2023 BMW i4 Review – Electrifying Brilliance, For Drivers

A bad habit of mine, or a habit deemed bad by the many companies I work with, is my innate need to hand-wash the cars that are lent to me at some point through the period I have them, often right before I return them. I’ve been told time and time again that it isn’t necessary as they either have a fleet manager to have the cars sorted upon return, or that they have people in-house who wash their cars ahead of them being lent to members of the press.

The thing I find about washing the cars I have is that it gives me a moment to reflect on the time I’ve spent with them in a quiet, controlled, and considered way. Every bug I clean off the grille is a reminder of a drive, every water stain a reminder of inclement weather, and every bit of dust and every smudge in the interior a reminder of me getting to grips with a new car. It all comes back to me, and due to the manner with which I do things, it doesn’t overwhelm. 

A mistaken assumption often levelled at motoring journalists is that we get familiar with cars almost instantly, and that nothing flummoxes us. That couldn’t be further from the truth – as cars have gotten more complicated and electronic especially, more and more functions get drowned in an ocean of touch-sensitive screens hiding menus upon submenus upon submenus. This is often why I can be found idling for 20 to 30 minutes at a time in carparks just fiddling with the infotainment system in order to discover just what’s hidden in the maze of menus, and then setting the car up exactly how I’d like it. 

This is an area where electric vehicles particularly fall foul. In the transition from combustion to electric, more and more carmakers have taken the opportunity to try and reinvent the wheel. Buttons and switches have made way for bigger and more complicated screens (which also negates people complaining about cheap-feeling items), leaving poor sods like me jabbing away at them for an eternity at a time. 

Now yes, I’m aware that owners will very rarely have to face this. If you’re lucky and you have a well-trained sales advisor (something that I’ve recently discovered are few and far between) you’d have been given a comprehensive on-boarding process when you take delivery, and you’ll get used to everything quickly enough. But I’ve always been of the mind that if it requires more than two days to familiarise yourself with something, then it’s most likely an error of design, engineering, or just the work of an overeager interior designer aiming for ‘minimalism.’

This was what I found particularly infuriating in the BMW iX, the firms’ flagship ground-up born-electric luxury sports “activity” vehicle (it’s not an SUV, they affirm). In their drive to minimise everything, they’d relegated many of oft-used functions into the expansive touchscreen display, including things like the adaptive cruise follow distance and even the settings for brake regeneration. This was such a peeve that eventually I just stopped using the systems altogether and kept it 100% human-driven at all times, right before the Android Auto decided to absolutely freeze me out requiring a remote-triggered system reset. How fun.

So when I was given the keys to their new i4, the electric interpretation of the 4-Series GranCoupe, I walked up to it with a touch of trepidation. I was already feeling a sense of dread come over me as I recalled my time in the iX – I don’t often get to drive BMWs, let alone electric ones, so this was the freshest memory I had of the experience. But as I approached the four-door coupe the lights came on as it sensed the key getting closer, flashing the LaserLights and illuminating BMW’s ‘Light Carpet’ system on the sills, which was almost distracting enough to make me overlook its gormless grille. 

Being an ‘electric car conversion’ of sorts, having been engineered off an existing internal-combustion model rather than built off a bespoke EV-focused platform, the i4 benefits from very classic proportions. There’s an expansive bonnet designed to hide a huge twin-turbo inline-6 in the G80 M3, but here it instead houses a sea of plastic. In some models there’s an electric motor beneath, but in the eDrive40, there’s just a reminder that a little more planning could have freed up space for cable storage. Moving down the side, the 19-inch diamond-cut alloys look slightly small, their 255/40-section tyres looking like healthy doughnuts rather than the sliver of rubber one would expect from something that looks so sporty. And at the rear, following a gently-tapering roofline, you’ll find a hatchback framed by a pair of rather expressive LED taillights and a complicated rear diffuser. 

Ignoring the grille, which is so offensive it made me consider gouging my eyes out several times, it all seems rather inoffensive. But I get the impression that the typical BMW design language where the body appears to be stretched thinly over its chassis is somewhat gone. The i4, and subsequently the 4-Series, appears far more bulky than the model that it replaces. There’s more metalwork, more heft, and BMW has done little to try and hide it. The designer, Anne Forschner, says that this deliberate addition of visual heft is to give the car a more substantial presence – I never saw that as an issue in previous iterations of the 3-Series (and later the 4), but what do I know. 

