09-18-2023, 06:38 PM | #23 |
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09-18-2023, 06:48 PM | #24 |
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I bought out the lease on our X5 but will not be buying another X5. Don't like the interior on the newer models.
Probably will go back to a sports sedan or wagon. Will make that decision when I'm ready to move on but leaning toward an Audi RS6 Avant. |
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09-18-2023, 06:58 PM | #25 |
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Maybe the M5 wagon?
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09-18-2023, 07:03 PM | #26 | |
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Vehicle interiors are changing rapidly and not just BMW. We looked at the new 7th generation Mustang GTs the other day. Awesome car with great V8 sound. Even they are sporting the greatly expanded LCD across the dashboard which is very cool. |
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09-18-2023, 07:12 PM | #27 |
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Well, just joined the X5 family, but I did have a 2019 xDrive 330i for about 2 months. Turned out to be too small for my life, so moved on to an Audi A6.
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09-18-2023, 08:01 PM | #28 | |
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09-18-2023, 11:37 PM | #29 |
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I've never owned 2 vehicles from the same manufacturer, but do like the blend of sport and luxury BMW offers. While not as luxurious as the X5, I'd like to get into a M3/4 next. I came from an Audi Q7 and while I liked a lot about it, especially the quiet interior (X5 is noisy at HWY speeds), they tend to remove luxury items on their sporty models which is why I tried BMW. Wishful thinking would be a Panamera Turbo S since theres room for my girls in the back.
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09-19-2023, 08:05 AM | #31 | |
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09-19-2023, 08:17 AM | #32 |
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The X3 I came from was a 2011 35i. The only thing I miss is its raw power. The G05 is just as quick but it's much more refined so you don't get that sudden thrust into the seatback like I did with my X3, especially when I put it in sport mode. However, this is the price you pay for luxury, compared to the G05, that X3 was pretty crude. You'll get into an X5 and never look back
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09-19-2023, 09:46 AM | #33 |
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So far all rumors are pointing to the fact that it will be coming here. Of course anything can change between now and when production begins in November of 24 but it is sounding like it may actually become a reality this time around. The biggest concern then would be at what price point…
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Current - 2024 G05 X5 ///M60i in Java Green Past - 2005 E53 X5 3.0i in Titanium Silver; 2008 E92 335i in Montego Blue; 2019 G01 X3 M40i in Glacier Silver; 2022 G80 M3 Competition in Twilight Purple |
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09-19-2023, 09:55 AM | #34 |
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For reasons I can’t quite recall, we moved out of BMWs into Lexuses a couple of years ago. The Lexi were virtually bulletproof, but soooooo boring. Hard to stay awake driving them. Now, I’m in an iX M60 and I’m trying to lever my wife out of her Lexus RX350 and into an X5 50e because I absolutely hate driving her Lexus.
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09-19-2023, 12:32 PM | #35 |
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I've been into cars and specifically BMWs for most of my life. I've owned two BMWs previously--2012 E92 328i 6MT coupe (that I shed a tear when I sold, didn't have to sell, never should have) and 2019 G01 X3 M40i. The E92 was a phenomenal car with 100,000+ relatively trouble-free miles. Broke the cupholder and had a DMTL pump failure, both covered under warranty. That's it. Not a squeak or a rattle to be found.
