A blown tyre and a ride with Kah Beng

A bit of an eventful day today.

Caught the first half of the Germany vs Costa Rica match and did not wake up in time to make my way towards Sepang for the 2nd High Performance Challenge structured track day event.

I got up realising that I had to rush to the sepang circuit. I suppose in the rush I picked up a puncture (on my right rear) along the way to the Sg Buloh toll plaza. Once on the highway, the puncture got worse and resulted in a tyre blow-out. Luckily I was driving within the speed limit, and the bimmer was well within its limits.

The blow out was a bit of an inconvenience. I had to replace the shredded tyre. The spare was not of the right size. Potentially, I had to replace both rear tyres if I could not get the same model. It turned out I couldn’t… not without waiting much longer. So… two new tyres today.

The new Dunlop Direzza’s do not seem as firm as the old Yokohamas. A little less surefooted around the fast corners. Well, I’ll use it for a while and try other tyre models when it is time.

Got to the track at around 12noon. The orphans from two foster homes had already arrived (invited by RMCC – Ronald McDonalds Childrens Charity). The kids had a lot of fun being taxi-driven around the Sepang Circuit in a variety of cars ranging from the Lotus Elise (driven by the always fearless Kah Beng) to an Opel Zafira.

I got my chance later in the evening to hitch a ride with Kah Beng (pic above – wearing cap) and to observe the man at work. The amazing thing about the Elise is the braking point… which was some 75m from the entry into turns 1 and 15. He would drive the elise very close to the limits of adhesion with many opposite lock corrections. Spun once. Interesting to note his line through turns 13 and 14. I would like to see a slightly different line through that complex to see how the exit into the back straight would be like. Also took a ride in Luen’s track car (a bare bones Satria). Good stuff all round.

For more information about the High Performance Challenge, please do visit the website… and also help contribute towards our Racing For Children initiative.

Ariel Atom 2 – insane fun!

For those of you who do not know what an Ariel Atom2 is (no, it is NOT a brand of washing powder), then you should check out the video clip below. The Atom2 is perhaps one of the most insanely fun cars ever built. It is built by a small company (7 employees) somewhere in the villages of England. The engineering operations apparently run out of a barn on some farm.

But what is remarkable about the car is that it is perhaps the closest you can get to driving an open wheel racing car on the road!

Top Gear’s Jeremy Clarkson test drive of the Atom2 (boy does he look ugly!) is as much fun for us to watch as it was for him to drive. I want an Atom2!

More information of the Atom:

The Z4M coupe and BMW’s car mad board

BMW Z4M Coupe - 2

Deliciously uncivil

With a board full of car freaks at BMW, the hard-top M Coupé was a natural. The 330 hp 3.2-litre fastback-style speedster boasts 50/50 weight distribution

May 20, 2006. 01:00 AM
JIM KENZIE

ESTORIL, Portugal—The BMW Z4 Coupé was a “submarine” car at the company’s headquarters, admits one executive.

Submarine cars — meaning they were developed without formal approval from the company’s board of directors — are theoretically illegal at BMW.

“But once the board sees them and drives them, it’s okay,” says Ulrich Bruhnke, who has many titles including president of BMW’s M division, responsible for the high-performance cars.

He’s also responsible for driver training and individual customization programs.

Bruhnke has a huge advantage over executives at most car companies: all his board members are car freaks and all can drive with the best of them.

Turn them loose in an M version of any BMW and they get it. Right away.

The former Z3 roadster-based Coupé — the square-backed bread-wagon car — was marketed back home only in M spec as the M Coupé, although base versions (called “civilian” cars in BMW-speak) were available in other markets.

Also a submarine car, the Z3 Coupé’s lines were clearly controversial: it was probably the most polarizing love-it/hate-it car in BMW’s history.

The new Coupé, essentially a Z4 roadster with a fixed hardtop roof, is somewhat less divisive

. The Z4 roadster isn’t everyone’s cup of tea, but the coupe conversion doesn’t dramatically alter the appeal level no matter which way you swing on the soft-top version.

The profile is classic coupe: ultra-long hood and short overhangs front and rear, distinctly rearward-biased greenhouse, fastback rear with hatch opening.

Visually, the M Coupé is distinguished from the base Z4 Coupé by a larger front air dam, “power bulge” creases in the hood, unique 18-inch wheels, larger tires, four chrome exhaust tips and, of course, lots of badges.

Again in Canada, we will get only the M Coupé version ($68,900), our market not only being too small to justify too wide a model proliferation, but also reflecting the fact that Canadians buy proportionately more M products than Americans do anyway — Canada is apparently Number 5 in the world in M penetration.

