2017 BMW 1 Series M140i 3.0 turbo petrol

Summary:

Performance bargain with real character

Faults:

Brake squeal in reverse (cured itself after about 5,000 miles).

No other faults.

General Comments:

It's exceeded every expectation.

The B58 turbo six pot is the real star of the show, and I've never known another engine that seems to adapt to your mood or your driving style so effectively. Cruising about, it's silky smooth and pretty quiet. In Sport+ with the exhaust flaps open, it howls and growls like all the best BMW sixes, and the performance it delivers is fantastic. Any gear, any revs, it just takes off like a scalded cat. It hasn't used a drop of oil in 29,000 miles, or so much as misfired, and is returning, with a bit of motorway use admittedly, a staggering 30 MPG average. People whine that it doesn't have the character of the old NA BMW engines, and maybe it doesn't, but it's in a different league to the four pot units in the competition. To get anything that even competes with it, you're looking at the five pot in the RS3, but that car, at real street prices, costs half as much again.

And that's the other thing with the M140i. It really is a bit of a performance bargain. They start at £30k, but the deals on offer mean you'll pay a lot less than that. I specced mine as a 5dr auto, with adaptive suspension, Harman Kardon hi-fi, Professional Media, heated seats and privacy glass, and paid just £27k. The car lists, in this spec, at £36k. Everything else that even compares price-wise has four cylinders and AWD, and just doesn't offer the same character or entertainment from a driving perspective.

My car has the ZF8HP 8 speed automatic, and it's a brilliant match for the engine. Unlike the dual clutch systems offered by competitors, it is lag and snatch free at low speeds, and entirely consistent in its behaviour. In comfort mode, the only way you notice a gear change is by the revs changing. In Sport+ mode, it bangs the next gear in with a satisfying kick in the back. It's not as fast shifting as, say a DSG, but it's close, and the response and consistency moving off from rest, or when parking or manoeuvring is much better, being a proper torque converter based automatic.

Any car with 335 BHP going through the rear wheels needs a degree of respect, and of course it moves about a bit when you push on, but the other surprise with the M140i is that it isn't intimidating or difficult to drive in the slightest. In Comfort mode, the throttle response is quite soft, and the linear response of the engine, and the high grip levels mean your gran could easily drive it down to the shops without it ever feeling like it's going to spit her off the road.

Traction in the dry is phenomenal, and you can launch the car hard with only a gentle scrabble from the rear end. In the wet, you need to up your game a little bit, and it will think nothing of lighting up the rear tyres at 60 mph if you plant your foot with the systems relaxed (or off), but you quickly learn to be a bit sensitive with the throttle, and to moderate your inputs. And that's another thing I love about it. Yes, the AWD competition provides much more consistent all weather performance, but the M140i actually demands that the driver adapt what they are doing, and work with it. I can drive this car better now than I could the day I picked it up. You can learn everything about a Golf R or Audi S3 in a single 20 mile thrash, but the BMW rewards patience and learning in a way none of its competitors do.

It's not perfect, by any stretch. The damping is quite crude (cheap?), and making progress over uneven surfaces can produce an unpleasant, high frequency vertical jiggling motion as the damping starts to reach its limits. Admittedly, you have to be pushing on quite hard to see this, but it is probably the biggest limitation of the chassis. It's a shame, because the balance of the car is really lovely. The big engine doesn't make the car feel nose heavy, and it turns in really well. Adjusting the power balances the car in the corner in a way that you only get with RWD, and powering out gives a lovely sense of the rear end tightening the line, and really digging in and driving the car out of the corner. In the tighter stuff, the open diff (LSD is a dealer fit option) can make the rear end behaviour a little inconsistent out of tight corners. Sometimes, breaking traction out of tight corners results in a slide, sometimes you just get the inside rear wheel spinning uselessly. Sometimes it starts as one thing, and then turns into the other. Adding an LSD is highly recommended, and would be a big improvement.

