martinbo
Staff member
Yeah, Betty's right. The X5/6M have never received anywhere near the glowing reviews that the more traditional M cars have garnered in the past. We were initially led to expect physics-defying dynamics and a rearwardly biased handling characteristic but this turned out to be not-so. In the end, the X5/6M are mildly impressive for what they are but nowhere near the standards of the great M cars.
An ML63 AMG is said to be a more involving drive and Porsche's new Cayenne Turbo easily has the measure of the more powerful BMWs. But this point is largely irrelevant in the modern context of market. In a nutshell it all about this: "Is it fast? Yes. Does it look mean? Yes. Will it sell? More so if you have an M-badge on it." Result: X5/6M - and rightly so. As abhorrent as they are to me.
I came across this extremely interesting factoid in an unrelated article on the facelifted Jag XF on Autocar:
Now, tell me rationally, why on Earth ought BMW not offer an AWD M5 in the US? Especially now that it has turbo'd torque-slugger of an engine that will largely negate the drivetrain losses of AWD compared with the effect of it on a high-revving naturally aspirated engine in a heavy body.
An ML63 AMG is said to be a more involving drive and Porsche's new Cayenne Turbo easily has the measure of the more powerful BMWs. But this point is largely irrelevant in the modern context of market. In a nutshell it all about this: "Is it fast? Yes. Does it look mean? Yes. Will it sell? More so if you have an M-badge on it." Result: X5/6M - and rightly so. As abhorrent as they are to me.
I came across this extremely interesting factoid in an unrelated article on the facelifted Jag XF on Autocar:
Autocar said:Also on its way is a four-wheel-drive XF, which will extend Jag’s market penetration in the snowbelt states of the US, which includes New York. Around three-quarters of executive saloon sales in the snowbelt are all-wheel drive.
Now, tell me rationally, why on Earth ought BMW not offer an AWD M5 in the US? Especially now that it has turbo'd torque-slugger of an engine that will largely negate the drivetrain losses of AWD compared with the effect of it on a high-revving naturally aspirated engine in a heavy body.
I guess he must be Head of Project IDE (It Doesn't Exist). 


