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Introduced in 2000, the E46 might not be the best-looking M3 BMW ever built, but it might just be the best, which makes the M3 CSL the very best-of-the-best.
With more than 85,000 standard E46 M3s sold, BMW knew that it had hit on a winning formula. And yet, as is always the case, enough is never enough, so it went in search of something more, a niche to fill. And boy did it find one.
The BMW M3 CSL (Coupe Sport Leichtbau, or Coupe Sport Lightweight) was only ever available in two colours: Silver Grey Metallic and Black Sapphire Metallic. But no-one cared about not being able to order their favourite colour; with only 1,383 ever being built, all people cared about was being able to place an order in the first place.
Because the CSL has all the good stuff. Or rather, it has a lot less of the usual stuff because it lost most of the standard car’s soundproofing, along with its sat-nav system, electric seats, air-conditioning, and stereo. (Although the latter two could be refitted at no extra cost. Make sense of that, if you can…)
And then BMW started adding some goodies to justify the exorbitant premium it was charging. So, some of its body panels, including the roof and bonnet, are made from carbon fibre reinforced polymer. The boot floor is made of fibreboard, and the rear window is made from thinner glass than usual, too. The aim was not necessarily to save weight – although the 240lbs that were saved was a very welcome side effect – but to maintain the car’s weight distribution as close to 50:50 as possible.
A bodykit, comprising twin carbon fibre front splitters, and a rear diffuser helps keep the car planted at speed, as does a redesigned rear boot lid that features an integral and surprisingly discreet spoiler. Lightweight 19-inch alloy wheels complete the exterior pack, while fibreglass racing seats and a carbonfibre centre console and door trims added a touch of lightweight glamour to the interior.
BMW also added specially developed springs and dampers, a faster steering rack, and bigger brakes to the baddest M3 they’d ever built. The engine was mildly tweaked, developing 17bhp more than the standard car and, if you could flash a motorsport licence at BMW, it would remove the speed limiter for you too, lifting the top speed from 155mph to 161mph.
The CSL also gained an ‘M track mode’ on its dynamic stability control system, which allowed its drivers to push the car as close to its limits as possible while still retaining a bit of a safety net.
So, the BMW M3 CSL is a very special car, and the example you’re looking at here is a very special CSL indeed.







