BMW X Models 2007 News
Crossover coupe beaming brightly
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By Paul Gover · 03 May 2007
It has confirmed early details of its new X6 and believes it will create a new path as 4WDs move deeper into the crossover world between existing car classes.
BMW is convinced there are plenty of potential customers for a vehicle that will look and drive like a prestige car but still sit high in traffic and move away from the existing family wagon styling.
“The X6 is a new concept. This is the most refined coupe SUV you will find in the world,” BMW Australia managing director Guenther Seemann says. “This is a real coupe. It will be coming at the beginning of next year.”
The man who heads the X6 program, former BMW motorsport engineer Albert Biermann, has been in Australia for the introduction of the X5 and confirms Seemann's glowing praise.
“This is something very different ... but still an X car,” he says.
BMW is expected to preview the X6 late this year or early next year, most likely at the Detroit motor show in January, once it has fired its new M3 V8 super coupe into action.
The X6 will be built at the BMW factory in Spartanburg, South Carolina, where the success-story X5 is also built.
“I believe it will not compete with the X5 because it is a four-door, four-seater,” Seeman says. “Some 6 Series and Porsche 911 customers may want to drive a different car and this could be the X6.
“Porsche Cayenne and Range Rover Sport are the kind of cars that will compete.”
Seemann says BMW will renew its vehicle line-up by 2011, hinting at new premium models beyond the X6.
Motor show serves up stars of the future
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By Ashlee Pleffer · 03 Mar 2007
HOLDENThe focus at the GM-owned stand willbe the concept of the next generation of America's iconic muscle car, the Chevrolet Camaro. The partly Australian-designed sports coupe concept will make its debut here.Holden will be evaluating public response to determine if the Camaro will be a viable option for the local market.The new model has been confirmed for production in North America at the beginning of 2009. It is expected to be identical to the concept model, a modern interpretation of its original 1969 form.Part of the Camaro's engineering and design work is done in Melbourne.Holden is also unveiling a diesel version of its Captiva family all-wheel-drive plus the new Epica mid-size sedan. FORDThe hottest new baby car for Australia is the Fiesta XR4 (pictured on today's cover) which Ford will start selling here mid-year.The European-built car will complement its big brother the Focus XR5 Turbo.The XR4 will be powered by a 2.0-litre Duratec 16 valve engine. Falcon Cobra-style stripes will enhance its racy looks.Also following the Cobra style is a limited-edition run of 200 FPV GTs to commemorate 40 years since the first Falcon V8, the XR GT, was built in 1967.The distinctive black with gold stripes machine will sell for $65,110 from next month. TOYOTAThe company will reveal its latest prestige performance vehicles. The locally designed Toyotas make their world debut in Melbourne.The TRD range features a supercharged 3.5-litre, V6 Aurion sports sedan and the supercharged 4.0-litre, V6 HiLux sports utility.The Aurion will go on sale in the middle of the year and the Hilux will be launched towards the end of the year. AUDI The surprise of the show could be Audi's new S5 and A5 models, which make their world debut at the Geneva show next week.The A5 will be available in both four-cylinder and six-cylinder petrol and diesel engines, with the 3.2-litre, 195kW V6 petrol topping the range.The S5 has an eight-cylinder 260kW engine, producing 440Nm of torque. It sprints from nought to 100km/h in 5.9 seconds.The coupes will be available to order from March, with deliveries starting in June. JEEPThe Chrysler brand will preview three of its new production models in Melbourne.The all-new Jeep Wrangler and Wrangler Unlimited will be the main attraction to the stand, along with the first compact SUV for Jeep, the Compass.The Wrangler has been redesigned, and has a new diesel engine added to the range.The Unlimited is a four-door model, with five seats and extended wheelbase.The new Compass will be available in both petrol and diesel engines when it goes on sale this month and the company believes it will appeal to a younger audience. NISSANNissan will unveil three new models, including the much-talked-about Qashqai, which has been renamed Dualis for the Australian market. The Dualis will be launched in Australia towards the end of this year and will slot into the small segment.Nissan will also display the new Micra, a 1.4-litre small car which will also go on sale towards the end of the year and the revised 350Z. With a new 3.5-litre, V6 engine, the 350Z will go on sale in April. It also features changed interior and exterior designs. HONDAHonda's latest offering in fuel-cell technology, the new FCX concept, is making its Australian debut in Melbourne.The low-riding, sporty sedan runs on hydrogen and has more power, while still offeringa a full-sized cabin. Honda is currently working on a retail version of the prototype for the US and Japan. EDAGThe engineering and design company will exhibit its EDAG SUV, a one-of-kind model based on the Porsche Cayenne. The modified SUV has been lowered and reshaped and the roofline dropped by 70mm.It has a 447kW turbo engine, with large air inlets on the front bumper for the intercoolers. Wedge-shaped side skirts and muscular fenderflares give the EDAG SUV even more character. It sits on 23-inch wheels with ultra-low profile tyres.Inside, four sports seats are separated by a full-length centre console, which features a DVD player and Sony PS2 game console. BMWWe'll see the debut of the new X5 in Australia at the motor show.The revised SUV will go on sale in April with a 3.0-litre diesel and a 4.8-litre, V8 petrol engine. A 3.0-litre petrol will be available from June. Prices will start at $80,000.BMW will also show the 3 Series convertible as well as the the updated 5 Series and 1 Series. MAZDAMazda will feature the Australian preview of its new large SUV, the CX-9. The seven-seater will be the third SUV for Mazda when it goes on sale in Australia in January.It is expected to cost $55,000-$60,000.Mazda will have both a cut model with the roof taken off, as well as a left-hand drive, North American production model on display.
