Episodes

  • Buying a Used F22: Which Engine, Which Risks, Which Car to Buy
    Apr 25 2026
    Buying a used BMW F22 looks straightforward until you start living with one. This episode closes the gap between what buyers assume and what ownership actually delivers — covering every engine variant in the range and what each one means for your money, your risk, and your long-term experience.

    The F22 isn't one car. It's four distinct cars sharing a body. The 228i's N20 four-cylinder carries a well-documented timing chain risk that can turn a bargain into a write-off at higher mileages — and the N26 variant found in emissions states doesn't escape that problem. Understanding what to listen for, and what questions to ask before handing over money, can be the difference between a great buy and an expensive lesson.

    The M235i and its N55 inline six sit in a different category. A well-maintained example with clean service history remains one of the most compelling arguments in the entire range: real performance, a character the four-cylinder cars can't match, and none of the chain anxiety that follows the N20.

    Post-2016 cars sharpen the picture further. The 230i's B48 is not a headline engine, but its tuning response is disproportionate to the cost of the work — making it the practical choice for buyers who want a car they can develop incrementally. The M240i's B58 is the engine the F22 was waiting for: factory headroom, a deep tuning community, and the ability to produce numbers that close the gap with cars costing two or three times as much.

    This episode is the buying guide the rest of the series has been building toward.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
    Show More Show Less
    14 mins
  • BMW M235i Origins: Why the F22 Almost Never Got Built
    Apr 25 2026
    The BMW F22 2 Series Coupe nearly died in a boardroom before it ever reached the road. In this opening chapter of the F22 Owner's Guide, we trace how a shrinking coupe market, a company-wide efficiency revolution, and one critical engineering argument combined to produce what many enthusiasts now consider the last genuinely pure BMW sports coupe of the modern era.

    We set the scene inside BMW during the early 2010s — the era of forced-induction transitions, retiring naturally aspirated engines, and the N20 and N55 arriving to replace them. The question wasn't whether turbocharged engines could perform. It was where to put them to extract everything they offered. The answer was a lighter, shorter-wheelbase rear-wheel-drive coupe — and the business case that eventually got it greenlit.

    We then examine what the F22 was actually replacing. On paper, it slotted in above the 1 Series Coupe. In practice, it stepped into the shoes of the ageing E9x 3 Series — the E46, E90, E92 — giving a generation of used-BMW buyers somewhere credible and modern to land.

    The episode also breaks down the launch engine lineup: the N20-powered 228i and its notorious timing chain tensioner weakness, the California-specific N26 variant and why it matters for used buyers in emissions-regulated states, and the N55-powered M235i — the car that earned the real enthusiast praise and set the tone for everything the F22 became. If you're researching an F22 purchase or just want to understand what makes this car tick, this is where the story starts.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
    Show More Show Less
    13 mins
  • Engine Evolution and Turning Points: How the F22 Built Its Reputation
    Apr 25 2026
    The BMW F22 didn't arrive with fanfare. It arrived with a plan. This episode traces the engineering decisions, engine evolutions, and market positioning that turned a compact rear-wheel-drive coupe into one of the most respected enthusiast cars of its generation.

    The story starts with the F22's inheritance from the E9x 3 Series — a proven audience that wanted rear-wheel-drive handling, a manual option, and genuine chassis balance without M car prices. BMW didn't just absorb that audience; they upgraded the proposition at a moment when much of the industry was abandoning it.

    From there, the episode works through the four engines that defined the F22's production life. The N20-powered 228i offered a competitive 241 horsepower, but its timing chain and tensioner failure pattern made it one of the most critical due-diligence items for used buyers today. The N26 variant — fitted to emissions-compliant cars in California and select northeastern states — shares that concern. The M235i changed the conversation entirely: the N55 inline-six brought 322 horsepower, a broader powerband, and a qualitative shift in character that made it feel like a different machine, not just a faster one.

    The 2016 refresh brought the B48 and B58 to the 230i and M240i respectively. On paper the power gains look modest. In practice, the architectural shift — newer modular platforms, improved refinement, a stronger foundation for modification — is exactly what transformed the later F22 into the used-market benchmark it is today.

    If you're buying used, building a shortlist, or just trying to understand why certain F22s command stronger prices, this episode gives you the framework.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
    Show More Show Less
    13 mins
  • Common Faults, Engine Codes & What to Check Before You Buy
    Apr 25 2026
    The BMW 235i's reputation as an enthusiast car is well-earned — but reputation doesn't pay for a timing chain replacement. This episode cuts through the ownership mythology and gets specific about what actually breaks, which engine to worry about, and how to buy a used F22 without inheriting someone else's deferred maintenance.

    The N20 in the early 228i carries the most significant known risk: a timing chain and tensioner setup that degrades quietly under real-world use, with expensive consequences if you miss the window. The N26 — fitted to cars sold in California, New York, and New Jersey — shares the same vulnerability despite its different emissions hardware. If you're looking at a used 228i from either coast, the inspection checklist doesn't change based on the engine code.

