Archive for the '7 Series' Category

2011 BMW Alpina B7



Problem: BMW will not make a M7. Despite making the M5 Wagon and the X6 M, the boys from Bavaria want no part of the Mercedes-Benz S63 AMG, S65 AMG, Audi S8, (soon) Jaguar XJR, Porsche Panamera Turbo or Bentley Flying Spur Speed market. Odd, yes, especially from the company that discovered a new segment between the 5 Series wagon and the X5. Anyhow, no M7 for you.

Solution: the Alpina B7, as its an M7 in everything but name. Some of you might want to argue the point that no way is the Alpina B7 good enough to wear a vaunted M badge. To which we say… you might have a point. So think of it as the 750CSI. Either way, this here new Alpina B7 is going to be a pretty worthy competitor to all them big, fancy super sedans up above. Here’s why.

From the outside the changes include front and rear fascias and spoilers that not only set the B7 apart from lesser 7 Series but are functional. The front spoiler provides 30% more downforce while the rear tacks on an additional 15%. Not only that, but the front spoiler provides specific cooling to new transmission and oil coolers. Also impossible to miss are the 20-spoke, 21-inch Alpina wheels. Inside nearly every surface gets covered with hand-stitched “Lavalina” leather (whatever that might be) and Alpina badges. The areas not swathed in Lavalina get treated with Alcantara. There’s also a heated steering wheel and illuminated blue Aplina door sills.

Of course, what’s underneath matters most. Specifically the 4.4-liter twin-turbo V8 gets pumped up to 500 horsepower and 516 pound-feet of torque (as opposed to the 750i’s 400 hp and 450 pounds of twist). The press release notes that all that torque is, “available across an unusually broad engine range, from 3,000 to 4,750 rpm,” which is either wool-over-the-eyes PR hype, or a typo. We’ll go with typo, as the regular strength 750i makes its 450 pound-feet from 1,800 to 4,500 rpm. Either way, the Alpina B7 can hit 60 mph in 4.5 seconds. And now, the kicker: the short wheelbase B7 costs $122,875 and the extended wheelbase B7 will set you back $126,775. Both prices are before the $875 destination fee.

BMW X6 ActiveHybrid



BMW took advantage of California’s proclivity for greenwashing to give its ActiveHybrid models their North American debuts at the LA Auto Show. Just for good measure they also brought along the incredible Vision Efficient Dynamics sustainable supercar concept. While we know a great deal about BMW’s first true hybrid, the X6 ActiveHybrid, from our first drive, we still had to admire its incredible combination of horsepower and technology, even if the mileage isn’t really spectacular enough to warrant a truly green halo.

The BMW 7 Series ActiveHybrid is a mild hybrid with the electric motor filling one of three roles while in motion. It alternates between being a motivator, a generator and a booster depending on load and demand. It can go 37 mph on the motor alone, it gets 20% better overall mileage than the straight gas engine, and it does the 0-60 trot in just 4.7 seconds thanks to its 455 horsepower and 515 lb-ft of torque. BMW’s Peter Miles did add one bit of information to the Active 7 equation when he announced pricing. The regular wheelbase model will start at $103,125 while the long-wheelbase “L” model will start at $107,025.

The last car in the BMW eco show was the Vision concept. And never before has the phrase, “last but not least,” been more appropriate. This thing looks like it could have come out of Minority Report, yet it has so much real world promise. We’ll never see this car in production, of course, but don’t be surprised to see many of its elements in future BMW models. We’re still trying to decide whether we’d take this or the swoopy e-tron concept next door at Audi’s stand, but why not have both?

2010 BMW X6 ActiveHybrid

2010 BMW X6 ActiveHybrid

BMW’s pitch on how great the X6 ActiveHybrid is goes like this: it’s the world’s most powerful hybrid vehicle, fuel consumption is reduced about 20 percent compared to a similar vehicle without a hybrid drivetrain, and no matter what speed you’re going, the incredibly complicated powertrain is performing at the most efficient level possible. All of this power means that the X6 hybrid is no sluggish Toyota Prius, offering frugal but unexciting performance. On the other hand, the size and weight of BMW’s luxury hybrid crossover means that, well, the X6 hybrid is no Prius in the mileage department, either.

Let’s start by congratulating BMW for bringing its first batch of hybrids to market (the 7 Series ActiveHybrid is launching alongside the X6). In everyday traffic, the hybrid system helps keep fuel consumption down – to a still-lame 18 mpg combined (estimated) – and, since the engine can shut down at stops, the ultra-quiet interior made sitting in Miami traffic during our preview drive almost a pleasure. Nevertheless, there’s still a lot of vehicle here that hampers any attempt at real fuel efficiency gains. The X6 ActiveHybrid weighs 5,688 pounds for crying out loud – 400 pounds more than the non-hybrid. This vehicle simply doesn’t makes a lot of sense for anyone actually interested in fuel efficiency.

2011 BMW 5-Series


The 2011 BMW 5-Series is slowly undressing as far as camouflage goes, and its looks are going the “more substantial” route to match its more substantial, modified 7 Series chassis along with a dose of 5 Series Gran Turismo in back. The front end gets a less sculpted treatment while, if the swirls don’t deceive us, the rear glasshouse slopes more steeply into the trunk lid. The lower rear fascia gets the same severe angle as that on the 5Series GT.

Inside – at least according to the forms, since everything but the shift lever and iDrive is covered – it is beginning to look like a 7 Series in miniature.

Under the hood will be the usual suspects, with the 550i supposedly getting the brand’s eight-speed auto. There are also rumors of a turbocharged four-cylinder and Active Hybrid. The car should make its first public appearance sometime early next year.

