Alpina has pulled the covers off its 2023 D4 S Gran Coupe and given us a reminder that diesel power can still be desirable, no matter what the sales figures say. The concept of a diesel luxury car is dead in North America, and even in Europe buyers have been turning their backs on compression-ignition power in favor of gasoline and electric alternatives. But the D4 S’s ability to hit 100 km/h from rest in less than 5 seconds and return 6.9 l/100 km (40.9 mpg UK/34 mpg US) is looking seriously appealing in the wake of record gas prices.
Though the D4 S is new, we’re familiar
with its constituent components. The body and interior is shared with the B4,
Alpina’s take on the BMW 4-Series Gran Coupe, which was launched in March 2022.
And the bi-turbo, mild-hybrid 3.0-liter straight-six powertrain is lifted from
the D3 S, BMW’s hot diesel-powered 3-Series sedan.
The 350 hp output makes the D4 S
substantially less powerful than the 488 hp gasoline-equivalent, but
both cars generate the same 730 Nm of torque, and both send that
muscle to all four wheels via a ZF automatic transmission. The D4 S hits 100 km/h in 4.8 seconds and will run to 270 km/h if you can find an
empty stretch of autobahn, says the company. Those numbers mean it gives second
best to the B4, which records 3.7 seconds and 301 km/h, but also
sucks up 40 percent more fuel.
Visually, the two coupes are almost
indistinguishable, managing to stand out from the regular 4-Series Gran Coupe
herd, without having to shout. You get Alpina’s instantly recognizable 20-spoke
forged alloys wrapped with Alpina-specific Pirelli P Zero rubber, the classic
Alpina chin spoiler, a small rear spoiler, and a console plaque with your car’s
individual build number.
And if you choose Alpina Blue or Alpina
Green, two paint colors exclusive to Alpina’s cars, you’ll ensure your D4 S
isn’t mistaken for a BMW version, although a range of BMW colors and the
company’s Individual paints are also available. However, going down the
Individual route, or adding carbon brake discs will definitely swell the
€ 79,700 (US$ 83,700) price Alpina is quoting for the first cars arriving with
European customers this September.