Never really fell in love with the G01 M40i. It was a nice car, as fast as anyone needs, but it just felt like it was trying to do everything--be super sporty with a stiff ride, but also a big top-heavy SUV. It did things well but it was too much of a compromise for me. Plus it had some annoying issues, like the infamous kidney grill shutter failure and a control arm replacement, in my relatively short three years with it. Overall, it was a great car, and man did I love that B58. Just never bonded with it. Then they started offering stupid money for used cars. I sold my M40i 3 years old with 28k miles for a few thousand away from what I paid for it new, and bought a new Tesla Model 3 Long Range. I like new tech, so I wanted to try a battery electric vehicle and Full Self-Driving. Big mistake. Huge. The Tesla hasn't really "broken" per se, but it's a literal rattletrap. It is put together with less care than a 1994 Hyundai. When I got it brand new, the trunk was so misaligned it rubbed off some paint on the rear fender. The panel gaps are an assortment of different widths. One of the parking sensors was pushed in, and there was a scratch on the door jamb that had a Tesla inspection sticker on there--but that they just didn't do anything about. And that's Tesla ownership in a nutshell. Volume, volume, volume. Get them out the door and get paid for them, then basically abandon you to terrible service. Doesn't matter--they have your money already, and enough rabid fanaticism around them to not miss you as a customer if you move on. The seats rattle. The doors rattle. The paint is like an Earl Scheib job from the 80s--feels like some doofus just sort of waved a spray gun in the general direction of the body and called it good. And the tech...okay, that deserves its own paragraph. It can be downright dangerous. Even the bog standard driver assist features are not nearly as good as those on even a Toyota. My auto windshield wipers come on in the bright blue sky, and are nowhere to be found in a torrential downpour. Turning them on manually requires looking at the damn screen to punch through menus to find the controls--in the pouring rain. And Autopilot? The most nerve-wracking feature ever. You just never know when the car is going to decide to stomp on the brakes--hard--and scare the crap out of you. It's not just annoying, it's a safety hazard. BMW has better driver assist tech than Tesla and I don't even think it's close. Full self-driving is another story. In short, it ain't. I compare it to teaching a 15-year-old how to drive. You're simultaneously impressed with what they do know, and horrified as it tries to send you off into the curb, oncoming traffic, or Wonderland. It speeds up and slows down on some interstates as it gets really confused on the speed limit. If it sees a shadow under the bridge, it will throw on the phantom brakes. I have to intervene regularly. It's nowhere near ready for a wide release. I don't think it is anywhere as good as Elon Musk intimates. Disclaimer: I'm rooting for it, but it's not there yet. So less than two short years later, which is far shorter than I usually sell a car, I'm getting rid of it for an X5 50e. I think a plug-in hybrid (especially one with that beautiful B58 attached) is a better fit for the kind of traveling my wife and I do. The DAP on the X5 looks head and shoulders above anything Tesla offers--you can't even take your hands off the steering wheel in any Tesla at any time. I know the Model 3 will make a great purchase for the right buyer, but it's just not right for me. And it's not right for anyone who has any sort of expectation that the car will drive itself autonomously any time in the next several years. Most of the rest of my family has Volvos--my wife, my folks and my in-laws. Roof leaks and electrical faults (which may or may not be because of the roof leaks) seem to plague them. And they're just not too inspiring to drive. They're "fine." But every BMW I've driven just seems to be on another level. And as for my itch for performance, my wife is now thinking about a G42 M240i and I am here for it. With that and the X5, I think we'd have a garage where we'd both be happy all of the time. TL;DR: My first non-BMW purchase in a decade was a Tesla. It was a downgrade and I didn't like it. Going back to the X5 and not looking back. |
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09-19-2023, 07:58 PM | #36 | ||
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09-19-2023, 09:42 PM | #37 |
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Not to bash you, or criticize your judgment that’s like going from a Q8 to Q5 Both really nice cars but just much smaller the macan is very over priced . I would’ve stuck with the. X5 Not to mention the ridiculous pricing on service and maintenance
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09-20-2023, 06:58 AM | #38 |
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You pose an interesting question that was far less likely to see when I got my first BMW in 2015. Back then I simply wanted a peppy, luxury adjacent vehicle and the lease price on a 328i was a good value. Previously, while it was never a stretch financially to own a BMW, I was a value shopper. Then I got an almost perfect CPO 535Xdrive, then ordered a 2020 540Xdrive and now my current X5.
