2024 BMW X6M - Most Powerful & Fastest-Accelerating Production SUV!
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BMW X6 M Competition review
Big on brawn and sheer pace but the X6 M Competition lacks the driving finesse of the best of BMW’s M cars and its ride is borderline firm for everyday driving
BMW’s M division has been actively hinting about the introduction of electric propulsion for some time now, but it clearly thinks the traditional combustion engine still has some decent life left in it – as witnessed by the launch of the new BMW X6 M, the German car maker’s most powerful and fastest-accelerating production SUV model to date.
The new performance BMW SUV builds on the various strengths of the already highly capable BMW X6 M50i, launched in the UK late last year. It also shares its mechanical package with the arguably less flashy but more versatile BMW X5 M, alongside which it is assembled at BMW’s Spartanburg factory in the US state of South Carolina.
But rather than provide the X6 M with the electrified drivetrain that the times we live in might tend to prescribe, M has given it no lesser an engine than the twin-turbocharged V8 used by the latest BMW BMW M5. In standard guise, the highly strung petrol unit, which uses a cross-bank manifold as well as M’s double Vanos variable camshaft timing and Valvetronic fully variable valve timing to give it a high-revving character, kicks out a meaningful 592bhp. However, with different electronic mapping, among other unspecified changes, it gains a further 24bhp, taking the output of the Competition model sold in the UK to 616bhp at 6000rpm. In both cases, torque peaks at 552lb ft between 1800rpm and 5800rpm.
This gives the new flagship X6 model some 49bhp more than its predecessor and a stout 93bhp more than the X6 M50i. For added perspective, it is also 74bhp more than that served up by the Porsche Cayenne Coupe Turbo and 24bhp more than that offered by the Audi RS Q8 – both of which use the same twin-turbocharged V8 petrol engine in differing states of tune.
Drive is channelled via an eight-speed torque-converter automatic gearbox with steering-wheel mounted shift paddles to an M xDrive four-wheel drive system that accommodates an M differential to apportion drive individually between the rear wheels. Together, they are engineered to provide the X6 M with a distinct rear-wheel-drive bias. In the words of M: “It only brings the front wheels into play when the rear wheels aren’t able to transmit any more power to the road and additional tractive force is required.”
Suspension changes over the X6 M50i include a substantial brace at both the front and rear for greater rigidity, increased track widths, extra camber for the front wheels and subtle tweaks to the active roll stabilisation system, which uses electric motors to suppress lean in corners. Standard wheels are 21in up front and 22in at the rear, with 295/35 ZR21 and substantial 315/30 ZR22 tyres respectively.
How does the X6 M perform on the road?
If you’re looking for finesse, you best look elsewhere in the M line-up. Although the X6 M is engaging, its driving appeal is not exactly centred on its delicacy of control. Rather, it is the brutish nature of its power delivery and the ability of its gearbox and four-wheel drive system to place its reserves to the road in any one of its various driving modes that make it so memorable.
The M5’s powerplant endows the new BMW SUV with the sort of relentless energy associated with only a select group of top-flight supercars, as evidenced by its official 0-62mph time of just .
Remember to tick the M Driver’s Package option when you order and you’ll also receive the bragging rights to a 180mph top speed. In addition to this, the Competition model emits a delicious baritone exhaust note that growls with anger on the overrun in its most potent driving mode.
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