BMW i8 Concept Spyder
BMW’s i8 Concept Spyder shows that no matter how high-tech, carbon-fiber-clad, or battery-laden the car, some conventional rules still apply. In this case, even the mighty Bavarian automaker couldn’t escape the Aristotelian maxim, “Where there is a coupe, soon goes after a convertible.” (We may be a bit rusty on our Greek history.) And so we have this i8 Concept Spyder, which essentially is an i8 coupe without a stationary roof. Critically, however, the i8 Spyder looks more like a production vehicle than did the coupe concept, and so it gives us a decent idea of what both figure styles will look like when they actually go on sale.
What’s Been Switched
The fundamental construction of both roofed and roofless i8s is the same: a carbon-fiber passenger cell called the “Life Module” mated with the “Drive Module,” which contains the electrical motor for propulsion, lithium-ion battery pack for energy storage, and three-cylinder gasoline range-extender. There are, however, many differences inbetween the i8 coupe and Spyder.
For starters, BMW says the open-top car is a little shorter overall than the i8 coupe, and the wheelbase is shorter, too. The proportions look more like those of an actual car, and the driver no longer emerges to sit in the forward half of the wheelbase.
Doors are now made of opaque material—presumably the same thermoplastic that covers the rest of the exterior—and they have bona-fide treats to open them. We spotted the same thing on an i8 prototype recently caught by our spy photographers. The doors are still hinged at the front and sway upward and outward. Above them, a windscreen surround is now black instead of body-color, and the side windows actually look like they could slide down into the doors. Around back, the Spyder is similar to the coupe below the beltline, but above it, substitutes the coupe’s sheet of glass (or plastic) with a panel incorporating dual fairings. BMW also has added a gimmicky storage bay for two electrical scooters. It’s unknown how the open-air area will be covered in production form.The car will feature all-LED lighting, and not the laser-based units presently under development.
The Spyder’s interior also looks just a hint more ready for real life than the coupe’s. The psychedelic center console seems to be coming down from its excursion, with real buttons next to the shifter, a discernible climate control system, and a standard iDrive knob.
A Quick Powertrain Refresher
Stashed underneath the i8 Concept Spyder’s assets panels and interior trimmings you’ll find the same powertrain from the coupe. A 129-hp electrical motor lives up front, and a turbocharged 220-hp inline-three is mounted in the rear. BMW says total output is three hundred forty nine hp and four hundred six lb-ft, and that power can be shunted to the front, rear, or all four wheels. It’s possible that both the i8 coupe and Spyder could get much more power, as there won’t be an M version.
For the very first nineteen miles, the i8 can run on electro-stimulation alone; after that, the gasoline engine kicks on and both feeds power to the rear wheels and juices the battery pack. Recharge time is said to be two hours on a 240-volt European power outlet. Overall weight won’t be too different inbetween the coupe and convertible i8s—the rigid passenger compartment shouldn’t need any strengthening—and so BMW claims both cars will do the run to sixty in five seconds or less.
The i8 models will be built at BMW’s Leipzig plant; we expect this Spyder to arrive in 2014, or toughly the same time as the coupe.