I don't know any German expression for "s".Pbondar said:..the S being some form of technical German for two wheel drive as opposed to X drive...
Pbondar said:It looks like BMW marketing guys then adopted it for the E89 to counter the push (pun) from Audi with front wheel drive sports cars..
Absolutely spot on, I think it was Enzo Ferrari who said something like 'theirs no point having a front wheel drive car over 100 bhp because you cant get the power down" or something similar.Starman said:Pbondar said:It looks like BMW marketing guys then adopted it for the E89 to counter the push (pun) from Audi with front wheel drive sports cars..
No such thing as a FWD "sports car"![]()
Tell Porsche that. :wink:Starman said:No such thing as a FWD "sports car"![]()
Has Porsche ever made a front wheel drive car? or did you think he meant four wheel drive.. :lol:Busterboo said:Tell Porsche that. :wink:Starman said:No such thing as a FWD "sports car"![]()
sars said:Has Porsche ever made a front wheel drive car? or did you think he meant four wheel drive.. :lol:Busterboo said:Tell Porsche that. :wink:Starman said:No such thing as a FWD "sports car"![]()
Busterboo said:I don't know what the '35' means on my car, or the 'i', or the 'S', or whether the last should be a lower case or a capital. Come to think of it, I've little what most of the clutter makers put on other cars means. The 'E89' with all its silly model numbering that makes you want to put in a decimal point is a good series of cars, though.
tiglon said:Busterboo said:I don't know what the '35' means on my car, or the 'i', or the 'S', or whether the last should be a lower case or a capital. Come to think of it, I've little what most of the clutter makers put on other cars means. The 'E89' with all its silly model numbering that makes you want to put in a decimal point is a good series of cars, though.
The "35" means that turbochargers ruined the traditional engine size method of badging so now they add an arbitrary 5 to the NA badge number.
Ever since injection petrol engines became ubiquitous, the "i" stands for petrol, because BMW didn't want to do a 35p model in case customers thought that was the price.
The "s" or "S" - depending on where you look - means BMW hadn't come up with "M-light" branding yet and weren't up for calling it a 36i/37i/38i/39i. Given it has approx 11.5% more power than a 35i, I would have gone with 39.02.
To summarise, 30 for being 3 litre, add 5 for being turbocharged, add 4.02 for being the higher output engine, stick a P on the end so everyone knows it's not diesel or electric - it should be called a 39.02P. That would make more sense than Audi's latest badging logic, which seems to be engine displacement, remove the decimal point and multiply by 2 because bigger numbers sound better...
In case anyone is wondering what Z means, I've googled it for you and apparently it's "zukunft" (German for future) - which means that in 1989 BMW thought that a 2 seater convertible was futuristic?!

tiglon said:The first BMW turbo car had Turbo stuck on the model number, so perhaps a 35i should be called a Z130i Turbo?

Argyll Andy said:tiglon said:The first BMW turbo car had Turbo stuck on the model number, so perhaps a 35i should be called a Z130i Turbo?
You’re just wanting more bloody badges to play around with![]()
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Argyll Andy said:tiglon said:The first BMW turbo car had Turbo stuck on the model number, so perhaps a 35i should be called a Z130i Turbo?
You’re just wanting more bloody badges to play around with![]()
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Ole gits rule said:So does that make a 35iS a Z130 T2