BMW 7-Series and X6 Hybrids

Check out the latest news about BMW 7-Series and X6 Hybrids at Eco Cars News site.

2009 BMW 760Li

Description in Brief

Check out the driving video at Videos blog.

• Supreme motoring culture and luxurious comfort in perfection: The new BMW 760i and BMW 760Li twelve-cylinders mark the pinnacle of the fifth-generation BMW 7 Series. Superior powertrain technology, generous space and comfort, and unique features all round create an incomparable driving and travelling experience impressively confirming BMW’s leading position in the global market of luxury performance cars. Two body variants and a wide range of customisation options provide a huge margin of freedom for enjoying the exclusivity of this twelve-cylinder luxury saloon in your own, very personal style. Together with the BMW 760i, the BMW 760Li with its wheelbase extended by 140 millimetres or 5.5″ and particular emphasis on rear-seat comfort is also entering the market as the absolute climax in motoring luxury.

• The newly developed V12 power unit with BMW TwinPower Turbo technology, ¬High Precision Injection and double-VANOS infinite camshaft adjustment delivers maximum output of 400 kW/544 hp from engine capacity of 6.0 litres and develops peak torque of 750 Newton-metres/553 lb-ft from just 1,500 rpm. A masterpiece in modern engine technology, the all-aluminium twelve-cylinder power unit stands out through its effortless surge of power, unique acoustic and vibration-damping qualities, and a level of efficiency never seen before in this performance class. Naturally, both the BMW 760i and the BMW 760Li comply in full with the EU 5 emission standard.

• Both the BMW 760i and the BMW 760Li come with brand-new eight-speed transmission featured in these outstanding models for the first time. With its innovative gearset configuration, the new transmission offers additional gears while maintaining the dimensions and weight of a conventional six-speed automatic. This makes the eight-speed automatic transmission an ideal match for the power and performance characteristics of the new twelve-cylinder, bringing out the comfort and dynamic qualities of the V12 in particular style. And at the same time the new transmission enhances the all-round efficiency of the car to an even higher standard never seen before.

• The BMW 760i and the BMW 760Li both represent the stylish presence, superior sportiness and precise elegance of the BMW 7 Series in particularly exclusive style. The outstanding highlights of these very special models include the extra-wide, slightly concave chrome frame as well as powerfully contoured bars in the BMW kidney grille, 19-inch light-alloy wheels, the V12 model designation on the chrome-plated gill elements, an additional chrome bar at the rear as well as twin tailpipes in rectangular design.

• Detailed refinements add yet a further exclusive touch to the modern and luxurious interior ambience. The special features exclusive to these very special models include stainless-steel entry trim with an illuminated V12 model designation, the instrument panel finished in nappa leather and highlighted by elegant stitching, the roof lining and sun visors in alcantara as well as high-quality burr walnut interior trim of the most exclusive standard.

• Offering generous freedom of space, the wide range of standard features as well as innovative comfort and entertainment options enhance the grand touring experience particularly on the rear seats. The BMW 760Li comes with individually adjustable single seats at the rear, kneeroom of 208 mm/8.2″ and headroom of 988 mm/38.9″ setting up new records even in this demanding segment. Standard equipment on both models features highlights such as four-zone automatic air conditioning, the BMW Professional navigation system, comfort seats, Park Distance Control and Automatic Soft Close on the doors. Additional enjoyment is added by optional features such as the multi-channel audio system, a DAB double tuner, a DVD system at the rear, an additional iDrive Controller serving to mastermind entertainment, telecommunication and navigation functions from the rear seats, active seat ventilation, massage seats as well as the contoured sliding roof optimised for excellent noise control and highly attractive design.

• The BMW 760i and the BMW 760Li come as an option with the full range of features from BMW ¬ConnectedDrive, including driver assistance systems such as Cruise Control with Stop & Go, a High-Beam Assistant, Lane Change Warning, Lane Departure Warning, Speed Limit Info, BMW Night Vision with detection of individual persons, Side View and a back-up camera. Further features offered by BMW ¬ConnectedDrive are BMW Online, BMW Assist, BMW TeleServices and unrestricted use of the internet in the car as well as the Extended Emergency Call function with automatic determination of the car’s current location.

• Suspension technology unique even in the luxury class gives both the BMW 760i and the BMW 760Li truly fascinating performance and, in particular, unparalleled comfort. Both models come with a double-wishbone front axle, the Integral-V rear axle exclusive to BMW, hydraulic rack-and-pinion steering with on-demand management of the power assistance pump and Servotronic. Significant features coming as standard are Dynamic Damping Control including Dynamic Drive Control as well as Dynamic Drive anti-roll stability. The BMW 760Li comes additionally with air suspension and self-levelling on the rear axle, and as an option, both models are available with Integral Active Steering.

• Maximum occupant safety is guaranteed by the optimised structure of the body in conjunction with a wide range of passive safety systems interacting with one another and masterminded by electronic management. These include three-point inertia-reel seat belts on all seats, frontal and side airbags, head airbags at the side, crash-activated headrests at the front, runflat tyres as well as a Tyre Defect Indicator. The BMW 760i and the BMW 760Li come as standard with bi-xenon dual headlights including a daytime lights function provided by corona rings as well as foglamps and Adaptive Brake Lights. Adaptive Headlights with a Bending Light function, variable light distribution and adaptive headlight range control are all available as options.

