BMW Announce New Green Sports Car Concept for Frankfurt

 BMW Announce New Green Sports Car Concept for Frankfurt
BMW M1 Concept

The 2009 Frankfurt Motor Show that's coming up in September appears to be gaining some significant momentum in as far as product is concerned. Major automakers will make big announcements there and BMW is set to be one of them. A new sports car concept will be unveiled by Bavaria at the show and it is said to offer a future solution for current C02 challenges posed by cars.

What exactly this car will be made from is unknown for now, that is, if it will be constructed from light alloys, some form of plastic composite or both, or whether it is a hybrid or a full-on electric drive vehicle. One system it will have is EfficientDynamics Vision which will carry sustainable concepts not only in the drivetrain but in its design as well as materials used. BMW aims to inject a good dose of human and financial muscle to ensure this car becomes the platform for future "sheer driving pleasure" combined with environmental friendliness.

Several reports have claimed this car's existence before with some saying it will use a modified version of the company's 3.0-litre petrol turbo engine and others suggesting other power sources.


NB: Picture is the M1 Homage Concept

 

Source: BMW

BMW and motor sports: These two things have a long-standing tradition and simply belong together. Be it in motorcycle, touring car, sports car, rally or Formula One and Formula Two racing, BMW has amassed successes around the globe.
Promoting talent has always been a priority for us. In 1991, Formula sports saw the beginning of a joint talent promotion campaign by BMW and ADAC. Formula One drivers like Sebastian Vettel, Nico Rosberg, Timo Glock, Adrian Sutil, Ralf Schumacher and Christian Klien learned the basics of Formula racing from this program.

BMW is clearly the most successful brand in the 24-hour race around the Nürburgring’s north circuit.

In 1980, BMW announced the company’s entry into Formula One racing as an engine supplier. The partnership lasted until 1986.
Then BMW joined WilliamsF1 on the starting grid in the 2000 season. Gerhard Berger was the BMW Motorsport director at the time. Mario Theissen was nominated to assist him soon thereafter. We have scored 10 wins with the BMW WilliamsF1 Team.
In the middle of 2005, BMW acquired the Swiss team Sauber and took to the starting grid under its own steam.
Spearheaded by BMW Motorsport Director Mario Theissen, in 2008, the new BMW Sauber F1 Team established itself as one of the top three teams.

These are just a few chapters of BMW’s motor sports history. This goes to show that our decision to end our Formula One campaign was anything but easy.

Formula One racing had always been the perfect platform for BMW to showcase important brand values. We did this for years and transferred Formula One technology to series production more resolutely than any other manufacturer. The most recent findings obtained from Formula One racing to be applied to series production will be our KERS expertise.

However, our planned cost reduction will cause component standardization and homologation to increase, and thus will set certain limits on our engineers’ creativity. This doesn’t necessary correspond to our belief of what’s ideal. In times of economic and societal change, we must remain capable of taking action and being flexible. We have now paid tribute to this fact.

Our ten years of Formula One experience have had a deep impact on our development engineers. We have racing to thank for numerous technological innovations which can be found in our mass-produced vehicles today.

The main reason for this decision was not our current performance in Formula One racing or the general economic situation. It was solely the company’s strategic realignment.

Of course, our decision to discontinue our Formula One campaign will have an effect on our employees. Since we only made this decision yesterday, I trust that you will understand that I cannot give you any more precise information on this matter yet.
We will develop and assess various scenarios and do our best to find solutions for our employees in Hinwil and those involved in the Formula One project in Munich and Landshut. Most importantly, we are aware of the responsibility we shoulder and will inform staff as soon as we can make a clear statement.

We will continue our touring car and Formula BMW racing campaigns in 2010. This will be supplemented by our participation in ALMS and endurance races as well as our increasing activity in close-to-production customer sports.

As before, these activities will be supervised by Mario Theissen.
I would like to take this opportunity to express my personal thanks to our motor sports director Mario Theissen for his commitment and successes as well.
Furthermore, we will naturally continue our international motorcycle racing program, focusing on the super bike world championship series.

I would like to underscore what Mr. Reithofer just said:

Sustainability is becoming increasingly important. As a responsible premium manufacturer, we want to address this issue even more extensively than before.

What this means for our products is that:

They will be developed and built in line with the principle of sustainability across all development stages. Technological innovations will be accelerated even more, in order to constantly make our vehicles more efficient.

You will see a product of sustainable development at the IAA in Frankfurt in a few weeks in the form of a concept car. The BMW EfficientDynamics Vision will demonstrate how efficient a sports car can be. It will also prove that sustainability does not apply to the drive train alone, but to design and materials as well.