In the eDrive40, the i4 is powered by a 340PS/430Nm electric motor mounted over the rear axle, powered by an 83.9kWh lithium-ion battery, capable of rocketing the car from rest to 100km/h in just 5.7-seconds, and onward to a limited top speed of 190km/h. Testing that regularly will not yield the 590km of maximum range the car claims, but you’ll then likely appreciate the 200kW DC fast-charging capability that can rejuice the swoopy-roofed electric sports car from 10% to 80% in just 31-minutes. On an 11kW AC charger, it’ll take about eight and a quarter hours to go from flat to full. 

A quick aside on safety, the i4 eDrive40 is equipped as-standard with the Driving Assistant Professional suite, which tacks on autonomous emergency braking, adaptive cruise control with traffic-jam assistant, lane-centring assist with lane-change assist, blind-spot monitoring, side-assist collision prevention, and rear cross-traffic alert with automatic braking. There’s also a 360º camera with multi-angle view, which changes the viewing angle automatically based on the situation the driver puts the car in. All quite swish. 

Equally swish is the cabin, much to my surprise. Instead of doing away with all the buttons, BMW’s only removed the HVAC controls and placed them in the iDrive system, leaving everything else as-is. So the meaty M-Sport steering wheel still houses all the adaptive-cruise functionality I’d expect, along with the necessary switches to manipulate the 12.3-inch drivers’ display and full-colour heads-up display too. Everything inside feels overengineered and pleasing to use – the indicator stalks move confidently and with a nice action to them too, as do the iDrive controller and light switches. The confusing graphics of the instrument cluster remain, and no amount of fiddling can change that. I much prefer the seemingly-infinite customisation offered by Mercedes-Benz with their MBUX system, which no matter how you set it up, is still easy to read and understand at a glance. At least the full-colour heads-up display means I don’t have to look at the instrument cluster too often. 

There’s an assumption that electric cars are banal and uninteresting to drive. A fair assumption, given that the majority of Malaysians would have at this point interacted with vehicles like the BYD Atto 3 or, more recently, the Dolphin. Maybe if you’re adventurous you may have driven a Hyundai Ioniq 5 or Kona EV, but these are all cars where the most engaging part of the drive is the electric propulsion. This is not the case in the i4.

When you’re familiar with BMWs (which I am very privileged to say I am), you will understand that there’s an ineffable quality to the way they change direction, manage their heft, and sit poised on the road. Despite the sheer heft of the i4, which tips the scales at nearly 2.2-tonnes, you really don’t feel it from the drivers’ seat. The electric motor and its instantaneous torque make light work of propelling the car from a standstill, and the steering offers a heft along with its strong serving of accuracy. It isn’t communicative by a long shot – but in today’s world, we’ll settle for the pin-sharp nature of the i4’s controls quite happily.

On technical, tight B-roads, the i4 demonstrated that it was not to be scoffed at, with the same kind of agility and eagerness one would more readily expect from an M340i. The immediacy of the power paired to the harmony from the steering wheel, working in concert with the grippy M-Sport seats and their adjustable bolsters meant that it felt every bit a drivers’ car. And Hans Zimmer didn’t need to chime in to replace the iconic inline-6 soundtrack I’ve come to expect from something with the Bavarian roundel – I shut off the ‘Iconic Sounds’ and found myself using the brake regeneration function to slow the car down into corners. 

A word to the wise: I only attempted this after having driven the i4 for several days. If one isn’t fully accustomed to the nature of the brake regeneration, the progression of the throttle pedal, and the mapping of the brakes, you could very easily launch yourself into a hedge. But I assume most owners would acclimatise themselves with their cars quite quickly, which speaks to the intuitive nature of the driving experience. Speaking of the brakes, gone are the days where cars would hurtle their passengers back and forth as they switch between regenerative braking and friction braking – this is a smooth operator insofar as stopping is concerned. 

