Has anybody on here ever driven a 4WD BMW?
X5 and X3
I meant one that isn't currently available in 4WD over here at the moment.

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Has anybody on here ever driven a 4WD BMW?
X5 and X3
The RS4 is 40:60 F:R split I believe, it does feel more RWD than FWD when pushing on, well until the nose starts to push wide like all Audi's!
Me, and I stand by it. I haven't seen any proof yetWho posted in the other thread that BMW will never sell an AWD 3 & 5 series in the UK again since its not worth the effort?
Who posted in the other thread that BMW will never sell an AWD 3 & 5 series in the UK again since its not worth the effort?
Vauxhall Frontera, normally RWD. Can't use 4wd on grippy surfaces (non icy tarmac) though because there's no centre diff which causes the front axle to wind up and break.
[TW]Fox;15708257 said:To be fair...
citation needed imho.
Perhaps, let hope BMW can build an AWD system with some steering feel.
An AWD 3 or 5 Series would sell in virtually nil quantity to fleets, which make up a very large proportion of both models sales. Add to that the fact that even in Nordic countries the AWD versions sell far fewer than their RWD equivalents, and that most people will buy a RWD BMW rather than leaving BMW as a brand (and thus an AWD version just cannibalizes RWD sales), it's not a very convincing business case IMO.PMKeates said:Let me put it this way. In the last 5 years BMW have sold about 1,000,000 5 series globally. The UK accounts for 90,000 of those. Let's say that AWD 5 Series would be as popular here as they are in Sweden (obviously they wouldn't be), and that as much as a third of the people who want an executive car didn't buy a BMW because of RWD, and therefore buying an AWD BMW wouldn't cannibalise RWD sales. Do you know how many extra sales that makes? About 4,000. Not even half a percent, and on the basis that our climate suddenly turns Nordic, and on the basis that companies stop buying cars. Sure, if an AWD 5 Series works out in the UK, do it - but it's not worth putting any real investment in.
Yup, there's going to be a 3-4% BIK difference on top of the additional ~£2000 purchase price.Also given that AWD will put up emission and hence should increase your company car tax contributions i can't see them being sold in volume, but mind saying that it might be BMW responding to a small customer base in a hope to increase future sales?
It's an investment for very little potential return or positive effect.
Other than the RHD/LHD difference, yeah, they would be.Why would it be an investment for no return? Surely the AWD units that would be ordered here are exactly the same as the ones already sold all over the world?![]()
You know how 4x4 have 2wd (front) and 4wd, couldn't someone do the reverse? So RWD and AWD selectable?
To further emphasise how difficult it may be, in Japan you can buy a 325i xDrive. Japan is a right-hand-drive market. The xDrive is imported as left-hand-drive.Other than the RHD/LHD difference, yeah, they would be.
Only the upper parts of the ranges. Most of the other BMW 3 models are right-hand-drive except for the 335i, and the xDrive on the 325i is definitely not a status symbol.Practically all European prestige imports to Japan are LHD, that's because it's seen as a status symbol though.