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BMW M3
Debut: 2007
Maker: BMW
Predecessor: M3 E46 |
Ask car lovers which car they
would
choose if they can have only one in their garage, I suppose many would
choose BMW M3. Undoubtedly, apart from M3, nothing else provides the
same kind of performance and exciting driving dynamics while being so
practical for everyday use. At a relatively affordable price, M3 offers
tasteful styling, premium build quality, bullet-proof reliability and
4-seat accommodation. No wonder every year it attracted sales in excess
of 10,000 units and easily topped its class.
Since its launch in 1986, M3 has never been seriously challenged – not
even Mercedes' AMG division could do much to threaten its top dog
status. However, the scene changed completely when Audi dropped a
high-revving 4.2-liter V8 into its RS4. This engine pumped out 420
horsepower and was capable to rev to 8250 rpm, some 80 horses and 250
rpm more than the 3.2-liter straight-6 of the outgoing M3. Besides, it
had the right chassis tuning to deliver equally exciting handling. As a
result, many motoring writers put their votes on the Audi. Meanwhile,
AMG put an even larger V8 into C55. Furthermore, an even more powerful
C63, based on the new generation C-class chassis, is on the pipeline.
M3 has never been subjected to so much pressure...
Inevitably, BMW now faces
a serious question: to go V8, or not
to go. I am always a supporter of straight-6 engines, because
this configuration is simply smoother, more energy efficient, more
musical to ears and cheaper to build than V8s. Moreover, it is the
configuration that BMW is best known for. I suppose Munich also knows
this, but unfortunately, it just can't accept an image inferior to Audi
and AMG, so the power war among the German premium car makers
eventually killed the 6-cylinder M3 and resulted in the first ever
V8-powered M3 ! It gets more powerful, of course, but it also gets a
great deal more expensive. Now it asks for £50,600, a 20 percent
rise from the previous £42,500. That make it out of the reach of
many previous customers. The
days of affordable M3 has gone. Strangely, BMW still targets at
increasing its sales to over 100,000 units during its life. How this
can be achieved remains to be seen.
The new M3 is of course
based on the E92 new 3-Series Coupe. From its appearance it is easily
distinguishable from the regular coupe. Apart from the usual cooling
and aerodynamic tweaks, several changes catch your attention, namely,
the power dome on the bonnet (to leave enough safety clearance from the
V8), the flared wheel arches (to accommodate the wide rubbers), the
extra hot air extractors at the front fenders and on the bonnet. Oh,
and don't forget the black roof panel. It is made of carbon-fiber
reinforced plastic to lower the center of gravity, a technique learned
from the last generation M3 CSL and then productionized in M6.
V8 engine
Naturally, we are most interested in its new engine. Calling it the
first V8 used in M3 is not exactly true. In fact, a few years ago BMW
wanted to race in ALMS and produced a handful of M3 GTR with a 4.0 V8
for homologation. However, the new V8 has no relationship with that
engine. Instead, it is derived from the 5-liter V10 powering the M5.
Sharing the same 90-degree all-alloy construction with bedplate design,
the same cylinder spacing, bore / stroke dimensions and even up to
small details like individual throttle butterflies, 32-bit engine
management system, ion-current knock control system and super-high
12.0:1 compression ratio, you can see it as the M5's V10 with two
cylinders chopped away. It is lightweight for its power, too. Weighing
at 202 kg, it is 38 kg lighter than the V10 and even undercutting the
old straight-6 by some 15 kg. Admittedly, the old engine employed cast
iron block.
With a seriously oversquare profile for
combustion chambers, i.e. 92 mm bore and 75 mm stroke, the M-Power V8
is clearly designed to rev high rather than producing strong bottom end
torque. The use of low-friction Nikasil cylinder coating, Bi-Vanos
variable valve timing and lightweight connecting rods made of
steel-magnesium alloy (titanium is too expensive to BMW) also
contribute to this high revving character. As a result, the V8 can rev
to 8400 rpm cut-out without any hesitation. At 8300 rpm, it releases
the maximum power of 420 hp – that's 77 hp more than the old car and
levels with Audi RS4, though not enough to match the 457hp C63 AMG.
