03-27-2024, 01:46 PM | #23 |
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According to the UK website, the 50e weighs 2495kg and the 60e 2435kg… less than the weight of a typical adult difference. If equipped with similar suspensions, there is not a big difference at least because of weight. On the 50e, the weight is lower, and distributed F/R, whereas with the 60e, there’s lots more up front. With the supplied exhaust systems, the sound from the 60e may please more people, but that’s totally subjective.
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03-27-2024, 02:15 PM | #24 | |
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I'm also on the fence of hybrid vs. gas. One advantage of the 50e that I can't ignore in any case is that it drives so silky smooth. Not sure if it's the hybrid system or the air sus or both but damn! Not Lexus/Toyota kind of smooth (no offense) but smooth and powerful at the same time, like a beast hiding in shadow and can burst out all the energy whenever needed. Being a mustang owner for 7 years the smooth drive attracts me the most. Absolute love the deep growl of my pony but now it sounds a bit nosiy to me. Guess it's the "Tell me you’re old without telling me you’re old" time. But if I decided to own a 50e for 10+ years, it will likely break my wallet with higher repair cost. No one knows how these hybrids will hold up. Tough decision! |
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03-30-2024, 01:20 AM | #25 |
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When you remove the vowels from the word HOPE, you are left with HP.
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03-30-2024, 06:21 PM | #26 |
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All BMWs tend to be expensive for maintenance if you keep it for a long time after warranty expires, but my limited experience is that being electrified has not added to those expenses. While it’s possible for a catastrophic failure in the PHEV system, and batteries do degrade as they age and get through more and more charge/discharge cycles, until one or more actually fails, you can still just keep driving it and the only thing that changes is your maximum range. If you live in a CARB state, you have even a longer battery warranty than the rest of the USA, and more than most other parts of the world because of the way they manage the capacity. Most people will want newer tech by the 8-10 years of the warranty life, so it really shouldn’t be a major detriment. By the time it’s that old, regardless of the type, it will have depreciated quite a bit to a fairly low, but stable value. On my i3 that I kept for 6-years before the X5, it retained almost all of its original battery capacity, and the only non-warranty issue I had was related to a valve in the cooling system. It’s too early to tell about the 50e’s long-term reliability…you cannot equate warranty issues on a new vehicle with long-term issues, as those issues tend to get resolved…nobody wants repeated issues; neither the customer nor the manufacturer. BMW tends to use those repairs to figure out what went wrong, and fix it, either with s/w changes, or hardware updates so a newer one, even if it is repaired, tends to be more reliable over time.
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