I was never deluded into thinking BMW made the perfect luxury car. but the quality (interior is a solid step up in quality over my wife's GLE 350), drivetrain (absolutely nothing beats the B58/ZF combo) and the overall shape kept me in the fold. At a lease price of low $600s per month I could forgive some of the faults of the current crop of BMWs. At almost double that for a modestly equipped 40i I am less forgiving. Understand my '22 has been trouble free and is a nice vehicle overall. I still have the 3/22 version of the software and still have Auto Start Stop coded off. Seeing where BMW seems to be going concerns me. First and probably most important is the decontenting. While other markets can still get air suspension, acoustic glass, etc. BMW has made a conscious and deliberate effort to screw American buyers. In almost every road test of 3 and 5 series there is a note how the adaptive dampers make the ride very good. Those same dampers which are included as standard on every X5 seem to be the farthest thing from adaptive on terrible PA roads. If they worked at all I would probably not consider other vehicles. But the simple answer, which I would happily pay the $1000 cost for, is the air suspension. But while you can get it in Canada and elsewhere, it has been withheld from the 40i in the USA for 3 years now. They make it. It is available. We just don't get it. And let's discuss the auto start stop. There are really two things at issue: one is the lack of an off button. The second is that it is poorly engineered. As noted my wife has an MB GLE 350. Her car went in for service and they gave us the newly redesigned GLC (one category lower, comparable to an X3) for a loaner. Disregard for a moment the notably superior ride over potholes and expansion joints (with no EDC). It is also now a mild hybrid. MB does the mild hybrid far better. First, even in 2023 it has an on off button. However, even with it on it is far, far more seamless than BMW's system. If I am going to pay premium prices I would at least like a vehicle that rides as well as (or not much worse) that a Hyundai Santa Fe (which my mother in law has and does ride better than my X5). It seems like, other than the upgraded power for the 40i (which is already the best powertrain in the segment) almost every "upgrade" on the LCI is a step backward (powertrain issues on the 50e, removal of rear door sensors, increased road noise, A/C issues on X5 and X7, inability to code out A**, continued poor ride quality). Never say never. The new 5 series will be driven when it comes out, but if the LCI of the X5 is an indicator, I am not confident. And maybe some of the items mentioned will be addressed by the time I start looking into a new vehicle in 18 months. The new e class seems to have gone back to more traditional focus of comfort and luxury and it has made more options available, not less (jury is out on MB reliability). But as of right now I am very much considering other manufacturers for my next vehicle when I do not even test drive any other brand in my last 3 vehicles. |
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09-20-2023, 08:25 AM | #39 | |
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2021 BMW X5 45e 2020 Audi Etron S Prestige (wife) 2017 Range Rover HSE 2016 Audi SQ5 2014 Audi A8 2014 Audi Allroad (wife) 2012 BMW X3 3.5i 2010 Porsche 911 2008 Lexus GX 2006 Range Rover HSE 2004 BMW 328 (wife) For context I bought my first BMW as an 18 year old in 1979 (a 1979 320i S). I’ve owned collectible examples of M cars along the way (e30 M3, e28 M5, e36 M3, e46 M3, etc). Typically we would have the wife’s car, something sporty but road trip worthy and a SUV. In other words, I’ve loved and owned BMW’s for almost 45 years and at one point, six straight car purchases were BMW’s. I’ve never leased a car and the only time I finance is when its forced upon me (BMW Financial trunk cash/zero apr) and then I paid it off after 3 or 4 months. My 2021 X5 45e has been a fantastic car. It totally worked for my daily needs where the electric only range covered 95% of my daily duties. Spring and fall commutes were completely electric and winter and summer commutes the ICE would kick in for the last several miles when the battery depleted. Charged every night, absolutely wonderful for my needs. Never a warning light, never an issue, just routine oil changes/recommended service intervals. 