BMW M8 Gran Coupe patent images show design cues

    BMW's upcoming flagship coupe will also be sold in four-door guise, and thinly disguised prototypes are already at the Nürburgring.

    Published On Aug 28, 2018 07:00:00 AM

    7,400 Views

    BMW's is bringing back the 8-series name for a soon-to-be launched flagship coupe, and now the four-door M8 Gran Coupe flagship has been revealed in patent images.

    Recent video footage showed the M850i version being tested to the limits at the Nürburgring, but the patent images, which surfaced on tipster page Ferd, show the range-topping four-door coupé in its hottest guise.

    Previewed by the M8 Gran Coupé concept back at the Geneva motor show in March, the Porsche Panamera-rivalling 8-series Gran Coupé isn't due to arrive until 2019 - several months after the two-door variant. The M8 version arrives a few months after this.

    The M-performance M850i will be offered in £76,270 840d diesel and £100,045 M850i petrol form, and the Gran Coupe is predicted to follow suit. The production M8, meanwhile, is tipped to top 600bhp from a more highly tuned version of the same engine and will be available in all three 8-series body styles.

    The Gran Coupé is due to enter production in 2019. It appears largely similar to its two-door siblings, but with a raised rear roofline to provide more head room in the rear seats.

    Following the unveiling of the 8-series coupé, the convertible and Gran Coupé were all but revealed in patent images showing their distinct designs. The pictures, which surfaced on Bimmerpost, confirmed the car's look would follow its two-door siblings closely at the front and rear.

    Pictured previously during a testing stint at the Nürburgring, the design differences of the M8 coupé and convertible are visible. Aside from their differing tops, the variants also get their own bootlids to create different silhouettes.

    So far, only the two-door 8-series has been revealed, with the other two body types and M variants to be revealed later.

    Building on the base of the new 8-series range, which will appear on public roads in November, the M8 models will use BMW's twin-turbocharged 4.4-litre V8 engine. We know this because the racing M8 that competed in the Daytona 24 Hours earlier this year was equipped with this powerplant.

    Without motorsport restrictors to worry about, the finished road car is expected to produce 600bhp, placing it above the latest 592bhp M5 and giving it more firepower than the Mercedes-AMG S63 Coupé, which has 577bhp. M division president Frank van Meel revealed that development of the M8 was started at the same time as the regular 8-series and that their programmes ran in parallel. He said the M8 builds "on the genes of the 8-series and augments its DNA with added track ability and generous extra portions of dynamic sharpness, precision and agility".

    Van Meel added: "It all flows into a driving experience that bears the familiar BMW M hallmarks and satisfies our customers’ most exacting requirements.” He said that BMW's engineers set out "to ensure that the standard car wasn’t too sporty for its customers" because the M division "wanted the M8 to feel like a proper step up". "Also, because not all 8-series customers want an M car," van Meel continued.

    “We certainly want to make a statement with this car. It will sit at the very top of our model range and, for now, we have no confirmed plans for any series production model above it, so we understand it must have a specification suiting its position in our hierarchy.”

    The M8 will carry a heavy premium over the standard 8 Series' £76,270 starting price, so a starting price surpassing that of even the i8 sports car is certain.

    Global project manager for the 8-series, Sarah Lessmann, previously told Autocar: "There is a big gap [between the S-class Coupé and the 911] and we decided the 8-series shouldn’t quite be in the middle of those: it takes the best out of everything and defines its own gap. Performance-wise, we're close to the 911, but we also offer elegant and luxurious materials to match the best of the S-class.” The Porsche 911 Turbo starts at £128,692.

    BMW also used the M8 GTE, the racing version of the car, to compete as part of a factory effort in this year's Le Mans 24 Hours endurance race. It was the brand's first factory entry there in six years.

    BMW Cars

    Copyright (c) Autocar UK. All rights reserved.

    Comments

    ×
    img

    No comments yet. Be the first to comment.

    Ask Autocar Anything about Car and Bike Buying and Maintenance Advices
    Need an expert opinion on your car and bike related queries?
    Ask Now

    Search By Car Price

    Poll of the month

    The Mahindra XUV 300 facelift will be called the XUV 3XO. Should more brands rename models for facelifts?

    Yes, it could give new life to a slow-selling car

     

    13.39%

    Yes, but only if there are significant changes

     

    32.73%

    No, it's confusing and dilutes the brand name

     

    28.37%

    No difference, the product speaks for itself

     

    25.50%

    Total Votes : 941
    Sign up for our newsletter

    Get all the latest updates from the automobile universe