BMW X3 SUV first test
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By Stephen Corby · 22 Sep 2006
Theoretically, you could launch just about any motorised vehicle in Germany - a Korean sports car, a Yank tank, a hulky bulky SUV, you name it - and it would end up feeling fabulous.The joy of driving the country’s speed-limitless freeways and its smoothly surfaced and spectacularly twisty back roads is such that it rubs off a feeling of wellbeing onto whatever you happen to be piloting.Even catching a bus can be invigorating, when the bus is doing the sort of speeds you could be hung, drawn and quartered for in some countries.So, it’s possible that I was more impressed by BMW’s revised and refreshed X3 than I would have been if it had been unveiled in, say, Victoria (which is pretty much the philosophical polar opposite of Germany).But it’s also fair to say that the baby soft-roader had a hell of a lot of ground to make up, because the original was a stinker.The former X3 was a product that didn’t match its label, like putting Grange in a cask, or attaching a Tiffany diamond to a beer-can ring pull.BMW’s badge cache is such that it can get away with quite a bit, but feeling cheap is one thing we won’t forgive.While the big brother X5 is an impressive bit of engineering and has the quality feel you expect from the Bavarians, the X3 looked and felt like a bargain-bin Beemer.The black-plastic nappy treatment around the rear was a poor styling decision, even for a company that let Chris Bangle bugger the 7 Series, but the biggest failing was the interior.A plethora of plastics more commonly found in disposable razors or kids’ toys meant that the pseudo SUV felt like a pseudo BMW.The men from Munich don’t stuff up very often and when they do, they tend to fix the problem quick smart (with the exception of iDrive, which the X3 is truly fortunate to miss out on - oh, and run-flat tyres).And so we have the tweaked and tricked-up X3, one of the quickest, and biggest, facelifts the company has ever performed.BMW folk counter that the update to a model only launched here in 2004 was timely because so many competitors in this segment are about to be launched and they wanted to get in first.Park the new X3 next to the old one and it’s like looking at Paul Vautin the footy player and Fatty Vautin the suit-wearing star.The flat-black bumpers are replaced by colour-coded panels, the double kidney grille on the nose is bigger and bolder and the rear-light cluster, which used to look like a cross-eyed robot, has been tidied up with some LED liveliness.Inside, the plastics are polished and there’s a lot more ersatz wood grain splashed about.Best of all, it’s actually got door bins and map pockets now, something you’d think might have been an obvious inclusion on the original, but you’d be wrong.And, to the delight of our American colleagues, there’s even an extra cup holder.The overall effect is a lift in class, so that you now actually feel like you’re sitting in a smaller but no less pleasant X5, which was surely the idea of this car in the first place.And it really is a car, or a rough and tough looking people mover perhaps, rather than an SUV.It handles, rides and gingerly goes off-road like a car, with a commendable lack of bodyroll, surprisingly good steering and, in the case of the 3.0-litre versions we drove, a raspy, rorty sports car sound.Honestly, is there anything BMW’s straight six-cylinder can’t do? If the Germans ever decide to go to the moon, their rockets will no doubt be powered by this masterfully engineered engine.This new and yet again improved 3.0si version offers 200kW (up 30kW from the old one) and 315Nm.Acceleration is pretty impressive for a big, tall car that’s pushing a bow-wave of air, with a 0 to 100km/h time of 7.2 seconds (an improvement of 0.6 of a second). The mid-range punch also makes it a great freeway car.BMW claims an excellent 10.1 litres per 100km economy figure with this engine, but we saw between 15 and 17.7 litres per 100km, although our driving did include some detailed testing, and proving, of the car’s top speed of 232km/h.As far as off-road credibility goes, the X3 can boast Hill Descent Control, which works pretty well, and DTC (Dynamic Traction Control).This system, which has previously been employed to allow the tail of the Z4 to flick and flout, is cleverly adapted here to allow you the wheel slip necessary to tackle sand, sludge and mud (sadly our drive program didn’t include any of these things, but it sounds workable in theory).The permanent all-wheel-drive system, xDrive, is also mightily clever. In general use it has a 40:60 torque split, but if necessary up to 100 per cent of torque can be sent to one end, all within milliseconds.Frankly, though, all this equipment is bar-boasting stuff. Realistically, who would take a car this botoxed and beautified off-road and risk getting it scratched?The X3 will also be offered with a 160kW 2.5-litre engine, priced at $65,900 for the manual and $68,500 for the auto, while the auto-only 3.0si will be $73,900 – price rises of $1500 and $1000 respectively over the old models.More than 50 per cent of X3 buyers in Australia, however, choose the 3.0-litre diesel (which, sadly, we didn’t get to drive because we were sharing our launch drive with Americans, who think "deeesell" is the devil’s work).The volume model rises in price by just $500 to $75,900, and also gets equipment upgrades, including a Bluetooth kit.We probably shouldn’t even tell you this, because it’s cruel, but in Europe the X3 is also being offered with a superb new super diesel, the 3.0sd, which uses Variable Twin Turbo technology to produce 210kW and 580Nm of torque.It’s so impressive, in fact, that it blows the 3.0-litre petrol version into the weeds, with a 0 to 100km/h sprint of 6.6 seconds and a top speed of 240km/h.We might not be getting it yet, but we’re betting this engine will find its way into some kind of BMW offering here eventually, and that it will be worth the wait.Stephen Corby is a senior roadtester for the CARSguide team whose work also appears in the Sunday Telegraph. A version of this review plus more news and analysis can be read in the Sunday Telegraph.