And once you’ve tired of driving your i4 like berks like to drive their 3rd-hand BMW 316i’s with aftermarket M bodykits, you can do what they can’t: Settle into a relaxing, quiet, comfortable cruise home. The i4 enjoys incredible levels of refinement, far beyond even a 530i, owing to the need to insulate the cabin further thanks to the removal of the noisy power thing under the bonnet. With the standard-fit level-2 semi-autonomous driving capabilities offered on the i4, you really can cruise for hundreds of kilometres without breaking a sweat as you enjoy the frankly brilliant Harman Kardon audio system. 

What BMW has demonstrated is that they haven’t thrown out the fun by canning the internal combustion engine. In typical BMW fashion, they’re leading the way in the luxury segment by clearly stating that going electric doesn’t mean even the slightest loss of character – if anything, it is an opportunity to build upon the reputation your brand already enjoys and cement its place while the world changes around you. The BMW i4 may not be the brands’ flagship electric vehicle, but it is a masterful example of how the drivers that BMW owners tend to be will still get our kicks, even when the dino juice runs out. 


GALLERY: 2023 BMW I4 EDRIVE40 M-SPORT (G26), M BROOKLYN GREY

REVIEWED: 2020 TOYOTA RAV4 – Justified Premium

The Toyota RAV4 made quite a splash when it was launched here earlier this year for all the wrong reasons – while the size, safety, and refinement of the RAV4 were all pros, its price was what got all the attention. With two variants on offer, differentiated only by their powertrain, prices started at a little over RM200k – marking a gap of over RM100k from its main rival, the PROTON X70.

However, the RAV4 does claw back some brownie points. For starters, its inclusion of Toyota’s Safety Sense suite of advanced driver assistance systems (bundling Lane Keep Assist, Blind Spot Monitoring with Rear Cross Traffic Alert, Autonomous Emergency Braking, Adaptive Cruise Control, and Pre-Collision Warning) makes it one of the most comprehensively-equipped entrants in that regard, and its offering of a large naturally-aspirated engine will no doubt appeal to buyers looking for a low-stress low-maintenance option in their large SUV.

Speaking of large, the use of the Toyota New Global Architecture (TNGA-K) platform also means there’s acres of space inside for people and things, who can all enjoy the added refinement and comfort offered by it. It claims the largest boot in its class, and its rear seat space is arguably one of the better showings we’ve seen. And when you add to that features like Apple CarPlay & Android Auto, ventilated front seats, and a two-stage reclining rear bench, you realise that UMW Toyota’s been very smart about how it’s packaged the 5th-generation RAV4 for our market.

Would it be more attractive as a locally-assembled proposition? Sure, of course it would be. But does it suffer as a result of being fully imported? Well…

GALLERY: 2020 TOYOTA RAV4 2.5

VIDEO: 2020 Perodua Bezza Driven – Small Changes, Big Differences

Malaysian automotive heavyweight Perodua may have enjoyed market leadership for a good 16 years now, but perhaps now more than ever, there’s a fire under its ass to ensure that its lead isn’t compromised.

I don’t believe I have to go into detail here, but for the uninitiated, I’m talking about the challenges that fellow national carmaker PROTON has levelled at it throughout 2019. With every model in its lineup updated, purchase prices reduced, kit levels enhanced and aftersales service given a thorough going-over, PROTON has mounted an aggressive attack on the Malaysian market that threatens Perodua’s marketshare, which accounts for over 40% of the total number of cars sold in the last year. While models like the Myvi and Axia are beyond reproach, with the former accounting for almost half of all Perodua sales, the Bezza is in a far more precarious position.

With prices starting at RM34,580 for the 1.0-litre three-cylinder Bezza G (M/T) and rising up to RM49,580 for the top-flight Bezza 1.3 AV with Advanced Safety Assist, there’s a clear price-gulf between the models. Saga Premium vs. Bezza AV the price difference is enough to account for more than 4,700L of fuel, which could certainly power the lesser vehicle for quite a while, given that the one we own manages less than 6L/100km with daily use.

But with things like active driver assistance features, better modern conveniences, and tried-and-tested reliability, many argue that the Bezza can very easily justify its price premium. Couple that with the improved driveability, interior quality, and reduced NVH levels, the Perodua Bezza feels like a car that’s worth more than it is.

