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Car Gazing By Derek Price - August 20, 2008

2008 BMW 1-Series


Photos courtesy of BMW
BMW's new 1-Series has the style and performance of its bigger, more expensive stablemates, but it starts at a more affordable $28,600. You can't find many places where BMW cut corners in the new 1-Series compact sports coupe.

INFO BOX
What was tested? 2008 BMW 128i convertible ($33,100).
Options: None.
Price as tested (including $825 destination charge): $33,925.
Why buy it? It's just as thrilling, and perhaps more so, than the bigger, more expensive BMWs.
Why avoid it? The back seat is a complete joke.
RATINGS (1-10)
Style: 10 Ride: 8
Performance: 10 Comfort: 6
Price: 8 Quality: 9
Handling: 9 Overall: 9

CAR GAZING
Compact car is all BMW
Small 1-Series offers big power, driving dynamics
By Derek Price

It seems like everything in America is ballooning.

Gas prices have shot up like a bottle rocket. Our kids wear size 18 shoes. Our waistlines are upsetting the gravitational field. Our cities are sprawling like kudzu. And our cars are starting to look like blimps.

Consider cars like the Honda Civic, Toyota Corolla and Nissan Sentra. A few years ago, these were itty-bitty tin cans that you'd barely be able to squeeze into. But now they've grown to be so big that a whole new generation of itty-bitty cars – the Honda Fit, Toyota Yaris and Nissan Versa – have replaced them.

The same thing is happening at BMW. The 3-Series, which was once a relatively affordable compact car, has now grown to be so big and expensive that it's entered a completely new class. The last 3-Series I drove cost a whopping $52,000 and felt more like the roomy and luxurious 5-Series than a compact car.

That leaves room at the bottom of BMW's lineup for a new, smaller, more affordable car called the 1-Series. Starting at $28,600 for the 128i coupe, this lightweight car doesn't feel like a watered-down BMW at all. It's 100-percent pure BMW excitement, only in a smaller and cheaper package.

With rear-wheel drive and a powerful straight-six engine, there are few sports coupes more fun to drive than this one. Handling is absolutely superb and is even more enjoyable than the big BMWs because of the 1's light weight.

It's pure joy. In fact, I'd much rather drive a 1-Series on a mountain road than a 5-Series that costs twice as much.

And you know what's more amazing? I wasn't even driving the best 1-Series.

I drove the 128i convertible, which has a 3.0-liter inline six-cylinder engine. It makes 230 horsepower, which is more than enough for such a small car.

But BMW also makes the 135i, which comes with a 300-horsepower turbocharged engine. Considering I thought the 128i was plenty fast, the 135i must be ridiculous.

Another impressive thing about this car is that it doesn't feel cheap in any way. Usually when a car company tries to make a lower-priced vehicle, you can see where they cut corners. There's more plastic in the interior, fewer features and more noise in the cabin.

In this car, though, you've got basically the same interior you'll find in the more expensive BMWs. There's an eight-way power driver's seat, for example, when four-way would be perfectly acceptable at this price point. Soft-touch materials give it a premium feel.

As much as I love this car, I've got to point out one downside: the back seat is a joke. And, because the 1-Series is only available with two doors, squeezing your passengers back there is next to impossible.

Prices range from $28,600 for the 128i coupe to $39,100 for the 135i convertible.

(Derek Price is a newspaper editor and freelance writer living in Texas.)


The above article is provided for the interest and entertainment of our visitors. The views expressed in this article are only those of the author, who is solely responsible for the content. AutoGuide.net does not endorse any of these views, and is not to be held responsible for any of the content provided in the above article.


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