This BMW has Effortless power, sophisticated technology, elegant styling inside and out.
"Engineered like no other car in the world."
This vehicle is a MUST SEE! This is a Non Smoker vehicle which has been very well maintained and garage kept. The car looks beautiful and drives just as nice! It handles as if it was brand new. BMW's have also proven themselves over the years as an industry leader in reliability. You know that these cars will run for hundreds of thousands of miles! Most importantly, this car has NEVER been smoked in! You'll appreciate the smoke free interior this car offers! The interior is very nice with no stains or odors. The exterior is gorgeous and the paint is very glossy.
There is No Rust on the vehicle. A Southern Vehicle from the Sun Shine State
19MPG. Huge $avings on fuel cost compared to super car!!!!!!
The A/C blows cold and the Heater works great too.
Controls such as the Power Mirrors, Power Door Locks, Power Windows, Keyless Entry, Power Convertible top, and they all work.
Car Runs and Drives Perfect. Don't miss out on this beautiful BMW M3 Bid with confidence.
Overall, this is an outstanding and beautiful vehicle and it is awaiting its new owner. Bid with Confidence.
See lots of Pictures Below!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The winning bidder will not be disappointed with this vehicle so bid with confidence.
This is a NO RESERVE auction bid which means the highest bidder wins and gets this beautiful car. I have started the auction very low to enable you to decide what you want to pay by entering your maximum bid. Enter your bids early rather than the last minute so that you do not loose out on this vehicle.
Congratulations in advance to the winning highest bidder :)
HAPPY BIDDING!!!!!!
The M3 is visual poetry parked in your garage, and poetry in motion while driven.
Driving the M3 one learns what it must feel like to be a deity when freed from the shackles of place and time and the cares and worries that haunt ordinary drivers.
The M3 engine runs without sound or vibration at idle and normal speeds. Shifting through the gears the M3 gives no jerking forward and back, but instead offers continuous, unbroken smooth acceleration more like a silent turbine jet engine.
Driving the M5 is salvation. Behind the wheel your life is perfect.
WILL PASS EMISSIONS AND state inspections
tires in good shape 85%
No CEL engine lights on the dash
Starts the first time
NO RESERVE ACTION
ADULT OWNED
NO LEAKS
CLEAN AND CLEAR TITLE IN HAND
RUNS AND DRIVES PERFECT
ENGINE STARTS AND RUNS PERFECT
NO ACCIDENTS
NO RUST
SHIFTS ARE SMOOTH ALSO VERY FAST
*The exhaust has no signs of smoke
*The engine shows no signs of oils leaks
*The paint is original but very small little scratches and minor very small dents fenders 9/10 look at pics,
*Interior Condition 9/10 has minor wear keep in mind that this M3 is 16 years old and has 177k
*TIRES are in Great condition
*A/C WORKS FINE AND EVERTHING ELSE 10/10
* Florida CAR ALL IT'S LIFE
* NO RUST
*THE E46 M3 HAS NO REAR SUB FRAME CRACKS OR CLANKS
* THE M3 HAS NO PROBLEMS
Article is from Car and Driver
his is just as bad as a Corvette, except it has a back seat," muttered my wife, Mary, and she was not employingbadto meangoodin the modern urban vernacular. Mary has developed an aversion to riding in Corvettes with me because the powerful plastic sports cars always seem to stimulate my aggressive driving tendencies. She had correctly perceived that the BMW M3 convertible has precisely the same effect.
To readers of this magazine, this effect is a virtue rather than a vice because, just like the Corvette, the M3 convertible has the combination of effortless energy, secure grip, and linear controls that make any driver feel like Michael Schumacher--and want to emulate him.
Okay, so the M3 convertible can't quite match the quarter-mile time of 13.1 seconds at 111 mph of the latest Corvette convertible. In fact, the M3 convertible's 13.7-second quarter-mile at 104 mph is 0.3 second and 2 mph in arrears of the closed-roof M3 (June 2001), thanks to the convertible's shocking398-poundweight gain from its power top and various and sundry reinforcements.
Even so, the M3 convertible is by far the quickest droptop on the market with an adult-feasible rear seat. Turn off the traction control, drop the clutch at 4500 rpm, and you rocket to 60 mph in 5.1 seconds. A mere 7.4 seconds later, you'll hit triple digits.
Passing on a back road is simply a matter of using the beautiful shifter to select third gear and planting your right foot. Accompanied by the determined metallic rasp from the rev-happy 3.2-liter six, you will surge around even a double tractor-trailer in astonishingly little time and space. Keep your foot in it, and the M3 convertible will still be pulling strongly when you run into the electronic governor, which truncated the acceleration curve at 157 mph in our car, although the speedo needle was nearly touching the 170 mark.
At top speed, on an admittedly uneven road, the M3 cabrio did want both hands on the wheel. But in most other circumstances, it inspires immense confidence. We found ourselves hurling the M3 into corners ever faster, knowing the car was so well-planted on its big Michelin Pilot Sport tires that we would simply track through as if on a tether. Even in fast corners, midcourse corrections are always an option because there's invariably sufficient bite to tighten your line.
Although the current line of 3-series suffers from steering that is too light (soon to be corrected, BMW promises), the M3's nicely sculpted three-spoke wheel is beautifully weighted and so intuitively responsive that after driving a few blocks, you position the car with the casual accuracy that normally comes from years of ownership. Pretty soon, you're "driving it like a Corvette."
Unlike the latest version of Chevy's sports car, however, the M3 convertible accommodates more than luggage in the rear. Although its back seat is narrower than the one in the sedan, it's roomy enough for two average-size adults for short trips. The trunk will hold a pair of stacked, unfolded garment bags and some odds and ends, even with the top down. With the top up, you can fold a panel out of the way and fit another duffel bag or two.
