![]() ![]() VEHICLE TYPE: front-engine, all-wheel-drive, 7-passenger, 4-door hatchback The impending fourth-generation X5 has its work cut out for it, and it can’t arrive soon enough. If there’s some thought within BMW that the X5’s somewhat stately, reasonably rich appearance is enough to live up to its high price, the reality is that Bavaria’s mid-size SUV lacks the presence, driving pleasure, practicality, and pizazz to make it the choice over numerous more well-rounded and appealing rivals, at least this late in its production run. A $1150 Premium package added proximity-key entry, four-zone automatic climate control, and SiriusXM satellite radio, while a $2800 Executive package added soft-close doors, a surround-view camera, parking sensors, a digital gauge cluster, LED headlights, and automatic high-beams. Other extras on our $72,145 test car included $2900 for a pair of Driving Assistance packages, both of which add features-such as blind-spot warning, adaptive cruise control, and forward-collision warning-that should really be standard on vehicles of this prestige. If you want additional third-row space, you’re better off either waiting for BMW’s upcoming X7 or looking elsewhere, such as Mercedes-Benz’s GLS-class, another Car and Driver 10Best winner. There’s a paucity of space back there, even compared with its many rivals that set a low bar for comfort in the wayback seat. Our X5 came equipped with the $1700 third-row seat, an option you’ll want to mull over before choosing. Apple CarPlay is, perplexingly, a $300 option, and Android Auto is not available at all. The iDrive controller functions intuitively, and the 10.2-inch central display screen’s graphics are crisp and entirely modern. While there’s some merit to complaints that the X5 looks a bit dated inside, we’re not displeased by the dashboard’s appearance. The atmosphere in there is decidedly familiar-mostly in a good way-with no-nonsense white-on-black gauges, a chunky steering wheel, and a climate-control panel that could’ve been taken straight out of an E90 3-series. We wish the X5’s dynamics reminded us of early-2000s BMWs as much as the interior does. Numerous competitors come to mind that offer both nimbler handling and better ride comfort, such as the 10Best-winning Audi Q7, the Acura MDX, and the Porsche Cayenne.īrad Fick | Car and Driver Mixed Bag Inside A low grip threshold of 0.81 g and a longish braking distance of 178 feet from 70 mph are nothing to write home about, either. It exhibits sloppy body control and lifeless steering, as well as unrefined ride quality over rough surfaces (the Pirelli Scorpion Verde All Season Run Flat tires might be to blame for some of the impact harshness, but non-run-flat tires aren’t available). Although we don’t expect any three-row luxury SUV to be a corner scorcher, we do expect BMWs to be among the best to drive in any given class. If its heart lives up to BMW’s billing as an expert engine builder, though, the X5’s overall comportment on the road does not measure up to the Ultimate Driving Machine credo. More impressive was the 27 mpg it recorded on our real-world 75-mph highway fuel-economy test, beating both its EPA highway estimate and the V-6–powered Audi Q7 by 3 mpg, while also surpassing even the considerably less powerful four-cylinder Q7 by 1 mpg. Acceleration performance isn’t quite class-leading, owing to the X5’s prodigious 4911-pound mass (a whopping 689 pounds more than an Acura MDX), but it nonetheless managed a competitive zero-to-60-mph time of 6.0 seconds and a quarter-mile run of 14.6 seconds at 95 mph. Not only does it make a satisfying sound as it revs smoothly and swiftly to its 7000-rpm redline, it also makes an ideal pair with the eight-speed automatic transmission, which kicks down promptly and is rarely caught in the wrong gear. As with nearly all Bimmers, the turbocharged inline-six under the hood is a great engine that can somewhat compensate for the X5’s flaws. Let’s start with the bright spots, though. ![]()
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