2011 BMW M3 Pickup
Price |
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Production |
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Engine |
4 liter V8 |
Weight |
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Aspiration |
natural |
Torque |
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HP |
420 hp |
HP/Weight |
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HP/Liter |
105 hp per liter |
1/4 mile |
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0-62 mph |
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Top Speed |
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(from BMW Press
Release) Unique: BMW M GmbH develops the world’s fastest
pickup. Drive and suspension technology from the BMW M3 –
comprehensive testing completed on the Nürburgring-Nordschleife –
420 hp and 450 kg load capacity – world premiere on 1 April 2011.
Munich. Following the BMW M3 Coupé, BMW M3 Convertible and BMW M3
Sedan, a fourth body variant of this globally successful
high-performance sports car is about to cause a stir. Under the
strictest secrecy, the world’s first high-performance pickup has
been created at the BMW M GmbH development centre. The sportiest
example by far in this vehicle category, the BMW M3 Pickup will fire
the imaginations of all motorists with a deep appreciation of top
performance matched by a keen practical bent. 309 kW/420 hp under
the bonnet and a rear-axle load capacity of up to 450 kilos take the
hallmark BMW M relationship between race-oriented driving pleasure
and everyday utility to an entirely new level. This unique vehicle
has already completed extensive test and set-up drives on the
Nürburgring’s Nordschleife in advance of its global unveiling on 1
April 2011.
With this vehicle, BMW M GmbH once again furnishes evidence of its
exceptional competence in developing and building high-grade,
individual dream cars. With a high-revving V8 engine at the front, a
generously sized load area behind and a removable Targa roof above,
driver and passengers in the BMW M3 Pickup will relish an
unprecedented take on the familiar M feeling. Yet this spectacular
new development is unmistakably recognisable as a member of the BMW
M3 model family. Corroborating this kinship are not just the
inimitable power of the engine, but also fine-tuned aerodynamics and
a tailored suspension set-up. Measurements in the wind tunnel at the
BMW Group’s Aerodynamic Test Centre showed a Cd factor on a par with
that of the BMW M3 Coupé. Like every BMW M model, the BMW M3 Pickup
has also demonstrated its dynamic potential on the North Loop of the
Nürburgring. Official lap times have not yet been released, but the
needle in the dial vouched for a top speed of 300 km/h.
The kerb weight of the world’s fastest pickup undercuts that of the
BMW M3 Convertible by around 50 kilograms. Removing the Targa roof
shaves off a further 20 kg while at the same time lowering the car’s
centre of gravity. This most unusual experience of top-down driving
pleasure in a BMW M3 thus goes hand in hand with further optimised
dynamic handling.
The practical features of the BMW M3 Pickup are no less impressive.
Maximum load capacity has been raised to 450 kilograms. The load bed
of the BMW M3 Pickup is clad in high-grade structured aluminium
sheeting and provides the biggest cargo capacity ever offered on a
BMW M vehicle. In terms of the unit of measurement generally applied
to premium automobiles, that gives the loading area of the BMW M3
Pickup the capacity to carry up to 20 standard 46-inch golf bags.
What’s more, the BMW M3 Pickup is the first BMW M3 variant in the
25-year-plus history of this model range to come with a trailer tow
hitch.
Notwithstanding these unquestionable stand-out qualities, the BMW M3
Pickup will not be heading for the golf course or series
development, but will retain its status as an exclusive one-off. It
is earmarked for use as a workshop transport vehicle for BMW M GmbH.
With this in mind, the current BMW M3 Pickup – unlike a similar
predecessor built back in the 1980s – has gone through the requisite
procedures to earn its road certification. Which makes it officially
a truck – but one that puts a whole new spin on the meaning of the
word.