BMW 535i GT: Great answer – what's the question?
LOTS GOING FOR IT - BUT FOUR THINGS IT'S NOT
September 28, 2009
By John Simister
Let no market niche remain unfilled. Let no distinction be unblurred. Let no genre-defining name be safe. Meet BMW's new 5 Series Gran Turismo.
First of all, here is what it is not:
A GT, in the accepted sense of sleek Gran Turismo, with a sloping fastback tail and space in the back for between nought and two children. (It has a fastback tail, but is hardly sleek.)
An SUV, despite its tallish stance and "semi-command driving position", suggesting incomplete control, not least because it lacks all-wheel drive. (The idea is to attract those who might like an SUV's loftiness but baulk at its connotations of aggression, planet damage and over-specification for the tasks it is called on to perform
A hatchback, despite having a hatch in its back. (To call it a hatchback, contends BMW, is to belittle both its size and the cleverness of its tail's creators.)
An MPV, despite some ingenious ways of using and hiding the rear seats. (MPV sounds too worthy and utilitarian and the BMW is far too glamorous and luxurious for that.)
So, this is either a car which treads bold new ground, as Renault's Avantime (essentially a very plush Espace coupé) gamely tried to do with minimal success, or it is a car with a crisis of identity. First, though, that tail...
The idea is that you can open either the lower half of the tail door – as though a conventional boot lid – or the whole tail thing, including rear window, as one unit
The BMW has a rigid rear shelf which attaches to spring-loaded boards behind the foldable rear seats, boards able to cover the gap between folded seats and boot floor. With the rear seats upright and slid to their rearmost position, the ensemble forms a box which acoustically isolates the boot space and allows quiet travelling in the very spacious rear cabin.
That's a part of the £41 150 GT's luxury ambience; another part is the fact that the interior design and finish is that of a slightly ritzier 7 Series, BMW's biggest and most prestigious saloon.
The way the two-part tail door works isn't quite the same as in, say, a Skoda. That car defaults to bootlid-only mode and you have to press a button to make the two sections unite before you can open the entire tail door.
FERTILE MINDS AT WORK
In the BMW, one button does boot, the other the tail door. Does that make it cleverer? Not really, because the BMW loses points for the bulk of the mechanism and a rear window with so much black masking it's like looking through a letter-box.
Fertile minds were, undoubtedly, exercised in this car's creation, but it's no beauty. Still, it's a BMW, so it's likely to feel good on the road. Despite the 5 Series tag, chosen to position the GT appropriately in the BMW hierarchy, it owes more to the 7 Series, under the skin as well as in its cabin. So will next year's new 5 Series sedan.
Three engines are offered to begin with, each with a turbocharger: petrol feeds the 4.4-litre, 550i V8 and the new three-litre straight-six in the 535i, diesel the also straight-six 530d. Each has an automatic gearbox whose eight ratios make it hard to remember where you are should you desire some manual intervention.
It's better not to bother, anyway, just enjoy the engines' smoothness and impressive pulling ability. I tried the two "sixes", and the petrol one is outstanding, if thirstier.
This being an up-range BMW, various hi-tech options – such as unnecessary "active steering" which artificially hastens response at low speeds – can be applied to a suspension already fitted with self-levelling air springs at the back and self-adjusting shock-absorbers all round.
DELIGHTFUL ENGINES
The latter can be set to Comfort, Normal, Sport and Sport Plus, with corresponding changes to steering weighting and accelerator eagerness. Helpful messages on a central screen describe the settings in case you didn't realise that the drive might be more comfortable or that maximum sportiness reduces stability (worrying, that one).
Underneath the technology overload, though, is a fine car with delightful engines, a smooth ride and quite remarkable agility. It's a great solution, though to what problem, I'm not quite sure.
The rivals...
Ford S-Max 2.5 Titanium: It's an MPV but with a powerful, five-cylinder engine and delightful driving dynamics. Few buy this, the fastest version; those who do love it.
Nissan Murano 3.5 Tekna: It's an SUV with concept-car looks and a great interior. The V6 engine is thirsty and you might not need the 4x4, but it's a pleasing machine.
|
FASTBACK BEEMER: The shape sure isn't new in the motoring world - think Ford Granada Coupe from the 1970's, for a start - but BMW reckons its 5 Series GT is a new boy on the roads. |
By John Simister
Let no market niche remain unfilled. Let no distinction be unblurred. Let no genre-defining name be safe. Meet BMW's new 5 Series Gran Turismo.
