After a period of absence, Kelleners Sport has returned to the BMW
Transcription
After a period of absence, Kelleners Sport has returned to the BMW
048-054 BMWCAR 0211 22/12/10 16:49 Page 48 Special After a period of absence, Kelleners Sport has returned to the BMW tuning scene and its 535i looks set to bring the brand back with a bang Words: Sebastian de Latour Photography: Dave Smith 048-054 BMWCAR 0211 22/12/10 16:49 Page 49 048-054 BMWCAR 0211 22/12/10 16:53 Page 50 MW enthusiasts will no doubt recognise the Kelleners Sport name, though in recent years it has been notable in the BMW tuning scene only by its absence and it’s been quite some time since the company has brought out any new products. But, thankfully, Kelleners Sport is making a welcome return to the BMW scene, in a new location, under new management and with the facilities and technical expertise of Mercedes tuning expert Carlsson to hand. And, judging by its first car, it’s off to a cracking start. The car that has been tasked with the responsibility of re-introducing the company to the world is the F10 535i and the team at Kelleners Sport has been working away furiously for the best part of 2010 to create a package for the car from scratch in order to have it ready for its grand unveiling at the Essen Motorshow last December. I can’t even begin to imagine how daunting it must be to try and create a styling package from scratch at the best of times but when it’s for the first car from an essentially new company, it has to be absolutely bang on. No pressure then. B 50 BMWcar Visually, the Kelleners 535i is nothing short of spectacular – it looks like it would eat your children when you weren’t looking and have your dog for dessert. But somehow it manages to be both incredibly aggressive and hugely intimidating but without coming across as vulgar or over the top. While I can appreciate that perhaps Kelleners’ styling won’t appeal to all tastes, I personally think it’s awesome and however menacing it may appear in the photos, in the metal it’s terrifying. Kelleners has worked hard to ensure that the bodystyling isn’t made up of separate sections but that each piece of the whole kit flows into the next, making it look a lot more cohesive and aesthetically pleasing. The front bumper can take the bulk of the credit when it comes to the 535i’s looks because it does most of the work and it’s what gives the car its visual clout. It appears that whoever designed it left their pencil and compass at home and only had their set square to hand because it’s a riot of right angles, eschewing curves in favour of bold square shapes. It makes the F10 look massively wide, with those squared-off edges that house the vertical LED arrays. 048-054 BMWCAR 0211 22/12/10 16:53 Page 51 KELLENERS SPORT F10 535i The slim central air intake is flanked by two purposeful intakes and, usefully, the bumper employs a modular design. See that silver lip below the central intake? If you don’t like it, you don’t have to have it. And that stainless steel mesh is optional, too. I’ve seen the car with and without it and I can’t really decide which looks better – without the mesh and with some black grilles and black wheels, it would look incredibly mean and about as stealthy as is possible with a car like this, but on the other hand, if you’re going to the effort of fitting a styling kit that’s so aggressive and unsubtle, then you might as well go all out. I like the fact that Kelleners has eschewed the use of any chrome on this car as well, as far too many tuners (AC Schnitzer, I’m looking at you) seem obsessed with the shiny stuff. Stainless steel though, I’ve got a lot of time for. At the bottom corners of the front bumper are two little fins that protrude slightly and the line they create along the bottom edge is picked up by the side skirts and the elongated design of these, with their flared rear sections, has been created to give the car a more coupé-like appearance in profile, so I’m told. I’m not usually a fan of side FEBRUARY 2011 51 048-054 BMWCAR 0211 22/12/10 16:57 Page 52 skirts but I think these look really good – I like the way they make the car appear even lower and I’d even go so far as to agree with the coupé profile idea. The flared rear sections of the skirts are then taken up by the bottom edge of the rear bumper and this features a central diffuser section which can be painted in a contrasting colour to the rest of the bumper – grey in this case – which is a nice touch as it makes it more prominent and gives the rear bumper a more purposeful look. I love the big, fat, shiny quartet of exhausts, too. Each pair is staggered slightly and they sit right at the edges of the bumper, making the car look indecently wide from the rear and they’re massive – not so much hinting at this car’s potential as announcing it to the world via megaphone with accompanying fireworks and laser show. There’s also a rear spoiler, which is surprisingly large but blends in with the lines of the car to such a degree that unless you’re looking for it, it’s easy to miss, especially on a black car. Finally, at least on this example, Kelleners has left the interior well alone, opting only for some branded mats and a pedal set. 52 BMWcar And that’s fine by me because the standard F10 interior is so nice I can’t see any reason to go around filling it full of trinkets. I’m naturally a little nervous about taking to the streets in the one and only Kelleners 535i currently in existence – kerbing a wheel or grinding the front bumper on the tarmac doesn’t bear thinking about – but as Kelleners’ MD Marco Reinberg explains, the idea behind the car was to create a styling package that looks good but without compromising usability. “We have lowered the car,” he says, “but not so much that you can’t use it – there’s still plenty of ground clearance and you don’t have to worry about scraping the bumper or skirts.” That’s good to hear. The 535i fires with a four-gun salute courtesy of its sports exhaust and settles into a restrained yet purposeful idle. Sitting behind the steering wheel with your feet obscuring the Kelleners pedals and your legs covering the Kelleners logo on the floor mat, aside from the gentle throb of the exhaust there’s nothing to suggest that this is anything other than a standard 5 Series, which makes a nice change. A sport suspension kit is available for the F10 from Kelleners but this car was just fitted with a set of lowering springs which drop the ride height by 30mm, enough to make the 5 Series look a bit