    The N55 in the M235i sits in a measurably better category. Its failure modes are well-documented from years of use across the BMW range, and they tend to be predictable rather than catastrophic. The catch is that the M235i attracted buyers who drove hard — and oil change history on a used example is the primary document, not a nice bonus.

    The post-2016 cars bring the B48 and B58 into the picture. The 230i's B48 addresses the timing chain concerns of the N20, but high-mileage examples still need a thorough look at oil leaks, cooling system condition, and injector wear. The M240i's B58 is where the engineering argument becomes genuinely compelling — factory power, a strong reliability record, and a tuning response that makes it one of the most capable platforms in its price bracket.

    This is the episode you listen to before committing to any F22 purchase.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
    Show More Show Less
    13 mins
  • N20, N55, B48, B58: Which F22 Engine Should You Actually Buy?
    Apr 25 2026
    The BMW F22's engine lineup is the most important decision any buyer faces — and the one most likely to go wrong without the right information. Episode 4 of the F22 Owner's Guide traces the full engine evolution across the 2014–2021 production run, from the N20 four-cylinder in the 228i to the B58 inline-six that powers the M240i.

    Start with the N20. It gave the entry-level 228i genuine performance credentials at an accessible price, but it carried a structural weakness that could end an engine without warning: a timing chain tensioner prone to early failure at higher mileage, or sooner when service history was patchy. On a car positioned as a first proper BMW, a catastrophic repair bill that rivals the car's value isn't a footnote — it's the central risk. The N26 variant sold in California, New York, and New Jersey carries the same mechanical story under a different badge.

    The N55 in the M235i was a different proposition. Three hundred and twenty-two horsepower from a proven platform that had already accumulated a real-world failure profile across multiple BMW models. Oil leaks and cooling system wear at high mileage, yes — but no single structural weak point threatening total engine loss.

    The 2016 refresh changed the platform meaningfully. The B48 replaced the N20 in the 230i, the B58 replaced the N55 in the M240i, and both arrived with revised timing chain architecture that addressed the N20's critical fault. The B58 in particular has built a reputation for robustness that's rare in this segment — and factory power figures that are deliberately conservative, which matters the moment you start thinking about modifications.

    This episode gives you the framework to assess any used F22 before you buy.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
    Show More Show Less
    12 mins
  • F22 Legacy: What the BMW 235i Leaves Behind and What It Means Now
    Apr 25 2026
    The BMW F22 235i didn't earn its cult status through marketing — it earned it through the people who drove one and decided it was worth keeping. This final chapter of the series steps back from fault lists and spec sheets to ask the question that matters most: what does the F22 actually leave behind, and what does that mean if you're shopping for one now?

    The answer runs through four engines and seven years of production. The N20-powered 228i entered the market with promise and exited with a reputation shaped by timing chain failures that forced real decisions on owners. The N55 M235i avoided that acute problem and drew the most engaged enthusiast buyers from the start. Then the 2016 refresh brought the B48 and the B58 — more modern, better understood, and fundamentally more capable platforms. The B58 in particular changed the conversation: 335 horsepower from the factory, a well-mapped tune ecosystem, and documented gains that make modification predictable rather than speculative.

    But the legacy of the F22 isn't just about which engine to pick. It's about what the car represents in BMW's lineage. The F22 contains the entire arc of BMW's turbocharged transition — from the N20 through to the B58 — in a single model. It kept rear-wheel drive when rivals were abandoning it. It kept the short wheelbase and sharp responses that made earlier BMWs matter to enthusiasts. And it did all of that while remaining genuinely accessible on the used market.

    This episode is the one to share with anyone still on the fence. It's the context that ties the whole series together.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
    Show More Show Less
    12 mins
  • Fault Lines: Engine Reliability, Timing Chains & Buying a Used F22
    Apr 25 2026
    The BMW 235i's engine lineup looks straightforward on paper — four engines across eight years of production, each representing a step in BMW's shift to universal turbocharging. In practice, those engines tell very different reliability stories, and buying a used F22 without understanding the differences is how buyers end up with repair bills they weren't expecting.

    This episode works through every powerplant in the F22 range and what each one actually costs to live with. The N20 in the 228i is where the conversation has to start: its timing chain and tensioner failures became one of the defining reliability stories in modern BMW history, arriving at mileages where owners assumed they still had years of trouble-free running ahead. The N26, sold in emissions-compliant states, carried identical architecture and identical risk — a different badge over the same vulnerability.

    The N55 in the M235i tells a calmer story. More mechanically mature, different failure character, and without the acute timing chain exposure of the four-cylinders. The post-2016 B48 and B58 represent BMW's more fully developed turbocharged architecture — both more robust, but with their own accumulating costs at higher mileages. The B58 in the M240i is widely regarded as one of BMW's stronger modern engines, and used pricing reflects that reputation.

    Across all four engines, the ZF eight-speed automatic and six-speed manual remain consistent and well-proven — the gearbox was never a moving target in the reliability picture.

    If you're evaluating a used F22 right now, this episode is the preparation your pre-purchase inspection needs.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
    Show More Show Less
    12 mins