Where is the limit?
About two years ago I was writing about the phenomenal
bi-turbo engine developed by BMW, which solved one of the major drawbacks of
these oil-burning machines, the turbo lag. But guess what – for some unknown
reason, this was not enough: engineers at BMW were not happy, so they thought,
why not add another turbo? We have now a car with three turbines.
And to show how happy they were with the
result, the engineers decided that this engine was worthy of bearing, for the
first time on a diesel, the M badge. So, the BMW M50d was born.
They looked around in the yard and picked two
models into which to transplant the beast's heart, the X5 and the X6.
I got the chance to sit behind the wheel and
drive around for a few days in the X6 M50d. I had been looking forward to this
for a number of months so I’d gemmed up on everything there was to know about
the car. The specs show that this 6 cylinder 3.0 liter diesel will only be 0.6
seconds slower than its big brother, the full X6M version powered by the
thirsty V8. How about that!
Let's talk a bit more about those turbos. This
is how they work: one by one, they kick in sequentially across the rev range. A
small one gets to work at almost 1,000 revs, a larger one takes over from about
1,500rpm, then a third kicks in from about 2,600rpm. And... guess what: the
full 750Nm is available from just 2,000rpm, enough to give you a headache if
you are not used to such a violent push in the seat.
The intelligent ZF eight-speed automatic
transmission brilliantly complements the power of this motor, short-geared when
needed, but not lacking flexibility. The sport mode allows the gears to be
shifted close to the limiter while keeping the revs in the best performance
range.
In terms of fuel efficiency, even if it seems
a bit vulgar to talk about this in such a car, I managed to get a 10 liter
/100km consumption on a gentle freeway cruise. If you put the pedal to the
metal, the consumption will rise significantly to almost double. Still, it's an
unbeatable figure if you compare it with the V8 powered X6M.
The chunky steering wheel is indicative of the
way the X6 goes about its business. The driver has to deal with a two-tonne
vehicle but, miraculously, the engineers have done their homework here such
that you cannot feel this weight. It grips the tarmac like a veritable sports
car, balanced and smooth, without giving the driver that chilly feeling of losing
control.
Inside, the BMW X6 M50d is quite dull. The
personalization of the interior to the M specs is kept to a minimum. A small
badge on the wheel will remind you that you are in an M Sport vehicle. To be
honest I would have expected more creativity in this department.
The two rear seats of the pre-facelift X6 have
now turned into three, probably because male clients could not justify before a
practical mum the need to buy such a large four-seat vehicle. Now your
practical SUV is reborn and reinvented to please families too. But families
with deep pockets, as the tested version hits the 100,000 EUR mark.