After all, it displaces 2.2 liters less than the AMG mega V8. In terms
of horsepower per liter, however, the BMW V8 is the highest among the
three.
Less impressive is torque. The maximum value is 295 lbft at 3900 rpm,
less than Audi's 317 lbft and actually no better than the twin-turbo
straight-6 of 335i. BMW claims there is at least 90 percent of the
maximum, or 265 lbft, from 2500 to 8000 rpm. Sounds good, but the 335i
offers maximum torque from just 1300 rpm to 5000 rpm, while RS4 pumps
out 285 lbft from 2250-7600 rpm. The lack of bottom end torque means
you need to work harder on throttle and gearbox than the other cars to
keep pace with them. It also means fuel economy is more likely to dip
below the claimed 22.7 mpg, even though it gets the latest Brake Energy
Regeneration system like other 3-Series siblings.
Weight and Performance
However, if we talk about
straight line speed or track time, engineers will concern power to
weight ratio more than torque. The key difference among the three
German cars is weight: 1580 kg for M3, 1650 kg for RS4 and 1655 kg for
C63. The M3 is lighter because it employs quite a lot of lightweight
materials - aluminum suspensions, aluminum bonnet (like E46), composite
fenders and the aforementioned carbon fiber roof - as well as it lacks
the Audi's all-wheel-drive system and Mercedes' automatic gearbox. What
cannot be explained is why it weighs 85 kg more than the 1495 kg E46
(note: all quoted figures are DIN kerb weight), especially considering
it uses a lighter engine. Anyway, the new M3 returns a power to weight
ratio at 266 hp/ton, significantly higher than the previous 229 hp/ton.
It is also higher than RS4 (255 hp/ton), if not C63 AMG (276 hp/ton).
At least we can say it no longer trails its rivals for performance.
In straight line, we estimate the E92 M3 can accelerate from rest to 60
mph in 4.5 seconds, three-tenths quicker than E46. 0-100 mph should be
close to the mind-blowing barrier of 10 seconds. Many pricier sports
cars or grand tourers would slip behind it, for instance, Porsche 911
Carrera S, Audi R8, Aston Martin DB9... The new M3 is undoubtedly a
very quick car.
The rest of the car
As before, channeling the power to the
rear wheels is a 6-speed manual gearbox (BMW may add a new dual-clutch
gearbox later, so the SMG is no more). The E46's Variable
M-differential has been carried over to distribute the right amount of
power between the rear wheels, to enable power slide in corners in a
controllable manner. The standard tires are Michelin Pilot Sport
245/40ZR18 front and 265/40ZR18 rear. They require the composite
fenders to extend 20mm each side to cover them. Inside the wheels are
larger brake discs, 360mm front and 350mm rear, but they are clamped by
single-piston calipers only. As I wrote in AutoZine's News back in
April, I have some reservation about their braking power.
The suspension components
of M3 are mostly made of aluminum to compensate for the increased
strength and firmer setup. A new option is electronic adaptive damping
(called EDC), which offers 3 levels of driver setting - Normal, Sport
and Comfort. This kind of electronic gadgetries can also be found on
the hydraulic power steering, which offers Normal and Sport mode with
different weighting. (Thankfully, no Active Steer in the M3) It also
alters the throttle response. The stability control offers another 3
modes - On, Off and M Dynamic mode - with different level of
intervention. These electronic gadgets means the drivers have plenty of
toys to play with. They also partly explain the increased kerb weight.