Model variants:

BMW 760i: V12 gasoline engine with BMW TwinPower Turbo and ¬
High Precision Injection
Capacity: 5,972 cc, max output: 400 kW/544 hp at 5,250 rpm
Max torque: 750 Nm/553 lb-ft from 1,500–5,000 rpm
Acceleration 0–100 km/h in 4.6 seconds
Top speed: 250 km/h (155 mph)
Average fuel consumption to the EU standard: 12.9 litres/100 kilometres (21.9 mpg imp)
CO2 emissions to the EU standard: 299 g/km
Emission standard: EU 5

BMW 760Li: V12 gasoline engine with BMW TwinPower Turbo and High Precision Injection
Capacity: 5,972 cc, max output: 400 kW/544 hp at 5,250 rpm
Max torque: 750 Nm/553 lb-ft from 1,500–5,000 rpm
Acceleration 0–100 km/h in 4.6 seconds
Top speed: 250 km/h (155 mph)
Average fuel consumption to the EU standard: 13.0 litres/100 kilometres (21.7 mpg imp)
CO2 emissions to the EU standard: 303 g/km
Emission standard: EU 5

BMW 740d Review

The luxury car world has been turned upside down by Jaguar’s stunning new XJ. So what are the big cat’s rivals doing to compete with this latest flagship head-turner?

Well, even though the new 7-Series has only just been launched, BMW will offer a hybrid version next year. For now, there’s the 740d – the most powerful diesel 7-Series ever.

Under the bonnet is an even more muscular version of the 3.0-litre six-cylinder twin-turbo oil-burner that powers the 730d, which will make its way into the new 5-Series, too. It produces 61bhp more, at 306bhp, and delivers a massive 600Nm of torque – a 60Nm advantage.

Hooked up to a slick-shifting six-speed auto, the unit propels the newcomer from 0-62mph in 6.3 seconds – a second faster than the 730d – and 155mph. Drivers won’t be penalised at the pumps, though. In fact, as the 740d returns 40.9mpg and emits 181g/km of CO2, it’s even more efficient than the current 730d – although a revised version of the latter is due in September.

How does the model perform on the road? Well, it’s absolutely storming. The enormous torque output means response is instantaneous and supercar-fast between 50mph-75mph.

It’s easy to find yourself travelling at very high speeds, partly because there’s so little wind or engine noise, while the blend of comfort and a range of around 600 miles makes this a supreme long-distance car.

The way the 740d tackles corners is just as impressive. As with all 7-Series, it has Dynamic Drive Control. This gives the option of Comfort, Normal, Sport and Sport + modes, which alter the responsiveness of the steering, suspension and traction control. It means you can make the car boulevard-smooth one minute, sports-car-firm the next.

As you’d expect, all this comes at a price. The 740d will cost over £58,000 – around £5,000 more than the 730d. The latter is fast enough for most, but if you have the funds, the new car is a wonderful all-rounder.

BMW 740d M Sport

The new BMW 740d heralds the latest technological leap for the 7 Series, taking diesel performance in a luxury car to a new level. Powered by a 3.0-litre twin-turbocharged engine that produces 306hp, the BMW 740d provides the driver and its occupants with a smooth yet suitably rapid method of transport, while merely sipping at its fuel tank.

The 2,993cc engine features an all aluminium crankcase and third generation common rail fuel injection system offering 600Nm of torque from just 1,500rpm. This enables the 740d to achieve a class-leading zero to 62mph time of 6.3 seconds before going on to an electronically-limited 155mph top speed. These impressive performance figures have been made possible by the unique way the twin turbochargers work. A smaller turbocharger provides near instantaneous response for swift initial acceleration before a larger unit provides additional thrust from the mid-range to the redline. However, courtesy of EfficientDynamics technologies the new 740d still achieves an outstanding 40.9mpg on the combined cycle and a CO2 emissions figure of just 181g/km.

The revised BMW 730d

BMW UK’s biggest selling 7 Series, accounting for approximately 85 per cent of sales, has also been improved for 2009. The BMW 730d now comes with a revised engine that sees the class-leading Seven stride further ahead of its competitors in terms of economy and emissions.

From September 2009, the BMW 730d and 730Ld will be specified with an engine that has been refined to now achieve 41.5mpg on the combined cycle (40.9mpg for the long-wheelbase) and CO2 emissions of 178g/km (180g/km for the 730Ld). This represents a 7.3 per cent reduction in emissions and almost six per cent improvement in fuel economy. This sees the 730d drop into the band I Vehicle Excise Duty tier with a subsequent improvement in the benefit-in-kind rate for business users. This efficiency performance places the 7 Series head and shoulders above its key competitors, including the new Mercedes S350CDi.

What make all the revised 7 Series range performance gains possible are BMW’s award-winning EfficientDynamics technologies allied to an engine that features third-generation common-rail direct injection technology, incorporating piezo injectors, that operate at a peak pressure of 2,000 bar.

Brake Energy Regeneration uses the engine’s power on overrun, such as braking, to charge the battery for the car’s electrical circuit. When the driver is accelerating the alternator disengages so all of the engine’s power is channelled towards the car’s performance. Other ancillaries, such as the air-conditioning compressor, are also able to disengage to improve the all round performance of the car. All of these technologies were standard on the BMW 7 Series when it was launched in November 2008, but have since been enhanced on the 730d to achieve even more impressive performance figures. The roof, doors, bonnet and front side panels are all made from aluminium to reduce weight and help achieve the outstanding efficiency performance.

BMW 730d
245hp
540Nm
7.3 0-62mph
152 Top Speed (mph)
41.5 Combined mpg
178 CO2 g/km

BMW 730Ld
245hp
540Nm
7.3 0-62mph
152 Top Speed (mph)
40.9 Combined mpg
180 CO2 g/km

BMW 740d
301hp
600Nm
6.3 0-62mph
155* Top Speed (mph)
40.9 Combined mpg
181 CO2 g/km

*Electronically-limited.

