Hi guys, I know it’s early days yet - but are any of you thinking of taking your cars on track days? Or do you reckon this would be a bad idea?
"When you make the car for the race track, the range will go down very fast," Camacho told Road & Track during the first drive event for the i4. "It means, for me as a project lead, it was very important to have a rounded off concept including, of course, a good range and good charging performance. That's the reason why I decided not to go two steps forward."
So while the i4 M50 can hit 60 in under four seconds and makes 536 hp, an electric M4 it is not. Camacho says it'll be fine for a quick lap or so, but it's not designed for the sort of all-day abuse that an M3 or M4 is built to take. For that, you'll have to wait for a full-fledged electric M model to enter BMW's lineup.
"The first step was to electrify the first M model of the BMW Group as an M performance automobile," Camacho said. "That is the label: M Performance automobile. Of course, all the doors are open for the future, the goal and the next step is going to high-performance cars. It means we are starting and we're going one step after other until the right time."
@Jpuff, 4000+ pounds are fun in their own way at the track as long as they have the right chassis, right tires, brakes and engine - Acura NSX, Camaro SS 1LE, even BMW M3 or M4 xDrive are pushing 3900 pounds. Tesla Model S is 4600-4800 and set a record at the Nurburgring. I do admit that the i4 M50 is stretching the limit big time with its 5025 lbs, but having fun and having the fastest car are 2 different things. Of course, this is all speculation until we actually track the car, but I don't mind trying to make believe I'm Echo Gao...4000lbs+ cars are of limited fun at the track. 5000lbs+ cars are of even more limited fun. Slow down a lot, turn, point, accelerate. Repeat. Not a lot of possibility to carry weight through corners. If you try, it'll be a mess, I'd expect. There's just too much weight.