Anyone who takes a closer look at this concept car will understand the direction in which we are developing our technology. And it will become evident that we will have to dedicate more human and financial resources to this type of development work.
Ladies and Gentlemen,

BMW has always been active in the field of motor sports, and this will not change. We will maintain our outstanding tradition in touring car and Formula BMW racing over the long term. We will promote framework conditions that establish motor sports as the arrowhead of innovations that trickle down to future mass-produced cars. New drive concepts are just one example. BMW will continue to showcase sheer driving pleasure on the racetrack.

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 X6M X6M
This will be interesting, make just sports car, f@*k this green or hybrid cars!! M1 Homeage concept is too ugly.
July 30, 2009 11:09 am
 Bristol411S3 Bristol411S3
"BMW Announce F1 Withdrawal Face Saving Exercise for Frankfurt" ;-) It'd better be good...
July 30, 2009 11:16 am
 Prince_Ash Prince_Ash
i think its a good idea that each car company make atleast one or two green cars, to give diversity. this car looks nice the only thing i dont like about it is that the bonnet and wheels are completely ugly.
July 30, 2009 11:16 am
 spamme spamme
ALL the cars should be 'green'
July 30, 2009 11:21 pm
 nederina nederina
a green X6 M? haha
July 30, 2009 11:17 am
 nederina nederina
okay make that a hybrid X6 M
July 30, 2009 11:18 am
 Prince_Ash Prince_Ash
really ? wow mate, your bonkers lol
July 30, 2009 11:31 am
 davethepetrolhead davethepetrolhead
Agreed Prince Ash they are amongst some of the ugliest wheels i have ever seen. They look like you could grate cheese with them.
July 30, 2009 11:33 am
 sideskraper sideskraper
sorry to disappoint you, but electric/hybrid technologies will play a role in every new vehicle in the future. i for one prefer to fly in an airliner with high bypass turbofans rather than something with radial piston engines.
July 30, 2009 11:45 am
 zdenda20 zdenda20
Having spoken to a manager in one of the car companies under Vw, I can tell u that Hybrid cars are not green...the sheer amount of energy needed to produce and then ecologically get rid of the battery cells outweighs the petrol it saves...that is why they have not adopted the hybrid technology... All this "green" talk is really getting on my nerves...I want to save the environment, but changing the way we drive cars just so that the company's PR department is happy is BS since in the end it is more harmful to the environment...
July 30, 2009 12:15 pm
 sideskraper sideskraper
it's not to make the PR department happy, it's making the board happy. you have to at least keep pace with your opponents when it comes to environmental impact by the end user. the snowball effect took hold and we are where we are today. that said there will are and will be many benefits for users both performance and daily commuters. why let energy get wasted as heat when it can be re used elsewhere? sure it's still early days for mass implementations across manufacturers and market segments, but the same could be said of the first motor carriage 120 years ago, and then again when a fourth wheel was added. don't buy into that vw marketing bs. as if vw aren't working on hybrid technology. they've proven their conventional and highly refined (read: cheap to develop and manufacturer year on year) drivetrains to be as and in many cases more efficient than current generation hybrids. they aim to hit it out of the park when they deploy their hybrid system.
July 30, 2009 2:13 pm
 eeoikari eeoikari
Maybe it's 'Z Vision Concept' BMW is going to announce, not the M1. Although M1 would be delightful to see and also something BMW should have in their lineup (not the usual scaled up/down version of something already existing model).
July 30, 2009 1:15 pm
 TheAlchemist TheAlchemist
I like the 70s wheels...NOT!
July 30, 2009 2:45 pm
 tom43 tom43
Today the best informed german magazine "AutoMotor&Sport" announced some information about the new sports car from BMW presented as a concept at the IAA: 911 competitor, about 4.5m length and a combination of two electric and one fuel engine, light weight. Sounds very promising...
July 30, 2009 3:22 pm
 nederina nederina
bmw is following honda's step by quiting F1 and ditching their sports cars for some heavyweight SUV, MPV and silly fourdoor coupe-hatchbacks or whatever you call it now
July 30, 2009 6:07 pm
 EH? EH?
good idea but why would you ever buy one like the car in the photo.
July 30, 2009 8:53 pm
 popilirol popilirol
Ask me, I've been involved as a BMW die-hard fan since 2000 (with WilliamsF1). F1 has lost every sense of pinnacle in motorsport technology except its name. It has become nothing but an empty shell. Indy cars have even become faster and as much advanced as Formula One cars. F1 in the early 2000-2005 were at the summit of the upmost advanced and fast race cars ever built BUT now they're totally different... crap!
July 31, 2009 3:42 am
 trekkerbin trekkerbin
"The BMW EfficientDynamics Vision will demonstrate how efficient a sports car can be. It will also prove that sustainability does not apply to the drive train alone, but to design and materials as well." I am interested much more in the design and materials in order to make a green car while keeping it fun to drive. I look forward to it!
July 31, 2009 8:48 am
 HEMI426 HEMI426
Aslong their is no electric motor, I like it
August 11, 2009 1:28 pm