60,000 trouble free miles over approximately 33 months. In fact, I’m struggling to remember any unanticipated dealer visits for any of the aforementioned cars other than the various Takata airbag recalls and a couple of scheduled TSB campaigns on the Etron. With that preamble, I ordered a 2024 X5 50e from my dealer. Later went in to see the new interior layout…I was lukewarm and not really feeling the full integration of HVAC into the touchscreen but I thought what the heck, I would get used to it. Then drove one and thought the HVAC through the new vents was atrocious (yes, I adjusted the airflow settings through iDrive). Then cue up all the recent troubles so many have experienced with all the CEL’s, stop sales, etc. Reading about the lengthy stays in the shop and I decided to move on from BMW and cancelled my order. One reason in particular is I live 4 hours from my nearest BMW dealer (wonderful dealer) and potential extended shop stays would be terribly inconvenient given the drop off and retrieval logistics. Previous to placing my 2024 X5 order I also had ordered a Land Rover Defender 110 at the beginning of 2023 and it came in in August. Ordered it for the mountains, not as a daily, however the more I drove it awaiting the X5 50e arrival I just began to question whether the new BMW ethos was consistent with what I wanted and how I drive…The Defender is not as sporty as the X5 but I didnt particulary drive my X5 that way…it was just transportation and basically just a taller wagon/estate. The Defender is a more comfortable road trip car that the X5 due to the seats and the driving position. Its a terrific vehicle and I dig the throwback styling inside and out and I further appreciate that it doesnt feel like a VR video game to drive. Extraordinarily capable. I believe BMW has evolved their seating away from where they were once dominant…today they are less than ideal with their seating comfort. The BMW I first did business with would never have beta tested their cars on the customer and I can’t for the life of me figure out how you screw up a LCI like they seem to have done. I’m not sure I will ever return to BMW as the interiors have followed an unwelcome trend and reliability/QC has evidently become a thing but at the end of the day, these are just cars and I’m kind of unemotional about which one I buy. I just want it to do the job. Hopefully no flames for just answering the OP’s question. The X5 50e, on paper, is the ideal daily driver-road trip vehicle but the execution has been comical. |
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09-20-2023, 08:31 AM | #40 |
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Some of us forget that BMW is and has been a performance oriented vehicle throughout its history. Certain BMW models are much more driver/performance oriented but all share a common DNA with this being a very well known fact in automotive circles.
Guys who are focused on extremely plush, soft, interiors, sound isolation, and a silky smooth ride will likely be better served by a Cadillac or Lexus type vehicle. |
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09-20-2023, 09:08 AM | #41 | |
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When I first began buying BMW’s, they occupied the space between Porsche and Mercedes….sportier, more driver oriented than Mercedes and more versatile than Porsche. Audi wasn’t in the picture then…it was just a rebadged VW. I drove cross country in my e30 M3 and it was terrific. I had a 1988 911 Targa at the same time and I preferred the M3 for 90% of driving. BMW is eroding its brand equity and credibility but that’s ok too, its theirs to erode if they choose to. Some may cross shop with Lexus or Cadillac as you mention, however I dont. |
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09-20-2023, 09:21 AM | #42 | |
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Porsche, BMW, Audi, MB, are all evolving as they do and have always done. Quite unrealistic to expect any of them to market the same vehicles to a small number of traditionalists highly critical and unable to accept change. Change will occur in every thing whether we as individuals are on board or not. You can accept and enjoy new products which will never be perfect or elect to stick with prior models and essentially live in the past. |
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09-20-2023, 09:33 AM | #43 | |
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I feel like Porsche and Toyota are mixed. I feel like VW has totally lost it. I feel like Mercedes and Honda are getting better again. |
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09-20-2023, 09:39 AM | #44 | |
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And lest you brand me as the antithesis to the fanboy, I have multiple 2021 X7’s for my workplace runabouts. I dont drive them but once or twice per year and hadnt given the HVAC controls much thought until recently. They are perfect for what I need them to be and I have several more on order, I just wont be the primary driver. |
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