The long-mooted electric BMW M3, arriving in 2027, will use “crazy” chassis control software in a bid to offer dynamic performance “far above” that of today’s hot BMWs.
Confirmed by BMW development boss Frank Weber at a recent event, the electric M3 will be based on the firm’s Neue Klasse (NK) platform – as previewed by a radical concept of the same name at the recent Munich motor show – and will arrive shortly after the next-generation, electric BMW 3 Series.
“The next M3 will be battery-electric – full battery-electric,” Weber told reporters, but clarified that “there will be a coexistence” with the current petrol M3 for a period, “which is necessary”. The S58 six-cylinder engine used by today’s M3 is scheduled to remain in production beyond 2030.
Giving clues as to what to expect from an electric M3, Weber explained that BMW’s new ‘Heart of Joy’ control unit – a fundamental component of Neue Klasse-based machines – will be instrumental in providing a distinct driving character for electric BMW performance cars – and helping to mitigate any loss of character from the absence of a powerful petrol engine.
“This is a controller that has taken the last 20 or 30 years of our experience into a control unit. Everything that is driving-performance related, chassis-control related, propulsion- [and] powertrain-related is now in one integrated control unit,” he said.
“It’s almost the history of how you control a vehicle that is in that thing. We do it ourselves – we don’t buy it. The software is proprietary. This is why we talk about it. We say, see, this will enable driving-dynamics functions that you will love. Some of you have an interest in ‘the ultimate driving machine’ – you will see functions in [the Heart of Joy] that are crazy.”
The Heart of Joy – a successor to the ‘Hand of God’ control unit that BMW first used in the i8 hybrid sports car – has been developed to support quad-motor drivetrains, with variable amounts of power delivered to each wheel as required. Weber said the unit can deploy up to one megawatt (1341bhp) of total power, but stopped short of revealing a target for the electric M3.
BMW previously revealed it was testing a quad-motor drivetrain in a bespoke prototype based on both the BMW i4 and M4, as part of a development programme for the first electric M cars.
Weber said: “We want to come with something where we show that NK is already very ambitious, but this [performance model] is doing something far above what people are used to today. This will come not too far away from the initial launch of the NK as a product line, and we’ve said we want to have it early and close to the SOP [start of production] of the core model, because people want to have what M can do next also in the battery-electric world.
“We see this clearly from consumers. Some come to me and say ‘no, the M guys don’t want this’. I say no, be careful, because we do a lot of customer studies here. M customers want, simply, the best and highest performance you can get.