The launch of the 740d coincides with the introduction of M Sport models to the BMW 7 Series range. Now all BMW 7 Series variants can be ordered as either SE or M Sport. The latter specification builds on the high level of standard equipment offered with an SE by adding new 19-inch M Sport V-spoke style alloy wheels, M Aerodynamic body styling and high-gloss exterior trim. Inside, and Sport seats, M Sport steering wheel, M Sport door sill inlays, brushed aluminium interior trim and Anthracite headlining complete the offer.

Prices for the 740d and M Sport derivatives will be announced closer to their September, 2009 on sale date.

New option packages

News of the revisions to the BMW 7 Series range come as two packages become available for all long-wheelbase models. The options have been compiled with the chauffeur in mind, but will also appeal generally to other long wheelbase customers.

The Executive Package costs from £2,515 and comprises of 19” multi-spoke style alloy wheels, TV function, Sun protection glass, electric rear side sun blinds, front and rear seat heating and a windscreen with grey shade band. The Executive Plus Package builds on this offer by adding soft-close doors and driver and front passenger lumbar support. Prices for this optional package start at £2,865.

BMW 7 Series, the World’s Best Car?

BMW’s 2009 7 Series stands as the new benchmark for technical and driving excellence among cars. With more efficiency and more power, an iDrive controller that’s nearly fixed (really and truly), Internet access, plus a dazzling array of comfort, entertainment, handling, and safety features, this is the car you should buy if you’ve got $85,000 burning a hole in your pocket. I drove a prototype 7 Series over the summer on BMW’s proving grounds in Miramas, France. Here’s a fuller review of the production version of the 7 Series, driven on public roads in and around Dresden, Germany.

How many new features can you count?
BMW has significantly improved the car in at least a dozen ways you’ll like, especially if you appreciate what technology does to make the journey more entertaining, safer, and less damaging to the environment. They include Internet access via the car’s 1-3 LCD displays, improved iDrive, the industry’s biggest and brightest LCD display, a night vision system that detects pedestrians in your path, active steering that improves low- and high-speed turning, side view cameras to help you see when pulling out of driveways or alleyways, blind spot detection and lane departure warning, automated traffic sign recognition, an efficient diesel engine that runs happily at 150 mph, an electronic owner’s manual built into the LCD display, and a head-up display. Unfortunately, a couple of the neatest technologies are not available in the U.S.

Next-generation iDrive, huge display
The original iDrive was introduced on the previous 7 Series (2002-2008) and employed a rosette layout. To initiate an action, you slid the iDrive controller in one of eight directions (north, northeast, east, etc.), then turned and/or slid the dial more to adjust choices, then pressed down to initiate the command. It rewarded the dedicated owner, but not the more commonly found owner who wanted the car to do his bidding, not vice-versa, and it was even worse for the spouse or partner who needed to borrower his 7 Series when her non-iDrive car was in the shop.

Here’s what you get for 2009 with the new iDrive:

The iDrive controller is now wrapped with a rubbery band for easy gripping, not the slippery metal of the first generation. In front are buttons for the most common commands: CD / iPod and Radio on the left, Telephone and Navigation on the right, with a Menu button in between. This is pretty much a validation (read: copy) of Audi’s MMI (multimedia interface) controller concept except with iDrive your hand doesn’t have to stray far from the controller to access them. It’s a minor but useful difference.

The button pairs are inclined in a slight V-arrangement to give you cue if it’s the front button or the back button you’re touching. Press the Menu button and instead of a compass rose of choices, you get a list of eight choices, just as you’d get on virtually every iDrive knockoff that has come since from the likes of Acura, Audi, Cadillac, Hyundai, Infiniti, and Mercedes-Benz. They are CD/Multimedia, Telephone, Navigation, Contacts (cellphone), BMW Services, Travel Info, and Setup. (The photos show the choices in German.) Twirl the dial, press the button, and you’re under way.

Climate control moved out of iDrive’s clutches
Climate control has been completely removed from the purview of iDrive. Now it’s a band of a dozen dials and buttons for climate control, seat heaters, and defrosters midway up the center stack, between the ashtray and the DVD slot. Some automakers nicely integrate the climate control information into the main display while using separate buttons (Infiniti does it best); BMW instead uses an adjacent display with black panel technology that appears blank unless there’s the control is activated; it blends nicely into the dark wood paneling BMW still favors for the dash. You see only the lit orange digits, not the ghost of the unlit parts of the display. That’s a little feature, but in the $80,000 price strata, it makes the buyer feel better about the purchase.

Haptic, or force feedback, is gone from this iDrive. In the earlier 7 Series, when you neared the end of a selection list, the dial became harder to turn. The haptic feedback, from Immersion Technologies, also made it possible to have discrete clicks for, say, the fan speeds (except the climate control fan isn’t part of iDrive) or include little bumps felt by your fingers as you scrolled the radio tuner and crossed the frequency of an active station. BMW says owners found force feedback unexpected or limiting; it may also be some of the feedback was a bit crude, for instance when nearing the end of a list, you didn’t feel the controller stiffen so much as pulse the control wheel in the opposite direction.

If you don’t want to use iDrive, BMW has a good voice input system that works with virtually all entertainment, navigation, and climate control features controlled by a button on the steering wheel. But it’s not conversational, meaning you can’t say what’s on your mind and expect it to parse the request. Rather, you must use known words. But most commands have multiple synonyms, so if you take an educated stab in the dark and say, “Tune FM 106 point 3,” it’s going to work.