So we will not have the option of the 255 horsepower 3.0-litre inline six-cylinder engine; we will be forced (aw, gee …) into the 330 horsepower 3.2-litre M six.

This is 14 ponies down on the European-spec M cars. The engine is identical, but a slightly more restrictive exhaust system is required for the U.S. to meet its exhaust standards, and we, unfortunately, piggyback on those factory specs.

We also have slightly less peak torque: 262 lb.-ft. at 4900 r.p.m., versus 269 for the lucky Europeans.

This engine does not use BMW’s vaunted Valvetronic system whereby engine speed is controlled not by throttle butterflies but by stringent control of valve lift and timing.

Bruhnke noted that while this is fine for civilian cars, a high-performance engine like the M Coupé’s requires a separate electronically-controlled butterfly for each cylinder, for immediate throttle response.

A “sport” mode button on the centre console changes the throttle pedal-butterfly ratio and also modifies the engine electronics to provide even sharper reaction to pedal movement.

The only transmission is a six-speed manual, surprisingly (to me, anyway) not an SMG (sequential manual gearbox) automatic-or-paddle-shifted racing-type transmission.

Bruhnke said that the third-generation SMG transmission — a seven-speed — was introduced with the M5, and while the older six-speed SMG now in the M3 coupe and convertible could have been adapted, they felt it would be better to wait until the next-generation version was ready to be fitted to its newest car.

Also, the marketing people felt the classic sports car would work better with the classic manual transmission (the Americans had already demanded and received a regular manual for the M5; the rest of the world offers only an SMG).

A variable differential lock limits forward-thrust-reducing wheelspin to a minimum based on side-to-side variances in grip. Up to 100 per cent of the available torque can be switched to either rear wheel.

The chassis begins with almost exactly 50/50 weight distribution — some consider this ideal, although all true high-performance cars have a slight rear bias so that under braking, the forward weight transfer generates this desired equality dynamically.

The suspension basics are identical with other 3 Series cars — single-pivot MacStruts up front; multi-link “central arm” at the rear — although the M Coupé (and sister car M Roadster) uses significantly different details, tailored to the performance potential of these vehicles.

The Dynamic Stability Control system — to eliminate skids before they happen — is recalibrated to intervene more gently and at higher thresholds, to allow you more opportunity to bail out of trouble.

If you’re really brave, you can shut it off altogether — most such BMW systems remain at least partially active even when switched off.

Massive floating disc brakes lifted from the highest-performance M3 variant so far, the M3 CSL, bring the M Coupé from 100 km/h to rest in about 2.5 seconds, or within 34 metres.

That’s good to great, folks.

Portugal has perhaps benefited more from entry into the European Union than any other country, save perhaps for Ireland or Spain.

The improving economy has helped finance lots of road-building, and the hilly, scenic, seaside region around the capital city of Lisbon is laced with well-maintained and lightly-travelled sports car-testing opportunities.

Not to mention the former Formula One racetrack at Estoril, a challenging set of widely-varying corners designed to expose flaws in a car’s dynamics.

There aren’t many in the M Coupé.

It’s a cliché to say that the heart of any sports car is its engine, but it’s no less true for that. BMW almost alone sticks with the inline six (as opposed to V6) concept because it is simply the smoothest way to arrange about three litres worth of displacement.

Bruhnke and his team make a big deal about this being a high-revving engine, and like all (okay, most) BMW engines, it loves to rev.

Sounds terrific, too, the exhaust note ranging from quiet under low-stress cruising conditions to deeply sonorous as revs rise to absolutely bonkers as it reaches the 8000 red line.

While the torque peak occurs at a fairly elevated 4900 r.p.m., about 80 per cent of that peak value is available from 2000 r.p.m. on up. So again, like all BMW engines, this one has amazing flexibility and tractability.

The gearbox may not be quite as snick-snick as a Miata or Porsche Boxster/Cayman, but it’s pretty good. I did have some trouble co-ordinating the clutch, however, especially when trying to drive the car slowly in traffic — sometimes you just have to — and double-especially when the sport button is pushed.

Throttle reaction is just too sharp, and you get a fair whack of “rubber-banding” — lurching back and forth — as the drivetrain tries to accommodate all that torque.

Rev the whee out of it, though, shift fast and hard at the red line and no problem. That’s why they do offer the sport button — ironically, so things can be a bit less sporty when conditions so demand.

You can still drive the car moderately briskly on a track with the DSC engaged. The intervention is quite gentle and progressive, but for maximum speed, you’ll be shutting it off, as the engine power-cutting function rears its ugly head.

With DSC off, you still have the diff lock to help keep things under control.

