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Yet again the hybrid clone seems pointless compared to both the petrol and the diesel sibblings. It is heavier, space restricted and only marginally more efficient than the petrol version. 0-62 in 5.9 seconds but only when the batteries are charged, it means next stoplight or the one after better keep your head down. So what is the point again? The US market where diesels are a no-no option?
It's made in Europe and it's a BMW with a propeller badge. Says it all really. BMWs are so wonderful you wonder why they don't run on water and turn it into wine. Or run 100 miles at 100mph on a single AA lithium battery,
So, it's dearer, slower, less practical and more complicated. Great advert for new technologies there guys.
Why aren't car makers pursuing the diesel hybrid route? Surely that is the best of both worlds? I'm sure there are technical issues to overcome, but whatever they are, their solution would lead to a more practical longer-lived alternative.
it's all great. till you get to the rims. and AE is right, why buy this when the diesel is so much better.
Totally agree with you, POINTLESS.
Why stick a hybrid with a big 3 litre fuel guzzling petrol engine, doesn't really make much sense. It doesn't really make this car a green car at all. A waste of technology if you ask me. Now had they used BMW's great diesel engine instead.......
Oh well, i'm sure that won't bother the suit wearing tycoon who walks into a showroom hands up and buys one. Hope these new BMW's come with indicators..
Can`t see the point, if BMW wants to be seen as green then dont manufacture big engined gas guzzling cars! My 520d was all you need in todays traffic. BMW would have been better spending the money producing a paint finish which can resist Bird Poo for a couple of days, mine was unattended for five days and suffered an estimated £1,242:00 worth of damage.
There is no real reason why a hybrid should be any more economical on the open road than a pure petrol-engined car, when it will get hammered in consumption terms by a diesel. Where they have an advantage is if you are doing a lot of city or stop-start mileage, when the hybrid part is doing what it's designed to, ie storing energy from braking. The rest of the time, you're just hauling around a pile of heavy batteries that aren't doing anything useful. That's why road testers always get crap mileage, as they spend their time hooning around B roads. That's not what hybrids are designed for. Of course, it would be more honest of the manufacturers to mention that their economy figures can only be matched in specific conditions, and that hybrid is a waste of money if you spend your time on motorways and clear roads
This hybrid 5 Series is good – but we’d still buy the 535d diesel. In isolation, the ActiveHybrid 5 is fast and smooth to drive, with impressive CO2 and economy figures. But in Europe, the 535d makes much more sense. Outside of BMW’s own diesels, rivals such as the Mercedes E300 BlueTEC – which combines hybrid tech with diesel technology – may prove a better proposition.