Transflective 10.2-Inch LCD Display (1280-by-480)
The display for the iDrive operations is the industry biggest and best, a 10.2-inch transflective display with a 16:6 aspect ratio (most widescreens are 16:9 or 16:10) and a 1280-by-480 pixel resolution. In other words, effectively two 640-by-480, 4:3 VGA displays side by side. The screen can be split roughly two-thirds (left), one-third (right) to show two pieces of information, such as the navigation map on the left and a trip computer on the right. In unfamiliar territory, a good combination is a close-up perspective view on the left and an overview map on the right. The previous 7 Series also had a split screen but BMW, in father-knows-best fashion, restricted what you could display on which side. If you wanted to see audio information and your navigation map, the navigation map could only be in the smaller right-hand window. Call me crazy, but how much screen real estate do you need for music information? BMW made cautious progress with this 7 Series. If you want fullest audio details (artist, album, track, playing time, and next three tracks or next three albums / artists on an iPod or MP3 CD), it still must be on the left, but if you can live with a truncated information set (artist, album, song), that can now be on the right.

The display is a transflective LCD. Your calculator is a reflective LCD, lit by whatever light bounces off the panel. Your laptop is a transmissive LCD, lit by light from fluorescent tubes or LEDs behind, and it washes out when you go outside. Yet that’s what automakers use. A transflective LCD can be lit by either light source and the more reflective light hitting the screen, the brighter the display. As I found on the first car with a transflective LCD, the BMW 3 Series convertible , a transflective display can be easily read with the top down on a sunny day when you’re wearing 90% light-blocking sunglasses. This is a major advance and belongs on all cars – especially when the automakers ding you $1,500 to $2,000 for most navigation systems. (Components experts say a transflective display runs $25-$50 more than a transmissive LCD. When many automakers are lose billions a year, the cost of transflective would be a rounding error.)

In German automaker fashion, the display is not touchscreen, because surveys of motorists in Germany find Germans abhor displays marred by fingerprints. (Americans are happy to finger-tap a screen while eating a bucket of extra crispy and, anyway, isn’t that what microfiber cloths are for – cleaning grease off glasses, laptop screens, and cockpit LCDs?) And in BMW fashion, the displays are mounted at the top of the center stack to be as close as possible to your line of sight, which is good. Because it’s transflective, this display doesn’t need a hood. And that’s even better.

New Navigation Supplier, More Bells and Whistles
For this version 7 Series, BMW moved to a new navigation hardware supplier, Bosch, and map data supplier, TeleAtlas. (It had been Siemens and Navteq.) BMW pioneered in-car navigation in 1994. Its navigation systems this decade have been underrated because most users and reviewers expended their energy ranting about iDrive. (It didn’t help that Americans seem to prefer the touch-screen metaphor favored by the Japanese.) The map data is stored on an 80GB hard drive and includes 3D terrain and building maps. In perspective view, you see terrain in the country and 3D landmarks in the city (photo at left): major buildings show façade details; other buildings show their footprints (an L-shaped building is L-shaped) and are extruded (raised) to show relative height. Major buildings are lifelike representations (the opera house but not your house) and other downtown or commercial buildings have the proper shape and are extruded (raised) to their relative heights.

Icons still run up the left side of the navigation screen and they’re a bit cryptic but now there’s pop-up help of sorts: When your turn the iDrive control knob, the name for each function appears, one at a time. It was pleasantly amusing to see one of the senior managers of the 7 Series project, a 30-year BMW veteran and an engineer by training, momentarily unable to find where in the iDrive menu structure his staff hid in plain sight the 2D/3D map switch. In fact, it would be a perfect use of the word schadenfreude. To be fair, he’s a busy guy, but so are the 12,000-15,000 people who’ll buy a 7 Series here in its first full year in the U.S.

Google Send-To navigation from your PC; real-time traffic
BMW continues its association with Google that lets you create destinations online and then send them to the car, so long as it has the BMW Assist feature comprising an integrated cellphone (and Mayday calling). And BMW will continue to provide real-time traffic information, provided by Clear Channel and its partner Inrix. Traffic information in the U.S. is still evolving – you learn about major disruptions and see approximate roadway congestion, but all RTTI misses some delays and accidents. And when you’re routed onto side roads, it’s guesswork. RTTI today doesn’t know about traffic flow other than on highways, so it’s guessing the side road traffic flow by the posted speed limit there. It’s an industry issue more than a BMW failing and any traffic information is better than none, but you’ll still be disappointed a lot of the time. You can also see multi-day weather forecasts.

Always-available Internet. (In the back seat. In Germany. )
BMW crows about being the first automaker with what it calls ConnectedDrive “unrestricted Internet access.” Something got lost in the translation however. “Unrestricted” means this: From your 7 Series, in Germany, when you’re sitting in the back seat of a model with the one of the two optional rear entertainment packages and with BMW Assist, you can surf the Web using the iDrive controller to enter URLs and it can be any web site in the world (thus the unrestricted access). You can use the front seat display when the car is stopped or going less than 5 mph. That’s one more reason for BMW to have adopted the Sharp Dual View display that lets driver and passenger see separate images on the same LCD panel.

There is no provision for an infrared keyboard and BMW people gave us a song and dance about the difficulty of certifying a keyboard that would meet BMW standards; it’s less clear why the infrared modules in each of the back seat displays couldn’t be made two-way and you bring onboard your own $20 IR keyboard. (The further explanation from BMW has to do with BMW wanting to be in control of the entire customer experience, yada, yada, so if the crappy keyboard you bought online fails when you spill your bottle of sweetened green tea, you’d of course blame BMW rather than yourself or Tazo.) It’s possible BMW will negotiate a data agreement with a U.S. cellular carrier in time for the U.S. launch. (It’s working on European coverage outside Germany, too.) It would also be nice if BMW added an optional router so your WiFi laptop could get Internet access, too. Chrysler does that already with its cellular data option.