BMW still rules the universe when it comes to suspension tuning, at least for volume-produced cars. This one is set up to be firm, of course, but it’s reasonably comfortable even on harsh bumps. Yet there is virtually no discernible body roll, even in pretty hard driving.

Want understeer? Turn in too quickly.

Want to dial that out? Lift, settle the car, then squeeze the loud pedal again.

Want to toss it sideways and hammer it toward the apex with the steering on full opposite lock?

If you’re talented and brave enough, go nuts. (Racetracks only, please.)

In BMW’s tests at the Nürburgring race circuit, the M Coupé is measurably quicker than its roadster counterpart, despite a five kg weight disadvantage due to the steel roof and larger glass rear window.

But the coupe’s suspension can be tuned for better performance, with fewer compromises called for by the less-stiff roadster body.

As Bruhnke put it, “The lack of body flexibility gives the suspension engineers more flexibility!”

In road use, the M Coupé is a fine travelling companion. Provided, that is, that you fit. The low roof means you have to really get down to get in or out.

The cabin is snug.

Visibility isn’t great in any direction. The low windshield header means you’ll be craning your neck to see overhead traffic lights, the rear three-quarters view is tough in any coupe, and even the vista to the rear is limited by the shallow rear glass and tiny rear-view mirror.

My test car had tan leather upholstery and what BMW calls “carbon black leather” dashboard trim, which looks like carbon fibre but is actually leather. Brushed aluminum or high-gloss walnut are the other available dash treatments.

The trunk measures 300 litres — about 10.5 cubic feet — and apart from a covered box for the battery, it’s reasonably usable, apparently passing the golf clubs test.

At $68,900, the M Coupé is a grand less than the M Roadster, but a whopping $15,000 less (and 35 horsepower more) than the Porsche Cayman, which would be its closest competitor.

The Coupé is entering a market that was considered almost dead at 60,000 units worldwide in 2001, but has risen to more than 140,000 this year.

Bruhnke notes that the engineers thought this would happen — the Z4/M Coupés were developed in a scant 17 months, despite concerns on the part of the marketing guys who didn’t think the market would be this strong.

Only a few hundred will be offered in Canada each year.

If the idea of a serious high-performance, closed sports car that is equally at home on a romantic weekend for two or a racetrack day appeals to you, the M Coupé could be your ride.

Jacques’ F1 season so far

I must say that after 6 rounds of the F1 season, it is looking like another championship for Fernando Alonso. The scoreboard is 3 wins for Alonso, 2 for Schumi and 1 for Fisico. Alonso also leads the championship and Schumi can only hope that the realible Renaults would fail once or twice for him to catch up.

Unlike last year, Schumi’s position (compared to Kimi’s last year) is a little more predictable. Kimi’s 2005 run during the first half was beset by reliability woes. Schumi’s challenge to Alonso so far is looking reliable if not strong.

So, another Alonso year? Will it be a snorefest? I hope not. Unfortunately the last 3 races (Imola, Nurburgring and Barcelona) have been somewhat boring with very little wheel to wheel battles.

To entertain myself, I keep my eyes on the BMW Sauber F1 team and Jacques Villeneuve. So far BMW is looking a little unreliable. The speed is not there yet. But I guess this is their first year as a total package. So I should give them some time. But what is interesting though is Jacques Villeneueve.

IMHO, Jacques is having quite a season so far. To think that Heidfeld in the opinion of many got the better of the highly touted future world champion Mark Webber in 2005…

So by comparison JVil is enjoying a strong renaissance. This time last year, many were writing him off as a has been as he struggled with the Sauber. It is not until Jacques practically have to demand changes to the cars’ setup that things start to get better.

This year, it seems he started on a stronger footing. And he seems to be a much stronger team player this year. There is less of the hard talk of old. Jvil of 2006 seems to be keen on seeing the new BMW team improve further. In the recent Paul Ricard F1 testing session, JVil topped the times ahead of the two Renaults of Kovalainen and Alonso. Now I know these are just testing… but when have you seen JVil go for hot times in testing?

Stories of JVil insisting on softer tyres are circulating on Atlas F1 forums. At Nurburgring, BMW confirmed that they were using the softer compund tyres which helped JVil to points scoring positions. Again, at Barcelona JVil took advantage of his ability to make tyres last a long time even though on soft compounds to run an extra long (fnar fnar) first stint up to more than 50% of the race distance (the last driver to pit for fresh tyres)!

So the recent Paul Ricard tests, rumours have it that JVil was testing even softer tyres. Let’s hope that these can be put to good use at Monaco. Let’s hope that JVil continues his strong season and get a new F1 drive contract for 2007. I do hope that BMW will retain his services.