The first E28-generation BMW M5 appeared at the Amsterdam motor show in February 1984. In the historical roster of M-cars, it is predated only by the M1, the M635 CSi and BMW’s M5-in-all-but-name, the 1979 M535i.
The E28 needed just 282bhp to make it the world’s fastest series-production four-door. Just over 2000 were hand-built between 1985 and 1988. But close to 50,000 M5s have been built since, over four model generations.
And so to the $64,000 – or rather, seventy-odd thousand pound – question: is this new M5 good enough? Is it a worthy inheritor of such an impeccable lineage? The most thorough independent assessment in the business is about to supply some answers.
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