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How much? £29,610
On sale in the UK: Now
Engine: 2979cc 24v twin-turbo six-cylinder
Transmission: Six-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Performance: 5.3sec 0-62mph, 155mph, 30.7mpg, 220mpg
How heavy / made of? 1560kg/steel
How big (length/width/height in mm)? 4360/1748/1408mm
Need to know

CAR's rating

Rated 4 out of 54

Handling

Rated 4 out of 54

Performance

Rated 4 out of 54

Usability

Rated 4 out of 54

Feelgood factor

Rated 5 out of 55

Readers' rating

Rated 3 out of 53

BMW 135i Performance Pack (2009) CAR review

By Ben Barry

First Drives

21 August 2009 09:30

Sporty BMWs and aftermarket add-ons go hand-in-hand. Some AC Schnitzer aluminium pedals for your M3, perhaps? A set of Hartge rims? Maybe even a Dinan supercharger kit? Now BMW has decided to tap this lucrative niche, offering the BMW Performance line of exterior and interior accessories for the 1- and 3-series. Here we drive the firm’s fully loaded 135i demo.

Looks tasty. How much?

The basic 135i lists at £29,610, but the options on our car take that to just over £47k. Not all of that is accounted for by the Performance range, however. There’s Boston leather (£970), folding mirrors (£165), sat-nav (£1930), Xenons (£620) and more.

The remaining £11.5k goes to BMW Performance – and doesn’t include fitting or painting. But before we get too indignant about the price, remember that this very special 135i is still £3.5k cheaper than an entirely naked M3, and that the whole point is to showcase the kit you’ll mix and match in line with your tastes and budget. Saying that, I do want it all.

Okay then, break it down

Eighteen-inch 313 alloys (£2553), aluminium pedals (£53), uprated brakes (£1145), black kidney grilles (£57), rear carbon diffuser (£745), new front bumper (£630), carbon splitters (£310), handbrake grip and gaiter (£65), carbon mirror caps (£350), rear spoiler (£225), sideskirts (£215), sports suspension (£810), exhaust silencer (£550), short-shift kit (£220), sports seats (£2900), and – phew! – sports steering wheel (£675).

Any favourites?

None of the mods are without merit, but the seats were excellent – proper race-like Recaros that combine comfort, safety (they retained side airbags) and adjustability with the business of holding torsos tight through bends.

Also tempting is the steering wheel. It’s clearly based on a regular BMW three-spoker, but adds tactile suede at the all-important quarter-to-three position, plus digital shift-light indicators and a lap-timer display – seriously useful if you do the odd track day.

Lastly, the short-shift kit made a huge difference for quite a small price, the gear level feeling pleasingly stubby and improving the directness of the shift too – it reminded us why it’s still nice to shift manually, however good dual-clutch gearboxes are.

What happens to your standard seats, steering wheel, bumper etc?

Therein lies the rub. There’s no buy-back scheme and a 135i comes only in M Sport guise, so it’s already got alloys, sports suspension, nicer seats – even if they’re not as nice as the Performance stuff. That leaves you with a pile of new stuff to store or flog cut-price.

It perhaps makes more sense for lower-spec or secondhand models, but the Performance range needs to be better integrated into new car purchases – after all, if you spec alloys you don’t usually pay for a set of 16-inch steels too.

It isn’t all bad news, though – your factory warranty is unaffected.

 

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lk9950

lk9950 says

RE: BMW 135i Performance Pack (2009) CAR review

What a great car

08 September 2009 05:12

 

Hellbound

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Hellbound says

RE: BMW 135i Performance Pack (2009) CAR review

 Hartge all the way.  

25 August 2009 22:01

 

carmobster

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carmobster says

RE: BMW 135i Performance Pack (2009) CAR review

They should have made an 1 series M car with 4 cylinder engine, which is lighter and helps balance the car. Remember the fantastic M3 (the m30 model). It all sounds to me BMW going scared and is taking the wrong path. Right now Audi is taken over BMW position in the executive market by making good looking well built cars which are now bases on the sporty image it has gotten. BMW used to rule this segment but played too save because it was scared. Audi didn't example 1; the R8, it boosts Audi image on being a sport brand and make people buy A3's. Making an 911 rival and beat it, works. Example 2; R6, TT RS all performance cars which boost the image. Example 3; making all of you cars look good with clean lines so it appeals to a big market. BMW lost becauses it should have made the fantastic M1 concept car and CS saloon. An R8 is not making a lot of money on its own but it sure is making money for the brand as a whole. BMW didn't do anything to boost it's sporty image except bringing the redicolous X5 & X6 M as well as the useless 760. And also it is loosing on the "green" area because Toyota/Lexus have got that covered and BMW has no Hybrids which are a huge succes in the U.S. BMW please save yourself and build an M1concept sportscar, CS saloon, M3 CSL, 1 series M (golf/focus RS rival) This not to make more money on these cars but to save your image!

25 August 2009 14:04

 

benwhitworth

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benwhitworth says

RE: BMW 135i Performance Pack (2009) CAR review

Performance bits that do nothing for your performance...? Not for me.

24 August 2009 11:09

 

mikedunbar

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mikedunbar says

RE: BMW 135i Performance Pack (2009) CAR review

Worth it for the 220mpg you quote in the stats! :)

24 August 2009 09:57

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