If you’re too poor to afford a BMW, don’t worry about it. Many of you know that I own a 1995 BMW 540i. As I recall, it was reputed to be the “best handling car in the world” or somesuch in it's day. Driving home from work every night, I take a particular corner that is a lot of fun. It’s a good deal tighter at the end than at the beginning and if you take it at a good speed, you come out of the turn aimed directly at a dumpster that sits on the side of the road. It can scare the piss out of you when you’re at the limit of control and careening toward a solid steel bin with lots of sharp angles. In the 3g, I can take this corner at about 48 mph. In the BMW, I manage about 40 mph.
On the inside corner of the turn, the road surface drops off steeply. Because the 3g’s steering is surgically precise, I can run the front tire off this drop just enough to pull the car around the apex of the turn in much the same way as holding onto the banister gets you around the staircase more quickly. The BMW isn’t nearly as precise, so I can’t do this.
The other day, I was in a dreadful rush up the freeway driving the BMW. I was pushing to pass another car before I ran into the car ahead of me when I cut over hard. As I cut back to straighten out, the front corner dove. Bad. The shocks are brand new. I could drive my 3g into a lake and not get it to dive.
My 3g has the same suspension technology as a Formula 1 race car. The BMW? Not so much. It shares its suspension technology with my ’76 Accord.
About the only way the BMW trumps my 3g is with brute force. The V8 is fast, but the 3g will still get you on the freeway at a decent speed. And will lose the BMW in the first turn, so I’m okay. Nor is the 3g crushingly expensive like the BMW.
So here’s a toast to Formula 1 suspension in a cheap car that’s a hoot to drive. Cheers to a car as reliable as the family dog. Cheers to a car as responsive and nimble as one’s own hand. Cheers to the 3g!
Woohoo!!
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