Light seen from the side and a reflection of the photographer?
Thanks Busty. Laser light is static in I8. Does it come with dynamic functions in the 7er?
^Looks to me just as a very close-up of the innerlife of the light.
^^ Adaptive laser light, if so, would be great.
I thought it was a technical "tour de force" with laserlight. But I'm just a lawyer and not an engineer.It shouldn't be difficult to do, the laser light units are very compact.
No, design is a science in the sense that there are rules defining wrong and right, good and bad. The rules may not be as exact as in maths but are comparable to the empirical aspects of engineering (this was the first thing I as a natural scientist learned from my engineer co-workers in a design department).
All the hard data argue for the G11 here (i.e., lines, aspect ratios, graphics).
What is highly subjective is the implementation of a proposal and the perception of the final product. A technically good sketch may not translate into a good 1:10 model, a great 1:4 model may not make a homogenous 1:1 product. Among numerous reasons for that are technical constraints, environmental factors (e.g., lighting, movement), and finally users' viewing habits and patterns.
The rear indicator glass of the G11 folding in before meeting the small reflector in the trunk lid illustrates such critical points. Great in theory and sketch, giving the unit a gem-like appearance. In the conceptual phase, the designers must have been hyped up about this. But in real life, most people may not see this and with the ones who do there is the risk they will regard it as an unintentional misfit.
What I learned as a rule of thumb is: good design can be reproduced by heart in the outline but not in the detail. Test it! A 911 outline is easy to draw but the details - at least of the current generation aren't. Check! Good design.
I don't why this isn't shared more often... it's the same pic but less cropped imo and therefore gives a little more realistic impression. What is visible here is the very muscular flank (below the shoulder line, behind the air breather) and the slim side mirror stand.![]()
Haha (I like lawyers, even in professional contexts) .... but seriously: your intuition may be right. I hear there is testing of this going on. Obviously, the light is kind of 'unusual' to some drivers when passing other cars or reflecting objects. Some like the effect, some don't. Cannot be more precise without compromising my source, sorry.I thought it was a technical "tour de force" with laserlight. But I'm just a lawyer and not an engineer.
That slim mirror side connection piece reminds me of the same design on the E36 3-series.I don't why this isn't shared more often... it's the same pic but less cropped imo and therefore gives a little more realistic impression. What is visible here is the very muscular flank (below the shoulder line, behind the air breather) and the slim side mirror stand.![]()
@klier: I also find this detail shot pretty exciting. It shows better the layers in the headlight whereas in the pic I reposted, all layers melt into a huge something. I find the BMWblog render very close. In the area next to the kidney they got everything right.
Exactly.The distortion (fisheye?) caused by the lens really makes the rear look disproportionate. I think we will be surprised by how different the actual reveal looks from these pictures.
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