My point was that a diesel engine of certain size will outperform a petrol engine (providing decent engineering has gone into the engines). So for cost, a diesel should also provide better economy as well as performance. What is not to like?
This really is not the case. For starters the 335i/d engines you're comparing - the 335i has a single turbo whereas the 335d has twin turbos.
There is a reason >99% of all diesel engines have a turbo fitted whereas perhaps <10% of petrol engines have a turbo - and that is, that diesel engines are dog slow until you do fit a turbo whereas petrol engines.. aren't. Sure, you can fit a turbo to a petrol engine and it will go like stink but you don't have to, to get reasonable power out of it.
Take something like the S2k 2L petrol producing ~240bhp IIRC. This is a petrol engine
without a turbo/supercharger etc, and I can't think of a single diesel 2L engine that produces as much power even with a turbo.
It's a valid point that diesels provide better fuel economy but this is due to a number of reasons - notably that there is more energy per litre of diesel than per litre of petrol - and again due to diesels having turbos while petrol counterparts often do not. This means the car can cruise without the turbo spooling up, in which state it is essentially a lower-powered engine consuming less fuel, vs the non-turbo where it is always a 'higher-powered' engine. Hence the rise now in small 1.0L or 1.2L turbo petrol engines for small city cars, many of which comfortably produce <120g/km CO2.
The downside of course with using a turbo is added expense and added risk of failure, both of which add to the total cost of ownership and eat into the fuel savings. Clearly there are also other, diesel specific things and diesel-biased things which can go wrong as well like DPFs or DMFs/injectors etc.
DPFs for example currently get a bad rep perhaps partially because they are a new technology introduced in the past 10 years. Catalytic converters had their fair share of teething problems when they were introduced as well but these are now very robust and I expect DPFs will go down the same route.. but they are not yet there.
0.1 or 0.2 is meaningless unless you're a stats junkie. The real issue is the same performance for greater MPG. Albeit, that performance will be delivered in a fairly linear fashion, akin to the electric sports cars.
Too many people discount diesels thinking they're slow and inferior, they are so wrong (and i've owned an N55 335i too, so fairly well-driven in these two).
Performance delivery is really, really not linear in turbo engines. They give a shove of fairly low down torque and then not much else for the rest of the rev range. n/a engines are far more linear in their performance delivery and still are nothing like an electric motor in smoothness.