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BMW r&d boss bets on technology push to stay No. 1

BMW r&d chief Diess: "We will identify more parts where it makes sense to use carbon fiber."
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BMW Group is facing a number of challenges as it aims to hold off rivals Audi and Mercedes-Benz and remain the world's largest premium automaker.

The company must find ways to continue boosting sales while reducing fuel consumption and emissions across its vehicles. Leading BMW's technology push is r&d boss Herbert Diess, who this year is overseeing the launch of the i3 electric vehicle as well as the introduction of a new front-wheel-drive architecture and modular engine family.

Diess talked with Automotive News Europe Editor Luca Ciferri on the technical challenges facing BMW.

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By 2016, BMW Group plans global annual sales of 2 million vehicles, including the Mini brand. How many vehicles will have your new front-wheel-drive architecture?

Today, rear-wheel drive represents slightly more than a million. As to fwd, we currently only have the Mini range with sales of about 300,000 units. In the next few years, the share of smaller vehicles in BMW Group sales worldwide will increase: 40 percent within five years is not unrealistic [from below 30 percent now]. We will be offering those vehicles with front-, four-wheel and hybrid drive systems. Rear-wheel drive, however, will remain the BMW Group's most favored drive system.

BMW has a third vehicle architecture for the low-emission i vehicles called LifeDrive. This is an aluminum chassis with a carbon reinforced plastic body -- could it be used for conventional powertrain models?

LifeDrive is really an architecture for new drivetrains, mostly electric and plug-in hybrid based. It doesn't make sense to use that kind of architecture for conventional cars. We think in electric and plug-in cars it makes sense because we can reduce the size of the battery, which is the most expensive component in the car. If I can reduce the weight of the car proportionately, I can reduce the size of the battery and the battery is even more expensive than the carbon fiber.

In conventional cars you already use carbon fiber, for example on the roofs of the M models. Will this increase?

Yes. We will identify more parts where it makes sense to use carbon fiber. Future body structures will mix aluminum, steel and carbon. But it will be a while before we use carbon at the same large scale at which we currently use steel and aluminum.

The new family of modular three-, four- and six-cylinder engines will become the largest within the BMW Group, powering about 1.5 million of your 2 million sales planned in 2020. When will the first engine debut?

Next year. A three-cylinder unit will be the first application.

Which model will be first?

The BMW i8.

Will future V-8 and V-12 engines be spun off from this new engine family?

Mechanically there will be not many common parts, but the engines will be closely related in terms of technology. They will have very similar combustion chamber design and a common variable valve timing technology.

Will V-8s and V-12s disappear?

We still see a market for gasoline V-8s and V-12s, so we do not have any plans to abandon them.

Could we see a BMW V-8 diesel again?

No, our six-cylinder diesel engine with three turbos is fantastic. It's lighter, but has the same torque and is a very responsive engine.

BMW will offer a small engine to extend the i3 EV's range. Isn't this a bit of contradiction for a "born electric" model?

The optional range extender will almost double the range of the BMW i3. We do not think that a substantial share of customers will really need the range extender. It is more of an issue for those who have not yet had a chance to use an electric car. After a few days, they usually discover that a base range of 160km is sufficient to limit recharging to about two times a week. In most cases where people first think they need a range extender it actually never is used.

BMW envisions i3 buyers using the car in battery-only mode for urban daily commuting and the car's range extender for occasional longer trips. Could someone use the range extender on a daily basis?

The range extender is not intended for daily use. It's for situations when the driver needs to extend the range of the vehicle to reach the next charging station. Therefore, the i3 probably won't be the choice for customers with a need for an extended range. A plug-in hybrid would be a more suitable solution for those customers. For a plug-in hybrid, I would say the target range should be far enough so that recharging isn't needed more than twice a week when using the car in urban surroundings.

Meet BMW's tech boss
Name: Herbert Diess
Title: Board member for r&d, BMW Group
Age: 54
Based: Munich
Main Challenge: To keep BMW Group ahead of Audi and Mercedes in global sales, while reducing vehicle emissions.

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