of dynamic performance. However, it is the combination of engine, M xDrive and eight-speed M Steptronic, even more than the upgrading of engine's technical specifications, that really sharpens the high-performance character of the new BMW M5; it takes the dynamic driving experience to a far higher level than the relatively moderate increase in power alone would allow.

https://www.netcarshow.com/bmw/2018-m5/

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