The 2015 BMW M4 with a 3.0-liter TwinPower inline six takes on a 2014 Dodge Charger SRT 8 with a 6.4 Liter Hemi V8 in a drag race. Who wins?
On paper, a drag race between a new 2015 BMW M4 with an inline 6-cylinder and a 2014 Dodge Charger SRT 8 with a Hemi V8 shouldn’t even be close. In the real world, on a drag strip, things can turn out much different. The new 2015 BMW M4 is powered by a TwinPower turbocharged 3.0-liter inline six-cylinder which produces 425 horsepower and 406 lb ft of torque. The 2014 Dodge Charger SRT-8 is powered by a 6.4-liter Hemi V8 which pumps out 470 horsepower and 475 lb ft of torque. No contest right? Watch and see who wins.
The new BMW M4 runs the quarter mile in 12.27 at 119 mph, the 2014 Dodge Dodge Charger SRT8 12.70 at 108 mph. The specs would say the Charger should have a big advantage over the M4. But take a look at the difference in weight. The M4 weights in at 3,556 lbs (1,612kg), the Charger SRT 8 tops the scales at 4,400 lbs (1.995kg). The M4 is also turbocharged while the SRT 8 is naturally aspirated.
MUST SEE: Watch a valet take customers M4 for a joy ride in a parking garage and then gets fired [video]
Also noticed the BMW M4 leaves the line a full second before the Charger SRT-8 and gets a hole shot right out of the gate. The M4 driver was clearly quicker at the line. This proves there’s more to the story than what’s on paper or even what happens at the strip. Take the same two cars, switch drivers, and there could be a very different outcome.
How is this a challenge? The
How is this a challenge? The M4 comes in over $15k more than the SRT8. The real fight would've been an M4 v. Hellcat as they're both priced the same.
Or, you could pit a Charger
Or, you could pit a Charger Hellcat (6.2 Hemi with Supercharger) against the M4. I believe the MSRP of the HC Charger is less than the M4.
as it was said in the text
as it was said in the text too, the Charger driver obviously was sleeping at the start. I wonder why was this race even published when the major difference here was not in the performance of the cars, but of the drivers.