As you would expect in a $58,000 car, this trunk is neatly trimmed, as is the nappa-leather-upholstered cockpit. All the usual power adjustments and conveniences are standard, including one-touch top operation incorporating a mechanized hard boot. Dropping the top is so painless, we often did it for five-minute trips.
This top is fully lined and impressively tight. Even during an extended 90-plus-mph cruise--people sure drive rapidly in central California--air leaks and wind roar were so low that we almost forgot we were driving a convertible.
Droptop 3-series models have never been paragons of structural rigidity, and this latest M3 still can't match a Corvette convertible in twist resistance. Although stiffer than its predecessor, which is quite an achievement given the new model's much firmer suspension, the M3 convertible will quiver and shake in pothole-infested Michigan. On California roads, however, we rarely noticed any sheetmetal jitters.
The structural quibble aside, if you want a convertible that's fast and has a real back seat, this M3 is the best there is. Just don't let the four seats fool you. It's a sports car, and it encourages you to drive it like one.
Find out why the M3 ranks as one of 2002's10Best Cars.
VEHICLE TYPE:front-engine, rear-wheel-drive, 4-passenger, 2-door convertible
PRICE AS TESTED:$57,989 (base price: $55,727)
ENGINE TYPE:DOHC 24-valve 6-in-line, iron block and aluminum head, Siemens MSS 54 engine-control system with port fuel injection
Displacement:198 cu in, 3246cc
Power (SAE net):333 bhp @ 7900 rpm
Torque (SAE net):262 lb-ft @ 4900 rpm
TRANSMISSION:6-speed manual
DIMENSIONS:Wheelbase:107.5 inLength:176.8 in
Curb weight:3838 lb
C/DTEST RESULTS:
Zero to 60 mph: 5.1 sec
Zero to 100 mph: 12.5 sec
Zero to 130 mph: 22.8 sec
Street start, 5-60 mph: 5.8 sec
Standing 1/4-mile: 13.7 sec @ 104 mph
Top speed (governor limited): 157 mph
Braking, 70-0 mph:162 ft
Roadholding: 300-ft-dia skidpad 0.81 g
FUEL ECONOMY:
EPA city driving: 16 mpg
C/Dobserved: 19 mpg
Once upon a time, BMW could call its cars the Ultimate Driving Machine without people rolling their eyes and laughing. It's a bit harder to swallow in this era of diesel M-Sport cars, bizarre naming strategies, bloated designs and slow-selling oddballs like the 5-Series GT. Thank God for the E46 M3.
The good news is that the cars that made us care about BMW in the first place aren't going away; they're just getting more affordable, provided you don't mind a copy with a few miles on it and you have a budget for proper maintenance.
Ten years ago, the lovely machine you see above would have cost you something like $60,000. Now, thanks to the miracle of depreciation, an E46 M3 and all its 333 horsepower naturally aspirated straight six magic can be yours for far less than that. Yay depreciation!
We now live in an age when the M3's 333 horsepower and 262 pound feet of torque may not seem all that impressive. These days, you can get more power and torque out of a V6 Hyundai Genesis Coupe. Rest assured, though — even a decade later, the S54 is nothing to mess around with.
Like its predecessors, this is an engine that loves to rev, rev, rev. You get an ample amount of low-end power — enough to regularly engage your traction control on even medium-hard launches — but things really come alive in the midrange, and the motor screams willingly all the way up to 8,000 RPM. See that notch on the tach that shows the redline? That basically becomes your shift light. Not because you have to to squeeze all the power out of it, but because you'll want to all the time.
It's a nasty street fighter of an engine. Zero to 60 times for a convertible like this one are quoted at five seconds flat, while the lighter coupe version does it in 4.6. The 'vert felt a little quicker than that according to my butt stopwatch, but those numbers are impressive nonetheless.
he M3 is a hard-edged performance car, so don't expect to cruise in total comfort. The suspension is stiff enough that you will be well acquainted with the bumps in the road. But here's the thing: while the ride is harsh, it never really beats you up. Maybe it's because the seats are so comfortable, or maybe because it's been properly tuned to be an everyday car, but I can't go so far as to describe the ride as harsh. It's a good compromise.
t's an M3. Of course it handles incredibly well, duh.
I feel like we have this image of German performance sedans as being staid, buttoned down land missiles; fast, but undramatic. This is not the case with the E46 M3. It's emotional, lively, maybe even twitchy, and always eager to get its rear end out. It's not a car for beginners. Drive it in anger without knowing that you're probably headed for a ditch. Know what you're doing and respect the machine and you can outclass much more powerful and more expensive cars in back roads and on a track.
While the chassis does a great job of staying flat and body roll-free in the corners, a lot of credit goes to the superb steering system, which is tight, heavy, direct and offers a ton of road feel.
And here's where we circle back to why depreciation is a good thing. This once expensive car can now be placed into the hands of you,the people, the 99 percenters, for relatively cheap these days.
Some M3s can be had for $16,000 or even lower, while a few garage queens might go for close to $30,000. I also found quite a few examples on Carmax in the low $20,000 range if you want all of your potentially expensive maintenance to be covered under their warranty, which strikes me as a very good deal. This isn't a Honda Civic, so repairs can get tricky and pricey.
As with any German performance car, finding one that has been taken care of meticulously is more important than one with low miles. But for all you get in the E46 M3 — for all its performance, style, still-relevant tech features, and the way it balances what's good about old and new cars — it has become an incredible bargain.