On the Road
Enter the cabin, the mass production feel is a disappointment. Facing
you is a plasticky dashboard without any bespoke alloy decorations,
switch knobs, pedals or control gears, nor there are any extra leather
upholstery. Basically it is indistinguishable from a £20,000 318i
with the exception of the front bucket seats, but then the latter are
not as exotic as they ought to be. You must wonder where your
£50K is spent.
As expected, space up front is plenty while the two individual rear
seats can accommodate 6-footers with decent comfort. The lack of rear
doors might be a downside compare with RS4 and C63, but you can wait
for the 4-door M3 which is expected next year together with the
Cabriolet version.
Fire the V8, the first thing you notice is
how quiet it is compare with the old straight-6. At low rev it emits a
subdued bubble. As rev rise its sound track migrates to something like
a racing V8 with high pitch noise, but it still lacks the addictive,
pulse-raising excitement of the old engine. Those expecting a muscle
car kind of power delivery will be disappointed either, because the
M-Power V8 runs with turbine smoothness and a surprisingly linear
character. 6000 rpm is just the beginning, from there to 8400 rpm lies
the sweet zone and the car is really flying. V8 or not, M3 remains as
rev-hungry as ever. To access its performance, you still need to work
hard on its slightly clonky gearshift and put up with a fuel
consumption of 15 mpg or so.
We have no doubt that the new car is faster – BMW said it lapped
Nurburgring in 8 min 10 seconds, 12 seconds faster than the old car, 3
seconds quicker than the current M5 and just 1 second behind M6. Yes,
it is still some way behind the old M3 CSL, but that car employed
semi-slick tires, remember. However, whether it can match the new C63
AMG is quite doubtful to me. As we know, the AMG not only have stronger
power but also better brakes. In contrast, M3's single-piston brakes
are prone to fade during hard use, especially on tracks. Just don’t
know why, BMW has never taken brakes seriously.
But that is only the beginning of its weaknesses. Unbelievably, the V8
power is wrongly mated with a chassis setup that gone soft. On mountain
roads, the new M3 rides more comfortably, understeers more, rolls more
on the turn-in and becomes more difficult to trigger power slide in
corners, although once it is sliding the movement is progressive and
controllable. However, the most disappointing aspect is steering, which
lacks feedback from the front tires, so the driver can only guess how
much grip left. That hurts driving confidence and stops the driver from
pushing it as hard as previously possible. Even when you switch to
Sport mode, the steering is still too light for keen drivers, and the
numbness remains unchanged.
Sadly, the new M3 has lost the razor sharp character of E46. It becomes
more like a M5 rather than a nimbler, more driver-focused and more
entertaining machine. It might have a bigger heart, but it lacks a
soul. Sorry to the fans of M3, perhaps it's time to try AMG...
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The
above report was last updated on 16 Jul 2007. All Rights Reserved. |
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M3 Saloon
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Coupe performance with sedan
practicality
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You
might remember BMW once offered 4-door saloon version of the M3 in E36
generation. That was a decade ago. Unfortunately, it skipped the 4-door
in E46, giving rivals Audi RS4 and Mercedes C36 / C55 a good chance to
establish a solid basis in compact performance saloon market.
Inevitably, it has to respond with a new generation M3 Saloon.
Of course, this car is based on the chassis of E90 (3-series saloon)
instead of E92 (3-series coupe). This mean it is a little shorter and
taller than the M3 Coupe, but tracks and wheelbase are the same. The
same high-revving 4.0 V8 offers very high performance. We are talking
of 0-60 mph in 4.8 seconds, just 0.1 sec slower than the coupe because
it is 25 kilograms heavier. These extra weight come from the additional
doors as well as a standard steel roof instead of the carbon-fiber one
reserved for the coupe.
Due to the higher center of gravity, the M3 Saloon loses a little bit
body control to the Coupe, but it is still a very good driver's car in
its own right. In return, it gets a roomier rear seat which offers more
leg and head room. You have the chance of squeezing the third passenger
into the rear bench because it is no longer two individual buckets as
in the Coupe. The luggage volume also increases by 20 liters.