more purposeful but not so low as to render it undriveable. This car has been specced with VDC and retains the adjustable dampers so even though the ride is naturally a little firmer than standard on the sport springs, you can still either soften it up or firm it further if you so desire. The Kelleners 535i wears the company’s Hamburg design alloys in a 20-inch diameter, though they are also available as 19s. There’s so much going on here that the wheels just shouldn’t work and yet in the metal they are stunning. They are a 15-spoke design with five single spokes and ten spokes arranged in pairs with a recessed feature on the outside of each pair and the spokes extend out from the centre of the wheel at a slight angle before bending back in to the edge of the wheel. This does mean that the knuckle in the spokes does protrude ever so slightly beyond the safety net of the of the tyres so there’s 048-054 BMWCAR 0211 22/12/10 16:57 Page 53 KELLENERS SPORT F10 535i potential for some big kerbing disasters but I reckon it’s worth the risk because they look so good and are the perfect match for the rest of the body styling. They are available in three finishes – matt black, polished Graphite silver and polished Platinum silver – and this car was fitted with a pair in matt black and another pair in polished Platinum silver. I have to say that the matt black finish makes the polished platinum look positively dull; fitted to this car, with this styling kit and in this colour, the wheels look awesome, and after seeing the car with these alloys you get the feeling that anything smaller than 20 inches would look lost beneath the F10’s arches. And they don’t even ruin the ride – admittedly the roads around here are very smooth but even with the dampers on their Sport setting the 535i manages to avoid rattling your fillings loose, though I’d willingly sacrifice some comfort for style. Pop the bonnet and you’re greeted by a mass of black plastic which you’ll notice hasn’t even been treated to so much as a Kelleners sticker so you really have no way of telling whether or not there’s anything special going on under there. But there is, in the form of a Kelleners KS Power35 ECU. The 35i engine may now only have a single turbo attached to it but that doesn’t make it any less powerful or fun to use in standard form and it doesn’t make it any less responsive to a remap either. Power leaps from 306 to 367hp while torque swells from a capable 295lb ft to a substantial 354 and while Kelleners doesn’t have any performance figures for the car all you need to know is that it’s fast and then some. There’s torque everywhere, and despite its size and weight, the 535i responds instantly to even the slightest throttle inputs, with the excellent Sport auto ‘box fitted to this car not only being ideally suited to the Five but also the perfect partner for this engine, particularly in its breathed-on form. From the moment you move off, you can feel all that torque swelling beneath the surface and the 535i is keen to surge ahead at the first prod of the throttle, regardless of how few revs are showing. The mid-range is massive, with only a gentle squeeze of the accelerator required to have the F10 surging forwards on a wave of torque and no matter what you may ask of the 535i it will answer the call, powering past slower traffic, erupting out of corners or just putting a massive grin on your face. There’s more than enough grunt to spin up the rear wheels under full throttle on the cold, wet roads here in Merzig, much to the disapproval of the locals going about their Christmas shopping. But this engine is not just about torque – there’s power here too, lots of power. Nail the throttle and once you’re at the edge of the torque curve the power takes over, the acceleration building and building as the revs hurtle towards the redline and the exhaust note hardens and increases in volume, filling the cabin. It might not offer the same visceral thrills as an E9x M3 as it hurtles towards the rev limiter but peak power here is delivered at a lofty 7750rpm and the engine’s more than happy to rev, which means that there’s good reason to wring each gear out because that’s when the 535i feels at its fastest and sounds vicious with it. It’s quite a startling experience, so very different to what you’d expect from a large executive saloon and so very different FEBRUARY 2011 53 048-054 BMWCAR 0211 22/12/10 16:59 Page 54 KELLENERS SPORT 535i to what you’ve become accustomed to from the diesel engines that normally power these cars, even post power increase. The 535d may still be the more sensible choice but it can’t deliver the sort of thrill and noise that this 535i manages – it’s intoxicating stuff. It’s fair to say that I like the Kelleners 535i a lot. I think it looks out of this world, is wonderful to drive, handles superbly and is genuinely fast. All this comes at a price, naturally, but the complete Kelleners conversion is no more expensive than similar products from its rival tuners, though none of the other F10 Fives I’ve seen look quite as distinctive, or as good as this. In fact, this is one of the few times I 54 BMWcar have come away from driving a tuner car and would consider the styling one of the highlights of the whole experience – so much so that I would genuinely consider buying this kit and these wheels if I had a 5 Series and the money to spend on it. Kelleners Sport may have been away but it’s back in a big way and with just one car it has shown that it can go head-tohead with the rest of the tuning world. I can’t wait to see what Kelleners comes up with next… ● CONTACT: Kelleners Sport GmbH Tel: 0049 6861 933 2850 Web: www.kelleners-sport.de ENGINE: Straight-six, turbocharged CAPACITY: 2979cc MAX POWER: 367hp @ 7750rpm MAX TORQUE: 354lb ft @ 6100rpm WHEELS & TYRES Kelleners Sport Hamburg alloys, 9x20-inch (f), 10x20inch (r) with 255/35 and 285/30 tyres: From £330.36 PERFORMANCE UPGRADES Kelleners Sport KS Power35 ECU: £1269.37 EXHAUST Kelleners Sport stainless steel rear silencer: £1604.73 SUSPENSION Kelleners Sport sports spring set: £256.16 EXTERIOR Front spoiler insert with daytime running lights: £534.43 Front spoiler lip RS: £184.80 Side skirts: £605.79 Rear skirt extension with diffuser: £470.22 Rear spoiler: £334.65 Kelleners Sport three-piece stainless steel mesh grille insert: £313.24 INTERIOR Kelleners Sport floor mats: £89.19 Kelleners Sport aluminium pedal set: £78.49 Kelleners Sport aluminium foot rest: £74.92 (All prices exclude VAT, painting and fitting)