Don’t believe us? Check out our video review and see for yourself.

REVIEW: 2020 Hyundai Elantra – Surprises All Around

One of the drawbacks of being a motoring journalist feted with test cars frequently is that you stop getting wowed by things. New technology, evolutionary engineering, and improved build quality and materials have become de rigueur in the automotive industry, and writers like me stop getting impressed with new cars sooner rather than later.

But the Hyundai Elantra, refreshed in mid-2019 to take on the C-segment saloon space against cars like the Honda Civic, the Toyota Corolla Altis, and the Peugeot 408, was a truly amazing surprise. Available in Malaysia in just one trim at one price (of RM109,888), it’s clear that Hyundai Sime Darby is focused on getting the left-field buyers, rather than appealing to the broad spectrum that makes up C-segment saloon buyers. This could perhaps end up playing to their advantage by reducing overhead costs – with so many buyers moving towards SUVs, the space for such cars is shrinking rapidly, and having a large and overly-complicated range of products could simply end up spelling financial ruin.

Now with (literally) sharper styling and improved ride & handling, the new Elantra saunters in with a 2.0-litre naturally-aspirated petrol engine with 152PS and 195Nm, paired to a 6-speed automatic gearbox. Unfortunately that marks the end of the 1.6-litre turbo Elantra Sport, a car that caught alot of attention when it was launched, but ultimately failed to entice enough buyers. That engine does at least live on in the excellent Hyundai Tucson Turbo.

With all new cars offered with a 3-year/100,000km service package as well as a 5-year/300,000km warranty, the new Hyundai Elantra is certainly an appealing prospect. With tidy road manners, excellent refinement, and the sort of roughty-toughty build quality that will last ages, will the refreshed 2020 Hyundai Elantra be just the car you need for you and your family?

2019 Mercedes-Benz C300 Coupé – Reviewed

“But would you rather have an AMG C43?”

Coupés have not traditionally been given alot of thought in this country. Perhaps due to our Asian obsession with practicality and value, two-door vehicles have always been seen as one of the penultimate flights of fancy, superseded only by the cabriolet. And at RM416,888 for the 2019 Mercedes-Benz C300 AMG-Line Coupé most would ask, why not just get the saloon and save what, RM100k?

It’s a fair question. The saloon has better equipment (read: AIRMATIC suspension), it has a more supple ride (read: AIRMATIC suspension), and a greater breadth of ability (read: AIRMATIC suspension). It also has more space in the rear, and a slightly larger boot.

But if you think that way, then you’re not the intended buyer of a C300 AMG-Line. No, if you think in terms of how luscious the blue hue is on our test car, and how gorgeous the brown leather is, and just how poyo I look behind the wheel in my Mercedes-Benz sunglasses… then you’re the kind of person interested in the C300 AMG-Line Coupé.

But the real question is: At that price, would you have this beautiful German mistress, or add a little more and bring home the brutish AMG C43?

DRIVEN: Mercedes-Benz C300 AMG-Line – Desire, Uncomplicated

Sometimes things just fall into place.

It was a Tuesday morning when I got a phone call from a communications executive at Mercedes-Benz. Hey, she said, we have a C300 AMG-Line this weekend, would you like to have a go? My mind immediately leapt to thoughts of the panoramic sunroof, the AMG-Line steering wheel, and being an audiophile that recently discovered Sting’s new album, the Burmester audio system.

I’d have been stupid to say no.

Keys handed over, I noticed it was about to rain. I hate dirty cars and, having just been washed before it was given to me, I didn’t want the white C-Class to get any dirtier. So I quickly settled in, found a comfortable driving position (not a hard task given the electrically-adjustable steering column, lower-thigh bolster, and headrest), and set off.

Immediately, I took note of the power at hand. 255hp and 370Nm is what Mercedes reports the 2.0-litre 4-banger makes in the C300 AMG-Line, but in less geeky terms, it felt like a huge dollop. You don’t have to mash your foot into the floor to get a huge torque surge, which is harnessed best thanks to the 9G-Tronic automatic transmission. This, to my mind, is exactly what you want out of a luxury car. A sense of effortlessness, as it were.

