deutsch100 said:
I think the new 3er (E90) will have to prove itself. The exterior does look nice, but I am not happy with the interior..the design and materials look like the new 5 Series...and that is not a good thing IMO. I remember when the new 5 Series was going to debut...I was so excited until I opened the door, felt the door, sat down and felt the majority of interior plastics.
I think Fisher-Price supplied the interior to the current 5er ![ROFL [rofl] [rofl]](/images/smilies/icon_smile_rofl.gif)
To me the 1996-2003 5er is still the Benchmark, as the new one was not an improvement in every way...as a new model should be.
If a new model is not going to better than the current model, then don't put out a new model until it is better in every single way.
So...the new E90 will not be King of the Crop in my eyes until it can prove that it is better than the the E46, and those are some damned big shoes to fill.
For now I stand by Long Live The E46
Deutsch you are so right (yet again). The quality of the interior plastics of previous generation BMWs has always been a decisive factor in separating them from the merely adequate competition. Even my E30 has a dashboard that is simple, functional, solid, and attractive. The old BMWs had that "carved from one solid piece of granite" feel which made them so appealing to me. The driving position was just so right (still is) but somehow the new BMWs don't make you feel as though the car is shrink-wrapped around you anymore. My dad's E38 7er is a classic example: it's a big car yet the driving position and the use of ergonomics and good plastics makes you feel as though you're in a real driver's cockpit.
When you get into a new BMW it's all just so fake to me. The new 7 has such shocking plastics quality that I seriously wonder how on earth it ever passed the testing stage at BMW AG. When i closed the door I felt as though I was closing the top of a tin-can. Needless to say, the doors didn't shut with the pleasing "thunk" of old. Go and shut the door to an E23 7-series and you'll know what a great feel the car has.
For me, the new BMWs are faster, safer, more economical and all that stuff but they really have lost that special something in the transition from the E46, E39, and E38. BMWs have always been about putting the driver first which was so classicly evident in the driver-facing dashboard. The instrument clusters for the tacho, speedo, fuel, temp gauges were simple yet elegant and now they've been replaced by plasticky, geeky looking dials which further alienate me from the car. It's all about having a special connection to your baby and the new BMs are just too clinical and computerized for their own good. Absolutely horrendous plastics and interior design/quality really just shows how cynical BMW have become. Do they think we're
that stupid? I-drive is a joke too, and 'active-steering' repeatedly fails whilst simultaneously robbing the steering of meaningful feel. What happened to the granular responses of old?
No, the new breed have only distinguished themselves with their questionable styling, shocking reliability, and decreased driver appeal. And the 'power war' that's erupted between the German manufacturers only adds to this development as it further numbs the car's responses through the use of electronic aids and gumball tyres to keep bloody idiots from binning them into the nearest hedge. In this regard, I'm glad that BMW has risen above the competition with the new 330i. Aftter all, real driving enthusiasts shouldn't care if an Infiniti beats their 330 from the lights - it's all about the seamless delivery of power from that lovely straight six. Besides, you know you'd have more fun on the twisty stuff anyway.
Geez all this stuff with the new BMWs gets me angry.