BMW says its lineup of BMW Online services “remains absolutely unique and unparalleled in the world” including the basic Internet access plus portal services: business, sports, and general news; weather reports at the present location and destination; parking space information; and e-mail send/receive. BMW notes the services are “tailored … to national conditions,” meaning not every country gets the full package because, perhaps, BMW and the cellular carriers couldn’t strike a pricing agreement, or the infrastructure isn’t ready. It remains to be seen how much we get in the U.S. And others are chipping away at what BMW offers: Ford’s Sirius Travel Link, for instance, provides traffic information (for the navigation system), news, sports scores, weather reports, ski conditions, fuel prices, and movie listings. It debuts on the 2009 Lincoln MKS sedan. ConnectedDrive, BMW’s term for its online and telematics offerings, has the potential to make the car an important part of our connected lives, while simultaneously annoying BMW’s purist fanatics who think things went downhill ever since the BMW 2002 went out of production in 1976.

How to fit 5 buses inside one car
At home, you’ve probably got one network, 1-1/2 if you count Ethernet and wireless Ethernet as variants. BMW has five. There’s a CAN bus (controller area network) for much of the car’s core functions, a slower LIN bus (local interconnect network), the MOST bus (Media Oriented Systems Transport) for infotainment, and the high-speed, the ByteFlight bus for safety features, and the 10-Mbps FlexRay bus for chassis control. Why so many? CAN forms the core of the current car communications while LIN provides for even cheaper connections of non-critical devices such as the window winders. MOST excels at connecting infotainment devices and allows (in theory but not always practice) for swapping out modules if a newer technology comes along. ByteFlight knows about critical safety components. FlexRay is so quick that even at high speeds that information about a bump hitting the front wheels can be relayed to the rear suspension in time for the shock absorbers to adjust. These buses connect about 100 microprocessors.

Multiple multimedia options, great Bluetooth
BMW offers a cornucopia of entertainment choices although it’s hard for any automaker to stand out here. From BMW you get:
– Standard USB jack that accepts virtually any music-bearing device, including iPods, iPhones, and USB keys.
– DVD drive that plays audio and video CDs, DVDS, and MP3 or WMA discs.
– 80-GB integrated hard drive that sets aside 12 GB for music. (Lots of automakers have hard drives now; BMW’s is currently the biggest.) Music can be ripped from audio CDs or copied from already ripped MP3 / WMA music on a disc or key. The hard drive has a lookup engine for thousands of the most popular CDs and BMW says you can used ConnectedDrive (the cellular data connection) for lookup of more obscure titles.
– iDrive control of three music-capable cellphones (iPhone is one) that snap into docking modules in the cramped center console, as well as the ability to control music on Windows Smartphones if there’s a connector module.
– Good and better back seat entertainment systems with dual 8 and 9.5 inch screens. You can have up to three separate programs playing: front, left rear, right rear. The previous generation used a single LCD at the back of the center console; this has a panel on the back of each front seat headrest.
– Basic music information displayed for the driver at the base of the instrument panel regardless of what’s showing on the center stack LCD display.
– In the U.S., Sirius satellite radio and HD Radio. It wasn’t clear yet if that will be integrated or optional.
– In Europe, broadcast television in back and, when not moving, in front. (Europe is more densely populated than the U.S., so you’re less often without a TV signal.)
– Two speaker/amplifier upgrade packages beyond the basic, quite capable audio system.

Bluetooth may be seen as an long-running standard, but in fact the automaker and phone manufacturer implementation varies greatly. BMW includes Bluetooth and BMW’s version is pretty robust. It does a good job uploading entire phonebooks including multiple numbers per contact.

Test drive: Amazing grace at speed
Germans believe you build better cars when your car companies are located near the Alps and the country has an (increasingly crowded) network of unlimited speed autobahns. This new 7 Series is proof. I drove both the 400-hp twin-turbo V8 750Li that uses the same engine in the BMW X6 and the 245-hp twin-turbo inline six-cylinder diesel 730d. There’s also a twin-turbo 326-hp six-cylinder 740Li. All use six-speed automatic transmissions. The L stands for long (the car is stretched 5.5 inches), i is for fuel injection, and d is for diesel. (The first digit is the BMW model (1, 3, 5, 6, 7) and the second two digits stand for the engine displacement or, increasingly, relative performance. The 740Li has a 3.0-liter turbo engine that performs more or less like an unturbocharged 4.0-liter engine.)

Nothing else that weighs 2-1/4 tons and measures 3 inches longer than a Cadillac Escalade comes anywhere near the performance of the fifth-generation 7 Series. Most of all, the 7 Series performs well for the driver on narrow roads, on wet skidpads, on unlimited-speed autobahns. Under extreme braking, there’s never any twitchiness suggesting the front and rear ends want to swap positions, something I’ve encountered in a couple American high-end sport sedans. The new iDrive controller helped me find information faster while driving and the optional head-up display (about $1,200) put the most important information at the bottom of my field of view through the windshield. For those without an HUD, the same key information goes into the instrument panel.

The ride is almost as enjoyable for the front-seat passenger, especially when you use the power-ventilated seats and the butt massager — technically, an active comfort seat that raises and lowers the left and right sides of the seat a fraction of an inch to keep your legs from falling asleep. In many ways, the journey goes even better in back. Rear legroom on the standard 750i is fine and it’s exceptional in the 750Li, which is 5 inches longer, which you’d expect in a car 205 inches long (almost 3 inches longer in this model). The rear seats recline and it’s there you can watch a movie or surf the Web while under way, something you can’t do in front. Both rear passengers share one controller via an A/B switch – do children of the privileged not squabble over such things? – but they can watch or listen to separate programming. With the Driving Dynamic Control switch on the console set to Comfort and with the standard air suspension of the long-wheelbase cars, the passengers got a limo-like ride while the driver still had an exceptional sense of control. This is where the FlexRay bus comes into play: When the front suspension feels a bump and passes word to the rear suspension 126 inches away and moving forward at 88 feet per second at 60 mph, it’s a race against time. Fortunately, technology wins: The rear dampers (shocks) respond in 2.5 milliseconds, during which time the car travels 6.8 inches at the top speed of 155 mph, 2.6 inches at 60 mph.

