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Thread: Car and Driver: We Drive the Busted-Out BMW M3 LTW That Helped Develop Michelin Tires

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    Car and Driver: We Drive the Busted-Out BMW M3 LTW That Helped Develop Michelin Tires

    Great article - something you can pass on to friends to help explain why you drive a 20 year old car.

    https://www.caranddriver.com/feature...bmw-m3-feature

    We Drive the Busted-Out BMW M3 Lightweight That Helped Develop Michelin Performance Tires

    An analog test bed that worked deep into the digital age.
    NOVEMBER 2017 BY K.C. COLWELL PHOTOS BY MICHAEL SIMARI

    Tires have benefited from the digital age as much as Twitter has expanded the social game of POTUS, for better or worse. In the last decade, the spiciest street-legal tires have nearly surpassed the performance of a decade-old racing tire, and computer modeling is a big part of the reason. But as good as computers are at calculations, they can’t replicate human feel—yet. So prototype tires are still fitted to cars and run around tracks and handling roads by human drivers to fine-tune the product for human sensations. Probably much like you, we’d never thought too much about what cars were used as testing mules.

    Which brings us to this particular car. During this author’s first trip to Michelin’s Laurens, South Carolina, proving ground nearly 10 years ago, I spotted a personal automotive hero: the 1995 BMW M3 Lightweight. For me, that car was the most special among the exceptional. As an avid car-magazine reader in my youth, the E36-generation M3 occupied a place in my automotive heart from which it would not be displaced. It was the first car I remember driving while thinking, “Ohhhh, this is what Car and Driver is talking about.” The car spoke to me, and the memory of it will always be magic. It was never the fastest thing on the road, and, yes, we got a neutered version in the United States, with a less powerful and technically inferior inline-six—European models got six throttle bodies and variable valve timing—and a slightly softer suspension than was used in Europe.

    The 1995 Lightweight was as special then as would be the E92 M3 GTS in 2010 or even the F82 M4 GTS today. Just 11 preproduction and 115 production Lightweights ever existed. Surely many fewer survive today. For years, I thought that unicorn sighting in a Laurens parking lot was just a cool car owned by an engineer who happened to stretch its legs on the day I had passed through. I could not have been more wrong. The car is owned by Michelin. And it served as a precision tool for testing new tire designs. It lived, and occasionally died, on racetracks.

    Why This Car?

    Back in 1995, the E36 M3 was new to the U.S. and the Lightweight attempted to correct the neutering, albeit for an extremely limited number of owners. The CSL, as it is sometimes called, got the stiffer European suspension, a shorter 3:23:1 final drive, forged wheels, and hand-picked S50B30 engines good for a claimed 240 horsepower. In reality, the engines were probably a little more powerful. On the outside, all Lightweights were painted Alpine White with a tricolor checker M motif on the left-front and right-rear corners, used the adjustable front splitter borrowed from the Europe-only M3 GT, and had aluminum door skins. Buyers of Lightweights did without a radio or air conditioning in their cloth and carbon-fiber-trimmed interiors. Superfluous sound-damping material was jettisoned, too.

    Lightweights also came with a plethora of parts in the trunk, including additional underbody bracing, a strut-tower brace, a larger oil pan with dual pickups to avoid starvation in high-g driving, and a park-bench-sized wing. Not every dealer installed all the parts, and cars often trade to this day with the extras still packed in their original plastic.

    We tested one in August 1995. The short-legged differential, while great on paper, added shifts to the 60-mph dash, so it was actually slower in that metric than a particularly quick M3 we had in a ’94 comparison test, despite weighing 282 pounds less. That test car also had but 700 miles on the odometer; back then, BMW engines needed a thorough break-in to unlock maximum performance. We said “the Lightweight car is M3 espresso, pure and concentrated.”

    Michelin purchased its Lightweight in March of 2000 with just over 10,000 miles on its odometer. It came with a roll cage installed by its previous owner, and it still wears a sticker on the window touting that owner’s flying club. To get it up to testing spec, Michelin installed a pair of racing seats (the originals are stored “somewhere,” according to Michelin’s mechanic) and five-point harnesses.

    If you are anything like me, you’re thinking to yourself, “But why did Michelin need a Lightweight?” While it seems excessive for something so rare to be saddled with constant track duty, remember that Lightweights were not the six-figure investment in 2000 that they are today. First, it already had a cage in it. Second, Michelin starts all tire development with a square setup, meaning the same size tires front and rear. The Lightweight’s stock 235/40R-17 tires, all around, were right in the wheelhouse for performance tires at that time. Third, the car, at 2950 pounds, is fairly light and isn’t too hard on brakes, but it isn’t so light—as would be, say, a Mazda Miata—that the tires aren’t worked hard enough on a racetrack. Finally, and most important (as it is to us), was the naturally aspirated engine. A turbocharged engine would surely make the car quicker, but they are generally less sensitive to minute throttle changes, and crystal-clear communication is more important to any tester than is a lap time.