The M3 Saloon might claw back some sales, but Audi and Mercedes had
already expanded their performance versions to wagon. We might see M3
Touring in the future.
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The
above report was last updated on 15 Feb 2008. All Rights Reserved. |
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M3 M-DCT
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Twin-clutch
gearbox was introduced by Audi TT in 2003. In the first 4 years, this
technology was exclusive to Volkswagen group, which co-developed its
DSG gearboxes with BorgWarner and produced them in its own
transmission plant. However, as BorgWarner transferred its know-how and
started supplying twin-clutch modules to German transmission giant
Getrag, twin-clutch gearbox finally takes off. Getrag developed many
applications for its clients, such as the Powershift gearbox of Ford
Focus and Volvo S40, the GR6 of Nissan GT-R and the SST of Mitsubishi
Lancer Evo X. The latest Getrag products are BMW M3's M-DCT and Ferrari
California's unnamed unit. Both of them are based on a 7-speed,
longitudinal mounted, rear-drive and high-revving concept. Today we
concentrate on M-DCT.
The
designation M-DCT stands for M-division and Double-Clutch Transmission.
It replaces the outgoing single-clutch SMG. The first application in
BMW is the new M3, but I expect it will soon expand to M5, M6 and other
mainstream BMW models. When you order an M3 with this option, you pay
an extra 3,800 Euro and get a reasonable weight increase of 30 kg. In
return, 0-60 mph acceleration is reduced by 0.2 seconds, while fuel
consumption improves from 22.7 to 23.6 mpg and CO2
emission is reduced
by 10g to 285g per km. These are official figures.
A recent comparison test conducted by Auto Motor und Sport found the
M-DCT-equipped M3 Coupe did 0-100 km/h in 4.6 seconds (i.e.
approximately 4.4 seconds for 0-60 mph), versus 4.8 seconds for the
6-speed manual car. 0-200 km/h sprint is also slightly faster: 16.0
seconds versus 16.3 seconds. Whether this slim advantage worth the
premium depends very much on your view. Some people could spend 10,000
Euro on carbon-fiber and titanium stuffs to get the same improvement.
As before in SMG, the control system of M-DCT is versatile yet
complicated - it offers 6 manual modes and 5 auto modes with different
shift speed and smoothness levels. Gearchange can be made by either
steering wheel paddles or conventional gear selector. Generally
speaking, its shift quality is
smooth and much better than the notorious SMG, but in some
circumstances it is not as refined as other double-clutch gearboxes.
Start-stop motion in traffic could be jerky. Full throttle acceleration
in the sportiest mode, upshift could be quite violent. These weaknesses
could haven been understandable for a single-clutch gearbox, but to a
DCT it is obviously too flawed. Admittedly, the M3's wide rev band
(8400 rpm) and quick engine response make designing a DCT more
difficult than other cars.
To justify the extra cost, Getrag will need to work harder to improve
the M-DCT over its life cycle. We shall see whether more time of
development could benefit the version fitted to Ferrari California.
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The
above report was last updated on 7 Jun 2008. All Rights Reserved. |
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M3 GTS
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Track-oriented BMW tries to challenge
Porsche 911 GT3 RS...
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For reasons only God knows,
these days road-legal racing cars are hugely popular. Many high-end
sports cars are derived into track-oriented specials with striped-out
interior, lightweight materials, optimized engine, rock-hard
suspensions and semi-slick tires. Usually they are built in very
limited numbers and sold at considerably higher prices than their base
cars. Most ridiculous is, few buyers actually take them to motor racing
events. Somehow, there is a solid market for these cars.
