But BMW aficionados elsewhere in the world were rather curiously shortchanged. The company says it is not planning on introducing the 5 Series lineup at any of the upcoming auto shows – a departure from tradition.
The changes to the vehicle include styling touches meant to make the 5 Series look, feel and drive more like the pricier 7 Series. To that end, the 5 Series has grown a few inches in most directions. And it weighs in at several hundred pounds heavier than the equivalent outgoing models.
Despite a 7 Series lookalike grille treatment, the new 5 bears a lot of resemblance to the smaller 3 Series lineup, especially in profile.
The new chassis has a double-wishbone front suspension with cast-aluminum control arms, as well as BMW’s Integral-V multilink rear suspension.
In Europe, the 5-Series range will include five different sedans and seven different powertrain choices — one V-8, three inline-6s, two inline-6 diesels and one inline-4 diesel. The United States is likely to get a twin-turbo 4.4-liter V-8 with 407 horsepower, single-turbo 3-liter inline-6 (306 horsepower), a 3-liter inline-6 (258 horsepower) and a turbocharged 3-liter inline-6 diesel (245 horsepower). A new 8-speed automatic transmission will be offered for the first time. How soon? Next year. How much? Nothing official, but like a good cut of steak, the price per pound is likely going up.
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