    Almost immediately after Michelin bought it, the M3 Lightweight went to work as a test rig. The car has since contributed to the certification and development of many Michelin and BFGoodrich tires we’ve loved over the years, including the BFG g-Force R1, g-Force Rival, and g-Force Rival S and the Michelin Pilot Super Sport, Pilot Sport Cup 2, and new Pilot Sport 4S. If you are driving on a set of Michelin or BFG summer performance tires, they owe tribute to this M3.

    Analog Subjectivity

    Today, Michelin’s white knight is flirting with 50,000 miles of very hard duty. For 17 years, this E36 hasn’t (legally) seen a public road. Nearly every mile accumulated has been at the hands of a development engineer on a track; the most dialed-in of those guys and gals are the subjective evaluators. They would spend a whole day tracking upward of 12 sets of ever-so-slightly-different tires to fine-tune the feel. One of those former rubber jocks, Brandon Sturgis—who has since moved to a marketing role in the company—tipped me off that the E36 Lightweight was an engineering car.

    Michelin agreed to let us take a closer look at the old E36 and even let us drive it a bit. The Lightweight still carries its own, er, weight, but the miles show. You can’t put your hand between the roll cage and the body when it is getting lifted in the air—which happens multiple times a day when testing tires—or the body flex will pin your fingers in place. That front splitter has been torn off countless times. The quarter-panels are peppered with stone chips like a period-correct vintage race car. And the tricolor décor, which was red, navy, and light blue when new, has faded like a war-torn flag. One of its coolest battle scars is dimpling on the hood from high-g loading. This BMW is far from perfect, and that makes it perfectly beautiful.

    From behind the wheel, it is clear why Michelin selected this M3 as its benchmark. This car, even as ragged as it has become, continues to broadcast the status of a tire’s contact patch with crystal-clear five-by-five signal quality. Compared with a modern car, the big steering wheel feels slow in hand, but for every inch the wheels turn, they return yards of feedback. The Michelin-installed brake ducting occasionally falls off, and its engine has been spun past its operating range a few times, resulting in the replacement of the entire engine once and all 24 valves another time.

    On Michelin’s wet Track 3, the E36’s long-travel throttle is an analog rheostat, smooth yet with immediate response. Even today’s computer-controlled and direct-injected supercar engines feel laggy by comparison. If going quickly in the wet is any indication of how good a car is, know that this 22-year-old BMW still holds the Track 3 record. But, as Sturgis remembers, running the CSL on T3 was torture because it doesn’t have air conditioning and the old sprinklers—which the Laurens Proving Ground has since replaced with a more controlled flooding system—meant the testers had to drive in 90-degree-plus South Carolina humidity with the windows up, while wearing a fire suit and a helmet. Maybe that particular set of conditions simply inspired the driver on that day to go just a bit quicker to shorten the endurance contest.

    Out to Pasture

    Use any good tool too much, and it will wear out, but the Lightweight’s capability or performance isn’t what ultimately led to its retirement. It’s that the car’s fenders won’t accept modern-size rubber. Also, in 1995 there weren’t multiple CAN busses in cars—a ’95 M3 has OBD I diagnostics. Subjective drivers rely on feel and view objective data with suspicion unless it backs up what they are saying, but modern cars spit out a metric ton of information just by connecting two wires. And that information can’t be ignored. So, basically, this test bench has finally become just too old.

    Michelin has replaced the Lightweight with a highly modified E92 328i. While the E36’s modifications were limited to race seats and a brake-pad and rotor combination (StopTech slotted rotors and Porterfield R4 pads, for those still tracking E36s) that maximized the service interval, the new-to-Laurens E92 coupe needed more. Michelin has installed M3 suspension components with stiffer bushings, a full roll cage, a race seat and belts, and cabin fire suppression. Why not just start with an E92 M3, or an F30 3-series, you ask? The E92 328i is naturally aspirated and its inline-six is far less costly to maintain than the E92 M3’s V-8.

    Sarah Robinson, another former tire tester still working for Michelin, remembers the E36 fondly. She liked the Lightweight so much she claims to have “dibs” on it, if Michelin were to sell it, but the company isn’t sure what it will do with the old rig. We hope it remains in the family or becomes a museum piece—if there were a tire-test-car hall of fame, this M3 would belong there. Even if there’s another single car that is connected to as many kick-ass tires as this old mule, it wouldn’t be as rare. No one tests tires with a Bugatti EB110, but if they did, those are still more common than a 1995 BMW M3 Lightweight.

    -Josh: 1998 S54 E36 M3/4/6 with most of the easy stuff and most of the hard stuff. At least twice. 271k miles. 1994 E32 740il with nothing but some MPars. 93k miles.