Once I was outrunning the raincloud, I took stock of the cabin. Open-pore black-ash wood surrounded me, with door-tops covered in stitched Artico leather, peppered with laser-cut Burmester speaker grilles and silver controls. There was a widescreen infotainment display atop the centre stack, beneath which sat a gorgeous long slide of more wood. I noted the new digital instrument cluster, as well as the ‘old-school’ knob-and-touchpad arrangement of the infotainment controls. While Mercedes-Benz is enjoying praise for its MBUX infotainment system, the W205 C-Class remains paired with an older COMAND system. And yes, it’s COMAND, with one M.

It wasn’t for a couple more days until I had proper time to spend with the C300. I’d been rushing from appointment to appointment the two days prior, taking me through alot of the Klang Valley and its notorious traffic. I’d been warned that the C300’s 2.0-litre mill would consume quite a bit of fuel in such conditions – and yet without really trying, I never managed to nudge it past 10L/100km, despite other local motoring journos claiming figures between 11L-13L/100km. Maybe they have lead feet, but I can report that a full tank on a C300 AMG-Line would easily cover 600km between fillups. Not bad.

But it was a Sunday, and with filming done for the video review and more than half a tank of fuel yet, I told my girlfriend that we were going for a drive. We packed some things and headed out at 4pm, aimed for the old Gombak road that would take us up to Genting Sempah.

The roads themselves were beautiful, albeit badly paved, though the C300 soaked up the worst of the imperfections. We snaked along the narrow road with steep drops on the left and cliffside on the right, enjoying the scenery with the sunroof wide open and the windows half down. We passed quite a number of Mercedes-Benzes going the other way, no doubt returning from either an exciting squiz up Genting or a relaxing holiday on the East Cost and avoiding the queue on the Karak Highway – I surmised that that must be the life of the average Mercedes-Benz owner. While I nodded and smiled as we passed, I felt briefly like a bit of a pretender, no doubt the only person sat behind a three-pointed star with one eye on the fuel gauge.

The old Gombak road is not one that you tackle with gusto, I feel. You ought to stick the car in ‘Comfort’ mode and enjoy the drive, given that the rutted road surface would undoubtedly see the car shimmy from one edge of the tarmac to the other in ‘Sport+’ mode where there’s little give in the suspension. The ambiance was only improved by the audio system, which I had employed to play my favourite album by the late songwriter Nujabes.

At Genting Sempah we ploughed onwards to Janda Baik, a place that holds great meaning to me. I spent many formative years up that hill, with family on every corner. We’re not from Pahang but quite a number of us made Janda Baik our home, and as a result, I feel like the little kampung is an extension of me. Up we went, on slightly better roads this time, improved steadily as the population in the hilltop village expanded. We stopped by a couple of choice spots for photos, and a little roadside stall for some durian kampung.

I warned my girlfriend, who promptly selected a 3kg durian, that we’d have to eat it all. If even the slightest bit of durian got in the car, I’d wager I’d end up very quickly on Mercedes-Benz Malaysia’s list of blacklisted publications.

So we finished it.

And it was over dinner at Chef Zamri’s Nero Bianco Deli that I felt I’d finally been able to truly understand the C300 AMG-Line. Though it bears the famous Affalterbach abbreviation, it isn’t to be mistaken for a sporty compact saloon. Rather, it is very much the embodiment of the luxury compact saloon. Effortless to drive, comfortable to sit in, and ridiculously well appointed, the C300 is a gathering of Mercedes-Benz’s strengths. The only fly in the ointment is the lack of insulation, with road & tyre noise creeping in steadily once you move into triple-digit speeds.

While many would take fault with that, particularly if having recently sampled BMW’s new 3-Series or the Audi A4, the C300 sits right between the two. The 3er is no doubt the driver’s car of the lot, while the A4 is so amazingly plush you really think that they might’ve shrunk an A6.

But the C300 is the jack of all trades, or at least that was the opinion I held when I departed our dinner stop with home set firmly in our sights.

2019 MERCEDES-BENZ C300 AMG-LINE – RM304,888 AS TESTED





PREVIEWED: ’19 Mercedes-Benz S560e – Limo Reloaded

Superlative. Unsurpassed. Unrivaled.

