GO
GoAutoLogo
MENU

Make / Model Search

BMW - 2 Series - M2 Pure

BMW 2 Series (F22 2 Series Coupe)

F22 2 Series Coupe

Make: BMW

Model: 2 Series

Released: Jan 1970

Discontinued: Sep 2017

BMW logo1 Feb 2014

By TIM NICHOLSON

BMW replaced the E82 1 Series Coupe with the F22 2 Series Coupe in March 2014.

Three models are offered initially – a 220i, a 220d and a flagship M235i.

Based on the F20 1 Series platform, the ‘2’ nomenclature falls in line with the even-numbered F30 3 Series and F10 5 Series-derived F32 4 Series and F12 6 Series models respectively.

Like the recently released 4 Series Coupe, the 2 Series Coupe brandishes BMW’s latest styling details, including the larger double-kidney grille, ribbed sides and a multi-layered tail-light effect.

Compared to the 1 Series Coupe, everything but the car’s height grows, yet there’s more headroom inside as well as measurably greater leg and shoulder space, while even the 390L boot is a 20L improvement.

The 220i’s EU6 emissions-rated 1997cc 2.0-litre TwinPower turbo produces 135kW of power between 5000 and 6250rpm, and 270Nm of torque between 1250 and 4500rpm, for a 0-100km/h claim of 7.0 seconds.

On the economy front, the $2500 more expensive 220d consumes just 4.4L/100km compared to the 220i’s 6.0L/100km rating, thanks to an EU5 certified 1995cc 2.0-litre turbo-diesel engine delivering 135kW at 4000rpm and 380Nm from 1750 to 2750rpm. And yet it is barely any slower to 100km/h.

But the performance headline act for now is the 235i’s M135i-based 2979cc 3.0-litre turbo inline-six another EU6 rater, and with 240kW between 5800 and 6000rpm and 450Nm available from 1300 to 4500rpm, it will sprint to 100km/h in just 4.8 seconds on the way to a speed-limited 250km/h V-max, yet still average 7.6L/100km.

BMW offers a six-speed manual as a no-cost option alternative to the standard ZF-supplied eight-speed torque converter automatic transmission dubbed Steptronic.

Either gearbox drives the rear wheels in usual BMW tradition while weight distribution is pegged at 50:50 front to rear.

The nose contains a double-joint spring MacPherson strut system while the rear houses a five-link independent rear end, while electric power steering in both BMW’s Servotronic system.

Variable ratio steering, adaptive suspension and uprated brakes are an option, but a full five-star ENCAP safety rating is standard courtesy of a raft of active and passive safety features.

Reviews

When it was new

Latest reviews

Motor industry news

GoAutoNews is Australia’s number one automotive industry journal covering the latest news, future and new model releases, market trends, industry personnel movements, and international events.

Catch up on all of the latest industry news with this week's edition of GoAutoNews
Click here