Re: BMW F30 Alpina B3 Bi-Turbo : Initial Ownership Review Quote:
Originally Posted by TheGearBox Wow, what a looker! Especially those wheels. (I'm guessing 20's?)
By the way, I've heard that it is really expensive to buy cars in Singapore. Could you shed some light on that? |
It is extremely expensive to buy cars in Singapore. Shedding light would take a full article but let me give a quick summary. Beyond the usual import taxes and GST (which add about 130-150% depending on the value of the car), there is also something called the COE or certificate of entitlement, which is valid for 10 years and is attached to the car. The value of the COE is bid in a free market, and has varied all the way from SGD1 at the time of the financial crisis to SGD100K at its peak. It has settled at about the SGD30K-40K mark in the last few years, and though it's only for new cars, it affects second hand cars price tables as well. There is another complication that not all the tax is lost, but you can recover a percentage of it whenever you de-register the car and after 10 years, you get back 50% of the import taxes when you are forced to de-register or buy a new COE for another 5 or 10 years.
Net net, my rationale is very simple if a bit self serving. In India, a BMW 3 series would cost probably 6-8X of a Suzuki Swift. in Singapore, that ratio is about 2X, since the fixed taxes are so high. Though the absolute outlay is higher, it feels better to save up more and get a premium car instead of paying crazy money for a regular car. Also it rarely makes sense to buy a car new since Singapore's roads are so good that car's don't feel their age. So all in all, you can get away alright despite the initial shock from crazy prices. Quote:
Originally Posted by Iyencar Wow what a beast and lovely description. How is Alpine not voiding the warranty with such extensive mods? | Quote:
Originally Posted by itwasntme Why would Alpina void the warranty? It's a BMW heavily modified by Alpina themselves. | Quote:
Originally Posted by kunalsingh No wonder this car looked familiar! I was going about my usual morning TeamBHP browsing and saw your car on the home page. Had a solid Deja-Vu moment and I quickly went to search for your channel on Youtube to confirm that it was indeed your car. Great to see you TeamBhp man
I have been following your channel for a while now, and it helps me satisfy my GAS (gear acquisition syndrome). Love your PRS collection and I'm so happy to see a fellow Indian doing so well in Singapore (half my family also lives in Singapore and in fact my sister just returned to SG from India after finishing her 2 week quarantine Dubai).
I must say that you have GREAT taste in both your passion for cars and guitars. I hope we can catch up when I'm in SG next (and I secretly wish to buy a guitar off of your collection, preferably a nice DGT or Tremonti  )
P.S. - Also found you on instagram, have sent you a follow request. | Quote:
Originally Posted by RiderZone What a lovely car! My boss's boss owns an Alpina B10 that he uses as a daily driver, it's such an understated beauty as well. He seriously injured his left foot recently, but refused to drive anything else to work, which is even more ironic, because he owns a taxi company. |
Yes, Alpina has a unique relationship with BMW and in fact are privy to BMW R&D prior to their car's launch so that they can co-develop their cars with BMW. That's why Alpinas have BMW factory warranties and in some countries are sold in BMW showrooms itself.
@kunalsingh thanks for the support. Yes, the PRS collection is always evolving but would love to catch up.
@riderzone the B10 is a beast and an icon in of itself. Can't blame your boss's boss Quote:
Originally Posted by karan561 Welcome Utkarsh,
Glad to see an true Alpina (probably the 1st one) on the forum.
IIRC the 0-100 figure of 4.0 Seconds for the X-Drive variant of this B3 was the fastest accelerating Alpina in 2013/14.
Quick question about the steering/paddle shifters. I just noticed a ' + ' sign but the paddle shifters are not visible, so is it that Alpina version has omitted the paddle shifters in favour of buttons ? If so what are your thoughts compared to the 335i you used which had proper paddles.
Happy New Year 2021, Enjoy  |
You are right. Alpinas do traditionally use buttons at the back of the wheel instead of paddle shifters, though paddle shifters are an option on the current generation. The reason for this is historic. Alpina's founder Bukard Bovensiepen (the father of the current CEO) invented the steering wheel buttons from which F1 teams took the inspiration to invest paddle shifters, a different form of the same idea. In terms of how do they compare with paddle shifters, initial impressions are good. The Alpina buttons are very satisfying to press but I suspect in hardcore cornering, they will not be as easy to access as paddle shifters. All that said, I never do hardcore cornering so they suit me just fine.
Last edited by suhaas307 : 3rd January 2021 at 07:52.
Reason: Removing copied mod-note
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