2007 BMW M6 Convertible

2007 BMW M6 Convertible 2007 BMW M6 Convertible
First Drive Review

BMW hasn't had it too easy from us recently. The Bavarian masters of driving arts once had an easy ticket to a first-place finish in virtually every comparo they entered. But then came iDrive, then active steering, and then everyone's favorite "whipping tech," the sequential manual gearbox. You could argue that those technologies, in many cases, created as many problems as they solved, at least from the purist's point of view.

A brighter spot came in the form of the 2006 BMW M6 coupe, a 6-series coupe made even more salivating with zoomier styling, a sexy carbon-fiber roof, and one of the most delicious engines on God's green earth: a race-bred, heart-pounding, high-revving 5.0-liter V-10 producing an incredible 500 horsepower at 7750 rpm and 383 pound-feet of torque at 6100 rpm. So prolific is the engine that not even the entire alphabet's worth of techno-acronyms could keep the fun away. Then came the new convertible version- whoo-ee! What could be better, right?

Looks to Kill, Comfort to Thrill

Our test car showed up in the M6 coupe's "feature color," Indianapolis Red, a metallic crimson that looks no less fetching on the convertible, even with its black convertible top raised. With a smiling, M-specific front bumper topped by 6-series brooding headlamps, there is something deliciously ironic about the front end of the M6. Down the body sides are sill extensions and, of course, fender vents with M6 badge inlays. In back, the rear apron is sculpted to match the front end and also to accommodate the quartet of fat exhaust tips through which the V-10 sings its high-pitched song (a song that, incidentally, is easier to hear than in the closed-roof M6).

The M6's interior is no less intense. The optional carbon-fiber center-stack trim on our tester-the best $300 you can spend, we feel-glistened in the sunlight, and pretty much everything else that wasn't aluminum was covered in Indianapolis Red and Black Merino leather. We're still no fans of iDrive, but at least the M6's pivoting display didn't get washed out in the sunlight as with so many such systems on other cars.

The front seats are wonderfully supportive, although even at an as-tested price of nearly $116,000, they lacked the active side bolsters found on the M5. The M6 also could benefit from an extra cup holder (it comes with only one), more spacious back seats, a truly usable glove box, and an HVAC system that can keep up with the torrential top-down windstorm that occurs when speeds climb toward (or, um, past) legal highway speeds.