Snow Report from an X3
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By CarsGuide team · 12 Jun 2004
Snow had fallen the night before and lay thickly
across the road, with a fresh fall starting as we pushed BMW's shiny new X3 softroader through the icy
mountain landscape above Launceston in northern
Tasmania.
It was an almost surreal scene as the white carpeted
road chased telegraph poles into the distance, snow
swirling across the invisible surface with only the
guide posts to mark our way.
The outside temperature display of our car read zero
degrees Celsius, readouts in other cars actually dipped below freezing.
As the road began a series of short sharp, climbing
turns the high-priced Pirellis of some cars scrambled
for traction.
Other less fortunate motorists had slewed off the
road while one unlucky camper van sat with its nose
pushed into an embankment.
At no time however did BMW Australia consider
calling off the jaunt that took us in a large 200km plus loop around the Great Lake before heading back to
warmer climes of Launceston.
The much anticipated X3 joins larger brother the X5
that has been a "tear away" success for the company
since its launch a couple of years back.
Like other manufacturers BMW has discovered
there is a huge demand for off-road and soft-road style
vehicles, particularly in the luxury segment.
BMW describes the vehicle not as a traditional
4WD, not in the current idiom SUV (Sports Utility
Vehicle) but as an SAV (Sports Activity Vehicle), with
even more car-like dynamics, claiming it creates an
entirely new segment.
"The X3 will form a substantial pillar in our growth
beyond the core brands that we have," spokesman
John Kananghinis said.
The X3 does not look that much smaller than X5
until you venture inside where the accommodation is
more in keeping with that offered by a 3 Series model.
But there is still a substantial amount of rear legroom and the useable luggage area is almost as large.
There are three different models, a manual and
automatic 2.5-litre straight six and a 3.0-litre straight six the latter the same engine that powers the base model X5.
Prices for the X3 start at $65,300 for the 2.5 six-
speed manual, climbing to $67,900 for the 2.5 auto and
toping out at $74,600 for the 3.0-litre six auto.
We were able to sample both the 2.5-litre and
3.0-litre five-speed, tipshift autos and can report that both deliver plenty of punch.
There's nothing disappointing about the smaller
engine, certainly at the price.
And there's not much to differentiate the cars, which
all have the same tailpipe arrangement unlike the X5.
The 2.5-litre straight six is good for 141kW of power
and 245Nm of torque and in manual form can sprint
from 0-100km/h in 8.9 seconds (auto 9.8secs) with a
top speed of 208km/h..
The larger 3.0-litre engine produces 170kW and
300Nm and is good for 8.1 seconds, with a top speed
of 210km/h (221km/h with the sport pack fitted).
Drive is transmitted to all four wheels through
BMW's XDrive system, with torque split variably and
infinitely between front and rear wheels. Ground
clearance is rated at 201mm.
BMW claims the xDrive neutralises understeer or
oversteer in fast cornering, but we discovered the
vehicle still had a tendency to oversteer on the wet,
slippery bitumen hairpins that we encountered.
Overall, however, the X3 remained supremely
confident in a range of conditions.
Backing up xDrive is stability control, ABS brakes,
Hill Descent Control and Cornering Brake Control.
Standard equipment includes 10 airbags, multi-
function leather-wrapped steering wheel with cruise
control, 17-inch alloy wheels, roof rails, rain sensor
and automatic headlight control, fog lights, climate
control airconditioning, trip computer, and CD sound
system.
The quality is typical BMW with excellent fit and
finish, but we disliked the overuse of grey, lower body protective cladding on lower spec cars, particularly those with lighter contrasting paintwork.
Meanwhile, the rear seats seemed rather firm and the
vehicle packs only a space saver spare wheel.
The 3.0-litre diesel engine from the X5 is also under
consideration for the car, but as yet is not available in right-hand drive and if we get it will not arrive until later in the vehicle's life cycle.