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2018 BMW M2 Competition on its way

Powered-up baby M car under development

2018 BMW M2 Competition main
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BMW is readying a faster, fitter version of its popular M2 coupe.

The baby M-car has been a smash hit in Australia, its year-to-date sales of 229 (June 2017) making it the most popular M Division product. Those seeking a little extra, however, will be enticed by the forthcoming M2 Competition.

Speculation regarding a more powerful ‘M2 CS’ has been swirling for some time, however MOTOR believes that rather than joining its M4 brother under BMW’s exclusive CS banner, the car will instead expand the more attainable Competition range.

2018 BMW M2 Competition rearThe Competition treatment has been applied to everything from the M3 to M6 and usually consists of extra power and refinements to the suspension and differential, however MOTOR believes the M2 will take this a step further by adopting a new, albeit familiar, engine.

The current M2, like its 1M predecessor, has copped some criticism for using a powered-up version of BMW’s N55 3.0-litre single-turbo inline-six, so to silence these dissenting voices it’s likely the M2 Competition will receive a detuned version of the M3/M4’s S55 3.0-litre twin-turbo inline-six.

Outputs remain a secret, however we’d expect around 300kW/500Nm, leaving some breathing space to the 331kW/550Nm M3/M4 Pure and Competition models, with the standard 317kW M3/M4 expected to disappear from the model range in time.

2017 BMW M3 engineMOTOR’s Euro correspondent Georg Kacher reports in CAR three-tenths will be cut from the claimed 0-100km/h time, the M2 Competition managing 4.2sec in seven-speed dual-clutch guise (six-speed manual a no-cost option), trailing its larger (but little heavier), more powerful siblings by 0.2sec.

In addition to the extra power, in line with Competition tradition expect suspension and differential revisions to improve on-limit poise, new wheels and subtle exterior changes – likely the blacked-out badge and trim treatment that identifies an M3/M4 Competition.

Based on prior evidence, the M2 Competition is likely to carry a relatively small price premium over the regular model, so we’d expect a price tag in the region of $105-110K when it lands in 2018.

Scott Newman
Contributor

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