BMW is no stranger to track-oriented specials. You might still remember
the M3 GTR and M3 CSL that Munich
built in 2002 and 2003-04 respectively. The former was a homologation
special for American Le Mans series, whereas the latter was a
lightweight and tuned version of M3. Both were very expensive cars –
the GTR was priced at a staggering £120,000 due to its rarity
(only 10 were made), whereas the 1400 CSLs were sold at £58,500
each, 50 percent higher than the contemporary M3, or the equivalent of
a 911 Carrera. We questioned its value for money then. The same can be
said to today's M3 GTS.
The new M3 GTS stands between its two ancestors. Production is to be
limited to 150 cars, and each will cost an eye-watering £102,000
before tax. That money will buy you a well-specced 911 Turbo or a 911
GT3 RS with change. Naturally, the latter is the benchmark against
which the BMW should be judged. If the BMW could match the mighty GT3
RS, it might just beat any other rivals.
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Enlarged V8 answered the complaint for
the lack of torque in standard M3...
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On paper, M3 GTS has all the
ingredients to challenge the Porsche. Its 4.0-liter V8 has been stroked
to 4.4-liter, boosting output by 30 horses and 30 pound-foot of torque
– now 450hp and 325 lb-ft in total – and the torque curve becomes
slightly flatter. This should answer the complaint for lacking torque
in the standard car. Channeling the power to the rear axle is a 7-speed
DCT dual-clutch gearbox - contrary to Porsche RS, the BMW does not
offer manual transmission. Closer ratios and quicker shift patterns
differ this DCT from the one serving other M3.
Apart from more punch, the car has also undergone a strict diet to lose
70 kilograms of fat. Weight is saved by ditching luxury features
(air-con, audio and sound insulation), by using plexiglass
(polycarbonate) rear screen and rear side windows, titanium exhaust and
composite materials on rear floor, door inner panels and center
console. The standard front seats have been replaced by lightweight,
glassfiber-backed racing buckets which comes with racing harnesses. The
rear seat has been ditched in favour of a semi-roll cage and fire
extinguisher.
Outside, the racing flavor continues with a deep lip spoiler and a huge
rear spoiler. The latter is adjustable to vary downforce. The GTS also
sits much lower than the standard M3 – 20mm lower in road suspension
setting. In case of track use, ride height can be dropped even further
thanks to the (manually) adjustable suspensions it employs.
Predictably, the suspensions run more aggressive geometry and stiffer
springs and dampers. Wider fenders accommodate slightly wider tracks
and bigger 19-inch wheels. They are wrapped with Pirelli P-Zero Corsa
semi-slick tires with larger footprints (255/35 front and 285/30 rear).
Brakes, the weakest link of the standard M3, has been upgraded too. Now
the single-piston calipers are replaced with 6-pot up front and 4-pot
at the rear. Disc sizes are enlarged from 360 to 378 mm up front and
350 to 380mm at the back.
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Tremendous adhesion offered by P-Zero
Corsa tires... but ride is track-car hard.
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In reality, the GTS is obviously born
for race tracks. If you drive it on a typical B-road, its hard
suspensions might rock your eyeballs off. On a smooth race track, you
will be able to appreciate the aforementioned progress. The first thing
to notice is a stronger mid-range punch from the enlarged V8. It is not
a day and night difference from the old engine, but you will sense the
difference as you no longer need to squeeze the engine so hard. The
second thing is the higher cornering adhesion provided by the P-Zero
Corsa tires. As long as these rubbers are fresh, the cornering limit is
so high that you will be difficult to unsettle the tail. Then other
improvements come into play - the steering is heavier and more precise;
the handling is sharper and body control is rock steady; the braking is
finally excellent and matches the rest of the car; the titanium exhaust
produces a more exotic sound; Everything points to the right direction,
with the exception of ride quality.
Is it as good as GT3 RS then ? Well, not yet. In terms of straight line
speed, the BMW takes 4.2 seconds to go from rest to 60 mph whereas the
Porsche takes 3.9 seconds. By 100 mph, the gap is stretched to about 1
second. Flat out, although the M3 GTS is de-restricted to 190 mph, the
Porsche is even quicker at 193 mph. After all, GT3 RS has the same
horsepower count yet undercuts the BMW on scale by 160 kg.
