Thursday, 2 June 2011

2011 BMW 7-Series

The year 2009 brought the newest edition of the bigger Bimmer--and in this, its fifth turn around the block, the player from Munich neatly reverses the styling miscues applied under the old regime, which makes today's 7-Series one of the best-conceived big sedans Bavaria's ever brewed.

Call us converts: The latest BMW 7-Series turns our eyes more than ever and drives with real big-guy brio.

The awkward proportions and surfaces of the 2002-2008 model are gone, and performance is better than ever, too. The quintessential BMW driving feel remains intact, despite a horde of new electronic interventions and a big uptick in size. There's a version, practically, for anyone well-funded enough to lay down a minimum of $70,000 for a four-door sedan. The in-line six versions are sprightly enough; the twin-turbo V-8s are thrusty joys to drive. The V-12 may be overkill for anyone who can't afford one--and the new Hybrid, a first important step into new technology that could use some smoothing over.

Cavernous interior room comes with either the short-wheelbase 7er. Long-wheelbase cars have chauffeur-style room for front and rear-seat passengers. Safety ratings are still on hold, but other features overflow the order sheet--everything from DVD changers to night vision to custom wood and leather trim.

With a base price above $72,000 in the 740i, climbing to more than $135,000 for the 760Li, there's a vast gulf in the 7-Series lineup that leaves lots of wiggle room for the justifications and rationalizations you'll want to make. In that range, the 7-Series' competition includes the Mercedes-Benz S-Class, Audi A8, Jaguar XJ, Lexus LS; Porsche Panamera; possibly even the Aston Martin Rapide, if you're willing to sacrifice a lot for beauty.


With slimmer and more exciting proportions--and a much more streamlined cockpit--today's BMW 7-Series makes the prior version look like an ungainly rough draft. See details and best of the Web The big safety agencies haven't scored the 2011 BMW 7-Series, but it gets our highest score from a wealth of standard safety gear, and a good track record for crash protection. See details and best of the Web A simplified iDrive controller and some of the finest high-tech features available fill the 2011 BMW 7-Series with swagger. See details and best of the Web The 2011 BMW 7-Series cuts a wide swath across the EPA's fuel-economy chart; the six-cylinder models fare better than the hybrid. See details and best of the Web An aesthetic high-fiveStartling power, even with six-cylinder versionsHandling's pretty sharp for such a wide, long carThat huge back seatYour choice of nine different modelsGet Dealer Price Quotes The electronic gadgets can feel overwhelmingBMW's iDrive system's getting better--but have you tried MyFord Touch?ActiveHybrid 7 has too much regen baked in at low speedsIs the V-12 worth it?

View the original article here

No comments:

Post a Comment