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    Reminds me of an graying, loyal old dog. Head always at the ready for a little pat, and while she's now a little slow to rise, she's still as loyal and willing to please as when she was a pup.
    Last edited by emoore924; 11-04-2017 at 06:55 PM.

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    Needs photos!!!


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    Quote Originally Posted by bluptgm3 View Post
    Needs photos!!!


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    There are photos - hit up the link!

    -Josh: 1998 S54 E36 M3/4/6 with most of the easy stuff and most of the hard stuff. At least twice. 271k miles. 1994 E32 740il with nothing but some MPars. 93k miles.

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    Great find, thanks!

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    And... Mich hasn't made a 235/40/17 in decade...I get it, it's business. Even they apparently can't come to grips with moving on vs. continuing to support the E36.

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    Great story thanks for posting, but Bridgestone will always have my business. Cheaper tires, great performance, and more importantly they support many e36 tires sizes.

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    Quote Originally Posted by blckstrm View Post
    There are photos - hit up the link!
    LOL!!! What link?


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    Awesome story. It's great to see a LTW being used for its purpose and proudly wears the signs of use.

    Noticed a couple of things.

    - Fenders are rolled
    - Leather door cards installed
    - rear seats still in place
    - Looks like 8.5" contours? So likely 245/40/17 Rivals?
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    Quote Originally Posted by propcar View Post
    - Leather door cards installed
    Panels are original, note the single speaker. If you’re thinking they should be cloth, no US 95 had matching panels.

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    You're right, I looked through some old LTW pics had never noticed they came with leather door cards.
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    Quote Originally Posted by propcar View Post
    Awesome story. It's great to see a LTW being used for its purpose and proudly wears the signs of use.

    Noticed a couple of things.

    - Fenders are rolled
    - Leather door cards installed
    - rear seats still in place
    - Looks like 8.5" contours? So likely 245/40/17 Rivals?
    Fenders are both rolled and pulled/flared.

    I thought it was odd that it was running contours, too. I assume the author doesn't know what the forged wheels look like since he mentions them but doesn't note the car doesn't currently have them. Couldn't decide whether they were running square wheels or just square tires, but likely square wheels (since 245 is bit much for a 7.5, and they themselves don't make a 235 anymore - at least a PSS).

    After thinking about it, since it's running different rubber all the time, I assume they have multiple sets of wheels so they can mount / dismount while the the car is out. And finding extra sets of contours is likely far cheaper than finding sets of original forged LTW wheels. They'd also likely want "normal" OEM wheels rather than some lightweight BBS (or APEX) wheels, so the contours work for a normal weight OEM wheel.

    Also, I love the masking tape as a centering stripe on the wheel.

    -Josh: 1998 S54 E36 M3/4/6 with most of the easy stuff and most of the hard stuff. At least twice. 271k miles. 1994 E32 740il with nothing but some MPars. 93k miles.

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    Quote Originally Posted by propcar View Post
    You're right, I looked through some old LTW pics had never noticed they came with leather door cards.
    Not leather, they are vinyl.

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    Excellent article, thanks for posting.

    I wonder what steering rack those Lightweights came with....
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    Quote Originally Posted by Braymond141 View Post
    Not leather, they are vinyl.
    Even more surprising.
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    Would be awesome if Michelin tested the 245/40 Rival S 1.5 on the E36. I know what my next tire will be.

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    Quote Originally Posted by JEC928 View Post
    Excellent article, thanks for posting.

    I wonder what steering rack those Lightweights came with....
    The variable ratio 1995M3 steering rack.


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    Quote Originally Posted by bluptgm3 View Post
    The variable ratio 1995M3 steering rack.


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    Thank you.
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    But ltw's came with staggered wheels. The tires were square, but the wheels were 7.5/8.5... Go figure...
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    Something very beautiful about that LTW that has gone through years and years of track abuse... each battle scar adds to the look

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    non-oem bumper? Tons of wrinkle below the nose panel..

    and glove box sag! haha.

    Very cool article, read it a few times now.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Moron95M3 View Post
    non-oem bumper? Tons of wrinkle below the nose panel..

    and glove box sag! haha.

    Very cool article, read it a few times now.
    I saw that too - I assume "That front splitter has been torn off countless times" also means the that front bumper has also been torn off occasionally.

    -Josh: 1998 S54 E36 M3/4/6 with most of the easy stuff and most of the hard stuff. At least twice. 271k miles. 1994 E32 740il with nothing but some MPars. 93k miles.

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    Got to got there twice for the first two SRT Track Experience events in 2005 and 2006. Place was a playground. First year was better, Bondurant was running it they had Vipers on the road course and the wet skidpad was active to learn the boundaries of the ESP system. Second year and subsequent they turned it over to Skip Barber and they turned it into a yeehaw sort of thing where the instructors were "characters" and they dropped any pretense of teaching and just formed the attendees into competitive teams. Oh, and since they lost two or three vipers the first year, never saw those again One lady ripped one in half on a jersey barrier.

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