These are the sort of words that you will find peppered throughout any sort of editorial about the Mercedes-Benz S-Class. The Sonderklasse was for a long time truly in a class of its own, a thoroughly modern luxury limousine that always paved the way for others to follow. And even when it stumbled (cough W220 cough cough) it still comfortably surpassed its rivals in sales, and when they weren’t busting an Airmatic bag or leaking water through the bulkhead, they were wonderful things.

But while the S-Class always maintained a lead over the competition, the rivals have been gaining, and fast. The S-Class now has to justify itself against more premium marques like Bentley with their Flying Spur, as well as traditional competition like the BMW 7-Series and Audi A8. With those cars getting smarter, sharper, and more innovative with every iteration, it raises the question of just how long the S-Class will be able to maintain its lead. After all, even an ending has a beginning.

In a move that’ll most certainly cement its appeal on the local market, Mercedes-Benz Malaysia recently launched the new S560e plug-in hybrid limousine, the first plug-in hybrid S-Class ever to be launched in Malaysia. With an asking price of RM668,888 the S560e is the most affordable S-Class in the range today, both in terms of purchase and expenses, given that the PHEV can do some 50km on a single full charge. It’s no slouch either, with a combined output of 475hp, courtesy of the marriage between 3.0-litre V6 and electric motor.

I am certain that at this point there are some of you already asking about how much practicality has been compromised in turning the S560 into a proper EQ model. The answer of which is… not much more than the preceding S400h, actually. The batteries themselves take up no more room, but are now denser and more energy-efficient than before. The result is a boot that, over the non-hybrid S560, might not be able to squeeze in quite so many golf-bags but honestly, you’ll be more than happy with what it’s got.

What will also leave you happy is the generous spec-list. So the S560e comes loaded with everything from intelligent-beam LED headlights, autonomous-emergency braking, PRE-SAFE pre-collision preparation system, 360-degree cameras, soft-close doors, privacy blinds… you name it, it probably has it. It’s an S-Class after all, and you never forget it. What we appreciate with this facelift is the replacement of the steering wheel – the new unit now has a three-spoke design that looks far more natural, and less comical from the ‘clown-smile’ look of the outgoing car.

What has also changed as part of the facelift is the driving experience. The S400h that was the talk of the town when it came out was a bog-standard hybrid, with a small battery and electric motor assisting an otherwise-relaxed engine to take the edge off. With the S560e things are very different – this is a car that’s been designed to run fully-electric when possible, and it shows. The car takes off silently, gliding along with no emissions, and will continue to do so until the battery is exhausted, or when you’re at high cruising speeds where the petrol engine is more efficient.

The handover between the two is seamless, with the V6 engine just gently humming into life (yes I said ‘hum,’ because it would be uncouth for an S-Class to ‘roar’). And thanks to the intelligent EQ system, the S560e will identify portions of your journey where combustion power might not be needed (like when you’re northbound after the Menora Tunnel, for example) and allow the big V6 to take a break, pushing you along silently in all-electric mode while also recuperating power when coasting.

You get the sensation inside that you’re piloting something far smarter than you are but, unlike in some other cars, it’s not a sensation that feels alien. No, the S-Class offers a degree of confidence that the car really has it all handled, and all you have to do is soak up the miles from the driver’s seat and let the car do all the heavy lifting. Never has PHEV driving been so serene.

In my short run with the car at the Sg. Besi airport I didn’t have a chance to sit in the back of the big S-Class, so I will report back once I have. But I have little doubt in my mind that you’ll lose nothing by sitting back there – if anything, the removal of the act of driving may make the S-Class experience that much more enjoyable, given that you’ll be able to explore the big limo’s technology with greater depth via the two seat-mounted screens, which you can take in while reclining on the two electrically-operated rear seats.

After spending a good 20-minutes behind the wheel and pressed for an opinion, I can confidently say this – there’s a reason why Mercedes still thinks this car is in a class of its own. Yes the Audi A8 is very smart now and yes, the BMW 7-Series is now more comfortable than before. But honest to goodness, both of those cars are still reaching for the S-Class’ level of sophistication and elegance of execution. The gap may be smaller now than ever before, but it still exists.

The S-Class. What more can I say?

2017 Volkswagen Jetta: A Sharper, Stronger Second Take