KaosHunter said:
dlk001 said:
Reese130 said:
I drive a manual M235i and I drove it to test drive an M4 with a full akrapovic exhaust fitted. Without a doubt I had more fun in my 235 on the way home. The M4 was too soft and civilised.
No offense but I trust the 99% of car journalists that have actually driven the M2 and the M4 that say that the M2 is the better M car to drive. More fun more involving more rewarding. Surely they cant all be wrong? But the M2 is not as good on paper.. that doesn't bother me, I don't race anyway.
Some journalist say M235i is not fun and 220i is better? There was a long article written comparing them.
My brother has a 220i and I can tell you now it's very numb with practically zero sound. Gets very boring very quickly especially with the ZF box. The most involving part about it is the fact that the gears are so short and you hit redline faster than you can think about changing to the next gear. Then again I still haven't driven a M235i so I can't compare.
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Sorry. my bad I meant 228i and not 220i. But here are reviews including M2
M235i - There's no connection whatsoever to what the front wheels are doing. With the M235i, you steer until you hear squealing and rely on the larger rear tires to hold on if you get it a little wrong.
228i - The steering: light as a feather but as truthful in your hands as an electric rack could possibly be. In the 228i, though, you can actually drive the thing, you don't even touch the brake before the right-hander, and then you haul leeward with a brush of the brakes. There's always enough grip, and if you ask for too much, then just relaxing your hands on the wheel brings you right back to where you need to be.
In the track's final turn, the 228i is also better to drive than the other cars. The M235i doesn't really confirm available grip on corner exit, and there's a lot of metal barrier to hit if you get it wrong, so you wait. The M2 turns in fine, but with stability control deactivated, the torque wants to step the back end out. So again you wait, feathering the throttle until your wheel is straight after the apex. The 228i? You plant the throttle and let the tail hang. There's not enough power to make this strategy dangerous, and there's plenty of steering feel to correct on corner exit if you need it. It inspires total confidence and makes you feel like you're a better driver than you probably are.
http://www.roadandtrack.com/car-culture/a29245/bmw-2-series-comparison-test/
Here is another article comparing 228i vs M235i
http://jalopnik.com/the-bmw-228i-is-the-best-enthusiast-bimmer-you-can-buy-1662847106