BMW X3 prototype drive | Autocar

The PHEV is distinctly quiet and very smooth, with flexible and cultured qualities that make it every bit as capable in urban driving as it is out on the open road. There’s strong step-off and latent urgency to the performance on a loaded throttle when the battery is charged and the electric motor contributes to the overall output.

The more sporting M50 xDrive, meanwhile, is set to adopt a lightly reworked version of the existing M40i xDrive’s turbocharged 3.0-litre straight six ‘B58’ powerplant with something in the region of 396bhp.

It’s impressively fast and much more characterful than its electrified sibling, with potency and linearity to its delivery, providing it with a 0-62mph time that BMW says betters the 4.8sec of its predecessor.

Set to head the new X3 line-up until the introduction of a successor to today’s 503bhp straight-six-engined X3 M Competition next year, it also receives an electronic rear M differential as standard, giving it outstanding traction.

BMW hasn’t seen fit to provide the X3 with air suspension or twin-valve dampers, like those found on some rivals. However, it has reworked the existing X3’s double-wishbone front and multi-link rear steel-spring arrangement, giving the new car a 23mm wider front track, more rigid mounting points for the front anti-roll bar and added strengthening to the rear axle mounting points. Passive dampers are standard, but as with today’s X3, buyers will be able to opt for adaptive dampers.

The steering forgoes the dual-pinion design of today’s X3 for a new belt-driven set-up. Additionally, the M50 gets extra engine-bay strut bracing to stiffen up its front end and greater front wheel camber. Wheel and tyres sizes will range from 18in to 21in.

The changes provide the X3 with more accomplished dynamic qualities. There’s a more precise feel and more constant weighting to the steering, improved body control, with greater resistance and more progressive build-up to roll upon turn-in, and, most noticeably of all, added wheel control and greater overall composure to the ride, with impact harshness particularly having being greatly reduced in combination with the adaptive dampers. It’s certainly more rounded and capable than before – and in the case of the M50, which comes with its own uniquely tuned sports suspension, more engaging and involving too.

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