The gasoline-powered V8 (left) is cat-quick, about 6 seconds 0-60 mph, but the diesel is only a second slower. On a sprint along the autobahn at speeds of 100 to 150 mph, fuel economy was still on the order of 20 mpg, and an afternoon of driving on town, rural, and autobahn roads netted nearly 30 mpg. BMW deserves credit for being among the first automakers to offer 50-state-legal low-emission diesel cars this fall with the 3 Series compact sedan and X5 SUV. But BMW would be sending an even stronger message if its biggest, least fuel efficient sedan (other than the M5) could be had with a diesel as well. While hybrids are efficiency kings in town, on rural roads and interstates, nothing can touch a diesel for efficiency. Especially now that engines such as the BMW diesel are unnoticeable inside the cockpit, and outside only for a moment when starting, or at idle if you listen carefully. That diesel smell? Just the faintest whiff from outside the car.

The 7 Series continues as a rear-wheel-drive car where Audi and Mercedes-Benz offer all-wheel-drive versions and that may cost BMW a few sales. Based on BMW’s statement that economy improves 3% over the old model, thanks to a more efficient engine and extensive use of aluminum to cut 200 pounds of weight, expect to see an EPA rating of around 15 mpg city, 24 mpg highway, 19 mpg combined, using premium fuel.

Bells and whistles: Showing off technology
The hit list of technology also includes:
– Night vision. Order this option (about $2,200) created for BMW by Flir and AuotLiv and not only will you see, in the LCD display, the roadway and any warm object up to 300 meters (1,000 feet) away, but the system will place rectangles around hazards: people directly in your path (but not people off to the side), perhaps before you notice them in the display. The algorithms today detects pedestrians and joggers as well as bicyclists and skateboarders and eventually will pick up animals as well.
– Active steering front and rear. The rear wheels can steer up to 3 degrees in the direction opposite the front wheels at low speeds, making for crisper turns and a turning circle reduced by 28 inches. Above 30 mph, the rear wheels steer in the same direction as the front wheels, making for smoother lane changes. If you order the active steering option, you also get BMW’s quicker front-wheel turning at low speeds. That is, a quarter turn of the steering wheel at 20 mph gives you turning effect than at 40 mph. It’s different from variable-effort power steering where the turning effort is less at low speeds when you’re parking.

Circle of safety adds blind spot detection, side-view cameras
BMW is another automaker providing a circle of safety around the vehicle: cameras and sensors to monitor your progress front, rear, and side. Along with front and rear sonar, a backup camera, active cruise control, and lane departure warning, BMW is adding with the 7 Series:
– Side-view camera. Two fender-mounted cameras just ahead of the front wheels look ahead and sideways as you pull out of an alley or a parking spot (if you backed in). You see the view as a split screen on the LCD display: another reason to have such a big LCD. It’s useful on a car with such a long hood where the driver sits 8 feet back of the front bumper.
– Blind spot detection. BMW confusingly calls this lane change warning, which is easily confused with lane departure warning (which alerts if you drive out of lane). Sensors in the rear look to the side and back for cars coming up quickly to the left and right into your blind spot. If it’s unsafe to change lanes, a yellow warning triangle lights up in the outside mirror. If you don’t see the warning and put your blinker on to change lanes, the steering wheel vibrates a don’t-do-it warning. This is the same warning you get with the lane departure warning and in both cases it means the same thing: Stay in lane. BMW wisely uses no audible warning, which is embarrassing when there are others in the car who wonder what you’ve done wrong this time.

BMW Individual: How about a quartz iDrive controller?

In the rarified atmosphere of $100,000 cars, automakers look for little touches that make the car seem better in little ways. You can for instance, order your 7 Series with quartz material iDrive and dashboard tuning knobs that feel heftier and cooler to the touch than formed high-strength plastic knobs with a baked-on metallic surface. Beyond the usual build-to-order program, there’s a BMW Individual program with additional (costlier) leathers and additional (costlier) paint treatments and a three-month lead time. I was especially interested with the offered Merino leather which, according to BMW, has a “natural open-pore structure [that] assures a lasting active breasting effect and offers supreme comfort.” If you don’t like the upgraded fabrics BMW offers, you can supply your own. There’s a separate BMW Security car program that offers bullet-resistant body, windows, and tires. One level deters the garden variety kidnapper in Mexico City; a second level resists more concerted terrorist attacks on the diplomatic community.

Design and style: Did BMW retreat too far?
BMW took a lot of flak for the 2002-2008 fourth-generation 7 Series, particularly the high trunk line that was called the Bangle Butt, named for BMW’s American-born chief designer, Chris Bangle. Other automakers followed with raised trunklines that paid tribute to the BMW design, such as the Toyota Camry and Lexus LS. Over time the BMW design grew on some users (okay, me) but it was a flashpoint for others, particularly Europeans who had made their peace with iDrive 1.0. BMW’s board of management couldn’t take the heat (reportedly), toned down the design in 2006 with the mid-life refresh, and for this fifth generation model, BMW sounded a retreat that it’s describing as a charge in a new direction. The new direction may prove risky in today’s climate of high oil prices, since the car is designed to look wider and longer, which to some translates to bigger and less efficient. (Even if that’s not the case.) What’s there is striking and unquestionably BMW, but it’s also less interesting. BMW pulled out every trick in the books to make the car look straighter, longer, and wider, with front air scoops running the width of the car, rear chrome strips running the width of the car, and creases on the sides to emphasize the car’s length. Regardless, the design is unmistakably BMW. There is no danger you’ll see this as a Camry-Genesis-LS460 lookalike, at least until the other designers adopt BMW’s new styling cues.