First of all, here is what it is not:
A GT, in the accepted sense of sleek Gran Turismo, with a sloping fastback tail and space in the back for between nought and two children. (It has a fastback tail, but is hardly sleek.)
An SUV, despite its tallish stance and "semi-command driving position", suggesting incomplete control, not least because it lacks all-wheel drive. (The idea is to attract those who might like an SUV's loftiness but baulk at its connotations of aggression, planet damage and over-specification for the tasks it is called on to perform
The GT is either a car which treads bold new ground...
.)A hatchback, despite having a hatch in its back. (To call it a hatchback, contends BMW, is to belittle both its size and the cleverness of its tail's creators.)
An MPV, despite some ingenious ways of using and hiding the rear seats. (MPV sounds too worthy and utilitarian and the BMW is far too glamorous and luxurious for that.)
So, this is either a car which treads bold new ground, as Renault's Avantime (essentially a very plush Espace coupé) gamely tried to do with minimal success, or it is a car with a crisis of identity. First, though, that tail...
The idea is that you can open either the lower half of the tail door – as though a conventional boot lid – or the whole tail thing, including rear window, as one unit
...or it is a car with a crisis of identity - but first the tail
. The BMW has a rigid rear shelf which attaches to spring-loaded boards behind the foldable rear seats, boards able to cover the gap between folded seats and boot floor. With the rear seats upright and slid to their rearmost position, the ensemble forms a box which acoustically isolates the boot space and allows quiet travelling in the very spacious rear cabin.
That's a part of the £41 150 GT's luxury ambience; another part is the fact that the interior design and finish is that of a slightly ritzier 7 Series, BMW's biggest and most prestigious saloon.
The way the two-part tail door works isn't quite the same as in, say, a Skoda. That car defaults to bootlid-only mode and you have to press a button to make the two sections unite before you can open the entire tail door.
FERTILE MINDS AT WORK
In the BMW, one button does boot, the other the tail door. Does that make it cleverer? Not really, because the BMW loses points for the bulk of the mechanism and a rear window with so much black masking it's like looking through a letter-box.
Fertile minds were, undoubtedly, exercised in this car's creation, but it's no beauty. Still, it's a BMW, so it's likely to feel good on the road. Despite the 5 Series tag, chosen to position the GT appropriately in the BMW hierarchy, it owes more to the 7 Series, under the skin as well as in its cabin. So will next year's new 5 Series sedan.
Three engines are offered to begin with, each with a turbocharger: petrol feeds the 4.4-litre, 550i V8 and the new three-litre straight-six in the 535i, diesel the also straight-six 530d. Each has an automatic gearbox whose eight ratios make it hard to remember where you are should you desire some manual intervention.
It's better not to bother, anyway, just enjoy the engines' smoothness and impressive pulling ability. I tried the two "sixes", and the petrol one is outstanding, if thirstier.
This being an up-range BMW, various hi-tech options – such as unnecessary "active steering" which artificially hastens response at low speeds – can be applied to a suspension already fitted with self-levelling air springs at the back and self-adjusting shock-absorbers all round.
DELIGHTFUL ENGINES
The latter can be set to Comfort, Normal, Sport and Sport Plus, with corresponding changes to steering weighting and accelerator eagerness. Helpful messages on a central screen describe the settings in case you didn't realise that the drive might be more comfortable or that maximum sportiness reduces stability (worrying, that one).
Underneath the technology overload, though, is a fine car with delightful engines, a smooth ride and quite remarkable agility. It's a great solution, though to what problem, I'm not quite sure.
The rivals...
Ford S-Max 2.5 Titanium: It's an MPV but with a powerful, five-cylinder engine and delightful driving dynamics. Few buy this, the fastest version; those who do love it.
Nissan Murano 3.5 Tekna: It's an SUV with concept-car looks and a great interior. The V6 engine is thirsty and you might not need the 4x4, but it's a pleasing machine.
Free NEWSLETTER
OPEN WIDE: ...and wider and wider. The tail door of the new BMW 5 Series GT has two sections which can open individually or together to expose the huge luggage bay.

DARK SECRE: Why there's so much blackout on the tail window of BMW's new 5 Series GT isn't explained - but it makes checking your mirror like looking through a pillar-box slot.
BUSINESS CLASS BEEMER: You don't get seats like these even in SAA Business Class - they exist in the rear of the new BMW 5 Series GT 'fastback'.
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