The other area which lets the car down is the interior. Mine has the Coral Red Dakota leather which lifts the ambience a bit, but the dash looks plasticky and dated compared with the competition from VAG and Mercedes. There's nothing wrong with it functionally, and it's well screwed together, but it does feel its age. Driving position is good though, with a huge range of adjustment, and I love the fact that BMW has stuck with its trademark big, simple, clear instruments, back-lit orange at night, that might not look cutting edge, but are very easy to read at a glance. It's just a shame they didn't see fit to provide a coolant temperature gauge, let alone oil pressure or temperature. But you do get gimmicky power and torque meters in the iDrive which you will play with once or twice, then never use again.

You can forgive all this though when you drive the thing. Entertaining chassis, big hearted engine with bags of character, more than enough performance to get you locked up, and remarkably low running costs for what it is. I really do think these are the bargain of the moment, and what it offers is a completely different take on the hot hatch compared with all of its competitors. The only RWD option, and the only one with a six cylinder engine, it really stands out in a world of four cylinder AWD options. What's more, given the replacement is going down that road too, I think they will become future classics.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? Yes

Review Date: 20th December, 2018

22nd Dec 2018, 12:51

Nice review. Good to know BMW still make proper driver's cars.

2007 BMW 1 Series 120d Sport SE (E87) 2.0 turbo diesel

Summary:

Very sad to see her go

Faults:

1. Seal at rear of the automatic gearbox split, so gearbox oil leaking. BMW dealer repaired (expensive!)

2. Track rod end nuts seized. BMW recommended drilling them out which would have resulted in the car needing new track rod ends. Work not carried out as I got rid of the car.

3. Numerous trim rattles due to dissimilar matching trim type being used when manufactured. Example; both 'A' pillar airbag covers constantly clicked and creaked; most irritating. BMW forums suggested wedging layers of felt cloth in the gaps to dampen. A known issue on the 1 series.

4. Bonnet catch seized so had difficulty locking the bonnet shut. BMW dealer replaced.

5. Both tailgate struts became 'dry' eventually, resulting in an audible creak when the tailgate was opened. BMW dealer replaced.

6. DTC light came on when starting, despite the fact that I hadn't even touched the engage/disengage button. Stayed on during a short journey. On starting again, the light remained off and never came on again. Probably just a glitch.

7. Discovered the previous owner had affected a small paint touch up on the nearside front door, which after several years, came off. He hadn't done it properly, leaving me facing a £475 bill to have the door resprayed. Rather than throw good money after bad, I got rid of the car.

8. Other general wear and tear items; tyres, wiper blades etc.

General Comments:

From the day I bought the car to until I decided (albeit reluctantly) to get rid of the car, every single issue that arose, every service (major and minor) and every MoT was carried out by my local BMW dealer. They did a fantastic job, I always got a great courtesy car whilst mine was in the shop (4 series, 3 series and at one point a Z4... but I think they were trying to sell me those!).

To be truthful I could never really fault the car. It has always been reliable, but it has gotten to an age where things were starting to go wrong more frequently. I have had some horror stories with 'independent' repairers, so I made a point to always have the car dealt with by BMW as I insisted on genuine BMW parts being used. However, the trade off with that means premium prices.

I bought the car on a four year finance deal, and uncannily the moment I had finished paying for it, the problems started more frequently. These were just due to the car's age, and certainly not neglect as the car was looked after and well cared for.

I finished paying for the car in January 2017 and am now getting rid at the end of May the same year. In that short space, I have paid nearly £2000 fixing issues that have started arising. So rather than throw good money after bad and waiting for 'the big one', the car has had to go. It comes to a point that when a car starts to become a money pit you have to think sensibly.

I'll be sorry to see it go. It's never let me down, and I've always believed that when you own a car then you don't scrimp on caring for it. The 1 series may be the entry model for BMW, but it's still a BMW, which in my opinion sets it apart.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? Don't Know

Review Date: 29th May, 2017