Description
The M5 ended up blowing an engine, the E46 Compact had a power steering failure, and somehow we still got a ton of laps in, loaded everything up, and headed home with smiles on our faces.
That’s drifting and this is Bimmer Invasion. That’s BMW life. Expensive, slightly broken, but absolutely worth it.
If you want to support the chaos, the broken parts, the weird builds, and whatever questionable BMW decision happens next, grab some merch at chelseadenofa.com. It helps keep this whole circus rolling, and apparently we’re in the market for one slightly used M5 engine.
I’ve been drifting BMWs for around 20 years now, so pulling up to an event that was built around BMWs, drifting, and a car show all in one place felt pretty special. These cars have been a massive part of my life, my driving style, my builds, and honestly a huge part of why I still love drifting the way I do.
For this one, we brought out the BMW M5 — four seats, twin turbo, near 1000 horsepower, and basically a rolling smile machine. We spent the day giving rides, doing laps, and showing people that a big luxury sedan can still get absolutely rowdy when you point it sideways.
We also brought out the new E46 Compact build, which is one of my favorite kinds of cars: weird, different, and guaranteed to make BMW people argue. The E46 Compact was never sold in the U.S., so this was the first event where people could actually see it in person, get close to it, and decide if they loved it or hated it. And honestly, both reactions are exactly why we built it.
The day was full of BMWs, drifting, car show energy, good people, and a bunch of friends like Jordan from RK Tunes, Duarte from Drift HQ, and Adam LZ. It felt like one of those events that reminds you why drifting is so fun in the first place.
Of course, it wouldn’t be a real drift day if everything made it home happy.
Drop a comment and let me know what you think of the E46 Compact. Is it cool, cursed, ugly, or exactly the kind of weird build drifting needs more of?