In terms of steering, traction or real-world speed, the Porsche is also
superior to BMW, though the latter is undoubtedly easier to control.
However, while you can drive GT3 RS happily on regular roads, the same
cannot be said to M3 GTS. It is a single-minded track car rather the a
dual-purpose machine like the mighty Porsche. That is not good enough
to ask for so much money.
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The
above report was last updated on 16 Jul 2010. All Rights Reserved. |
Specifications
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General remarks |
Layout |
Chassis |
Body
|
Length / width / height |
Wheelbase |
Engine |
Capacity |
Valve gears |
Induction |
Other engine features |
Max power |
Max torque |
Transmission |
Suspension layout
|
Suspension features |
Tires
|
Kerb weight |
Top speed |
0-60 mph (sec) |
0-100 mph (sec) |
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M3 Coupe |
Front-engined, RWD
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Steel monocoque |
Steel, aluminum,
composites, carbon-fiber |
4615 / 1817
/ 1418 mm |
2761 mm |
V8, 90-degree |
3999 cc |
DOHC 32 valves, DVVT
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- |
- |
420 hp / 8300 rpm |
295 lbft / 3900 rpm |
6-speed manual |
F: strut
R: multi-link
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- |
F: 245/40ZR18
R: 265/40ZR18
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1580 kg |
155 mph (limited) |
4.3* / 4.7** / 4.1*** |
9.8* / 10.2** / 9.4*** |
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M3 Coupe M-DCT |
Front-engined, RWD
|
Steel monocoque |
Steel, aluminum,
composites, carbon-fiber |
4615 / 1817
/ 1418 mm |
2761 mm |
V8, 90-degree |
3999 cc |
DOHC 32 valves, DVVT
|
- |
- |
420 hp / 8300 rpm |
295 lbft / 3900 rpm |
7-speed twin-clutch |
F: strut
R: multi-link
|
- |
F: 245/40ZR18
R: 265/40ZR18
|
1600 kg |
155 mph (limited) |
4.3*** |
10.0*** |
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M3 Saloon |
Front-engined, RWD
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Steel monocoque |
Steel, aluminum, composites
|
4580 / 1817
/ 1447 mm |
2761 mm |
V8, 90-degree |
3999 cc |
DOHC 32 valves, DVVT
|
- |
- |
420 hp / 8300 rpm |
295 lbft / 3900 rpm |
6-speed manual |
F: strut
R: multi-link
|
- |
F: 245/40ZR18
R: 265/40ZR18
|
1605 kg |
155 mph (limited) |
4.1* / 4.6*** / 4.3**** |
9.8* / 10.5*** / 10.1**** |
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General remarks |
Layout |
Chassis |
Body
|
Length / width / height |
Wheelbase |
Engine |
Capacity |
Valve gears |
Induction |
Other engine features |
Max power |
Max torque |
Transmission |
Suspension layout
|
Suspension features |
Tires
|
Kerb weight |
Top speed |
0-60 mph (sec) |
0-100 mph (sec) |
|
M3 GTS |
Front-engined, RWD
|
Steel monocoque |
Steel, aluminum,
composites, carbon-fiber |
4645 / 1804
/ 1387 mm |
2761 mm |
V8, 90-degree |
4361 cc |
DOHC 32 valves, DVVT
|
- |
- |
450 hp / 8300 rpm |
325 lbft / 3750 rpm |
7-speed twin-clutch |
F: strut
R: multi-link
|
- |
F: 255/35ZR19
R: 285/30ZR19
|
1530 kg |
190 mph (c) |
4.2 (c)
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- |
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Performance
tested by: *C&D,
**Autocar, ***R&T, ****MT |
Copyright©
1997-2010
by Mark Wan @ AutoZine
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