Time has a way of moving quickly. One minute, a new car is making headlines as the latest and greatest release, and before long, production has ended, and manufacturers have already shifted their attention to the next big thing. That seems to be the story for BMW and its iconic M3 legacy, from the E30 that birthed its performance division with a single letter to the most recent G80 generation and its modern refresh. But, before the sixth generation of the M3 closes out to make room for what’s to come next, BMW is sending off the G80 in style with the special edition M3 CS Handschalter, a manual, rear-wheel-drive driver’s car named after the German term for “manual transmission”.
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Keeping the familiar M3 shape, improvements on the new BMW M3 CS Handschalter come in the form of weight savings and chassis tuning, making it more agile and purpose-built for both the road and the track. CS-specific (Competition Sport) details transform the exterior with carbon fiber components, including the roof, hood channels, front splitter, mirror caps, rear diffuser, and rear spoiler to reduce weight. The front end draws design inspiration from BMW GT race cars, giving it frameless CS kidney grilles with red accents, an M3 CS badge, and yellow daytime running lights like you’d see on track during a grueling 24-hour endurance race. The Handschalter edition sits 6mm lower than the standard BMW M3 and is available with lightweight forged wheels finished in either bronze or black.
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Just as BMW has always done, the M3's cabin remains performance-focused without sacrificing everyday comforts that make the sedan a perfect daily driver. A pair of M carbon bucket seats comes standard in the BMW M3 CS Handschalter and are layered in Anthracite Merino leather with Mugello Red accents, saving more than 70lbs while adding extra support and stability for more spirited driving. But it's those everyday, convenient features that make the M3 so appealing, and this special edition retains them, including heated seats, Harman Kardon audio, dual-zone climate control, and available options like a Head-Up Display and power trunk.
Under the hood, the BMW M3 CS Handschalter packs BMW M’s 3.0L twin-turbocharged S58 inline-six, putting out 473 horsepower and 406 lb-ft of torque through a six-speed manual and rear-wheel-drive setup. It sprints from 0 to 60 mph run in 4.1 seconds, with a top speed of 180 mph with the M Driver’s Package. It also comes standard with M Drive Professional, which adds features like adjustable traction control, a Drift Analyzer, and a Laptimer for anyone planning to take advantage of its track-derived DNA.