The New, Faster BMW M5 Will Have Fully Switchable Four-Wheel Drive

We were expecting it to drive all four wheels, but we weren't expecting a new xDrive system that allows on-the-fly adjustment from four-wheel drive to rear-wheel drive. Technological whizzbangery ahoy!
The New, Faster BMW M5 Will Have Fully Switchable Four-Wheel Drive

We thought it was coming and it’s now official: the next BMW M5 is four-wheel drive. Worry not, though, ye faithful devotees of rear-driven M-cars, because it’s a new, switchable system.

That’s right; the M5 will have a driver-selectable M xDrive system with three modes: 4WD, 4WD Sport and 2WD. The last of the three modes completely deactivates the front axle, while 4WD Sport pushes more of the torque to the rear wheels and allows a bit of light drifting without sacrificing the system’s traction benefits completely.

The New, Faster BMW M5 Will Have Fully Switchable Four-Wheel Drive

After reporting that the semi-M 5 Series was already faster than the old M5 courtesy of four-wheel drive, we had to expect the new M5 to follow suit, but we have to confess that we weren’t expecting this.

BMW appears to have involved one of its works DTM drivers, Timo Glock, in the final sign-off of the car. He had this to say, presumably while being poked with a pointy stick by the marketing department:

“I often drive long distances and I need plenty of room for my family, but I wouldn’t wish to give up the chance to explore the car’s sporting character.

“With M xDrive, not only can the new BMW M5 be steered with the usual precision and agility, it also offers me something I really appreciate, living in Switzerland: a noticeable boost to traction and controllability – even when driving in particular environmental conditions, such as wet weather and snow, and in both everyday driving situations and when pushing the car to its performance limits.”

The New, Faster BMW M5 Will Have Fully Switchable Four-Wheel Drive

Power comes from an upgraded version of the outgoing car’s 4.4-litre TwinPower turbocharged V8, but while BMW says it puts out more power and torque than before, it hasn’t quoted figures yet. It does, at least, tell us that it’s faster than before, and we reckon by a long way – at least in the 0-62mph and 0-124mph sprints.

An Active M Differential splits power between the rear wheels, and can vary its locking effect from zero to 100 per cent, making it theoretically the best possible kind of rear diff setup. A small amount of slip at the rear wheels is always possible, says BMW, even in its tamest modes, which is good news seeing as the car defaults to the basic 4WD mode upon engine startup.

The New, Faster BMW M5 Will Have Fully Switchable Four-Wheel Drive

Elsewhere there’s a 70 per cent larger head-up display, a revised eight-speed automatic gearbox with faster shifts and smoother behaviour at low speed. It has paddle shifters mounted on the steering wheel and can make multiple downshifts in one go – something not all automatics can manage. We look forward to getting hold of the performance data…

Comments

Anonymous
05/17/2017 - 11:17 |
2 | 2
DL🏁

As much as this is amazing, can someone explain why would someone need to switch to 2WD? In real world 4WD is faster and if you want to have fun, completely switching off traction control is not the wisest of ideas (unless you are Chris Harris)… Not to mention the fact that if you wanted to have fun on public roads, you wouldn’t buy a heavy saloon car.
On the track? Honestly, how many M5 owners take their car onto the track? 2%? 3%? And again, if you wanted a trackday car, you probably wouldn’t buy an executive saloon car for that purpose…

Don’t get me wrong - I still want one badly, but I just don’t get all of this “2WD and 4WD in one” nonsense. It’s like they are trying to satisfy the journalists who want to drift this car on a track to make a cooler video, rather than actual customers. They know that if they make M5 4WD only, journalists are going to go mad because of that and as a result sales will suffer. So they come up with this 2WD mode just to satisfy those journalists, so that real M5 customers are happier reading the reviews… and they will never use this 2WD mode.

05/17/2017 - 11:55 |
0 | 0

I just think that they should make all performance executive saloons 4WD, powerful, and fast on real roads (hence 4WD). For those who want drifting and fun, there is always the M2, M4 hopefully the upcoming Z5 (or whaterever they call it).
Just my opinion

05/17/2017 - 11:56 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

nice, does the dash also come with duct tape?

05/17/2017 - 12:45 |
6 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Y tho?!
Lol

05/17/2017 - 13:09 |
2 | 0
llP VeIoclty

MattKimberley BMW have announced performance numbers in their video on facebook, the video says it has 600hp, 700nm of torque, 0-60 in 3.5 secs

05/17/2017 - 12:48 |
18 | 0

Do you have a link to the video?!

05/17/2017 - 13:11 |
0 | 0
Rich_WVU

I’ll say the same thing I said on BMW’s press release. I know it’s quick, I know it’s a “better” car, but I don’t really care until it sounds like this:

05/17/2017 - 13:28 |
28 | 0

It won’t have the throttle response nor the feel either. :)

05/17/2017 - 17:22 |
12 | 0
Anonymous

no FWD????

05/17/2017 - 13:35 |
0 | 0
TheMindGarage

When Mercedes gets an A grade and BMW decides to copy his homework…

05/17/2017 - 14:08 |
2 | 2
Antiprius

Observe, Mercedes and Audi, this is how you do AWD. No Haldex here.

05/17/2017 - 14:56 |
8 | 4

Merc and Audi don’t do haldex only, but I do love this new “M” xDrive.

05/17/2017 - 17:21 |
2 | 0
Jeremias

Bmw for the love of the car god please don´t go AWD with most of your cars, please. The 1 and 2 series going FWD is bad enough. KEEP THE RWD HERITAGE. (btw i´m not saying that is going to be bad car)

05/17/2017 - 15:13 |
2 | 2
imtrademarked

everytime i see bmw’s xDrive i rawr XD

05/17/2017 - 18:55 |
0 | 0

Topics

Manufacturers

Sponsored Posts