Inside, the design is even more refined and luxurious than with the previous generation. That said, Audi remains the benchmark for cockpit sophistication. BMW still revels in prince-of-darkness dashboard design. While you can order beige leather to lighten things up, three of the four dashboard and console woods are dark and three of the four are glossy finishes that bounce sunlight back in your eyes. Only BMW’s Fineline natural (matte) trim looks like wood (still dark), while Fineline high-gloss, Ash Anthracite and Ash Grain high-gloss all have so many layers of glossy finish you can’t tell if it’s wood underneath or a very good plastic laminate. For wood trim done right, BMW should follow the lead of the new Jaguar XK or the aging but still vibrant Infiniti M35 / M45.

Is that a beer tap on your console?
With this 7 Series, the shifter is back on the console, replacing the column-mount electronic shifter that performed well but didn’t seem suited to a sporting car. This electronic shifter, shaped like a stainless steel beer tap, has two issues. First, it takes up console space that could be better suited to important things (for Americans) such as better cupholders, although there are two so-so cupholders just forward of the shifter. That forces iDrive to the right of the shifter, although the location still falls naturally to hand, especially since there’s an armrest for support and no cupholders between the armrest and control knob. (A real-world drawback to Audi’s MMI layout.) Second, the shifter actions take a bit of practice: To put the car in gear, you press a button on the left side of the shifter, then pull back for Drive, forward for Reverse. Once engaged, the shifter pops back to the middle position, since it’s just a big electronic pushbutton. Slap the shifter to the left and you can shift manually: Pull back to upshift, push forward to downshift. But to shift into Park, you’d don’t push the shifter all the way forward. Instead, you press a smallish button on the top of the shifter. If you do the normal thing and push all the way forward, past Reverse (or so you think), you’re still in Reverse and the car will be gathering speed as you open the door and step out (remember: 400 hp engine). Ask me how I know. My preference, although BMW didn’t ask my opinion, is that BMW should go back to the steering column shifter or (better) use a dash-mounted stub as on the Toyota Prius or various forgotten American cars – and couple it with paddle shifters. Since it’s all-electronic, size doesn’t matter.

Should you buy? When can you buy (or lease)?
This fifth generation 7 Series was to have been introduced officially at the 2008 Paris Auto Show in early October with sales in Europe this fall. It will likely be “announced” to the U.S. market at the mid-November Los Angeles auto show with pricing announced at the Chicago Auto Show in February and delivery beginning in late winter. My best guess is that the base price will creep up a couple thousand dollars to around $85,000 vs. the $79,900 entry price for the outgoing 750Li, and the as-sold price will be on the order of $100,000. Even with so much standard, many of the options that are available are not cheap. You can spend $2,000 apiece for active cruise control, night vision, upgrade audio, and premium comfort seats. More likely it will be the as-leased price ($1,000 to $1,500 a month) since the 7 Series has been the most-leased car in the U.S. About 85% of dealer transactions are leases.

Should you buy? Get on the waiting list to buy? Nearly a dozen automakers can lay claim to building the world’s best luxury car: Acura, Audi, BMW, Cadillac, Infiniti, Jaguar, Lexus, Mercedes-Benz, and Porsche. (Most all in the first half of the alphabet.) Audi, BMW, Lexus, and Mercedes-Benz take it most seriously. The mantle of world’s best car typically accrues to whoever among the self-anointed most recently delivers to market a high-end vehicle. And that right now will be BMW. The fifth generation 7 Series takes away two compelling reasons not to buy the fourth generation: iDrive too complex for most Americans and a design too reaching for many tastes. Now, all you have to do is ask yourself if you want to be seen driving a car with a big V8 engine when the rest of the world can have an economical but powerful diesel. I’d rather have this big Bimmer than any other car on earth. As long as you don’t need all-wheel-drive, the 7 Series surpasses the Mercedes-Benz S-Class, the standard-bearer the last three years.

BMW New 7-Series ActiveHybrid Concept

BMW has released initial details for its 7-Series ActiveHybrid Concept which will make its world debut in Paris. Described as a mild hybrid, the 7-Series uses a small electric motor, developing 15 kW/20 hp and peak torque of 210 Newton-metres/155 lb-ft., integrated in the transmission housing essentially replacing the drag inducing auxiliary components such as the alternator and starter motor. Electrical energy is generated through Brake Energy Regeneration system and stored in a high-performance lithium-ion battery located in the luggage compartment.

In this mild hybrid setup, the positioning of the electric motor in the transmission aids in the efficiency of the auto start/stop function. Additionally, the energy yield produced by the electric motor through Brake Energy Regeneration alone exceeds normal standards by roughly ten times. Such electrical power output provides ample energy to run auxiliary components such as air condition and infotainment systems and not off the alternator
which draws energy directly from the combustion engine reducing its overall efficiency.

The engine is based on the N63 direct injection 5.0-liter twin-turbo V8 unit already seen in the 750i and X6 xDrive50i producing 300 kW/407 hp, with peak torque of 600 Newton-metres or 442 lb-ft. In mild hybrid form, the result is 15 percent less fuel consumption and emissions (in the EU test cycle) versus a combustion engine only equivalent.

BMW plans to start production of two models with ActiveHybrid technology in 2009.