First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

hitmee

Well-Known Member
BMW is among the growing number of automakers that thinks it's time to stop judging engines by how many cylinders they have. They're probably right - in terms of output, for sure: the best modern turbocharged engines can easily make more power than their predecessors with twice the cylinder count. More boost is more power -- that's the easy part.



The hard part is making the package work in terms of refinement. Downsizing from a V-8 to a straight-six, for example, is a painless exercise: in-line sixes are just as smooth as V-8s. But what about going from a straight-six, the holy grail of refinement, to a four-banger -- the roughest of the bunch?
BMW started that gamble last month when the company let us drive its Z4 sDrive28i -- the first North American application of the N20-series 2.0-liter turbo four-cylinder. We came away mighty impressed but remained a little concerned that in less sporty, more luxurious applications like the 5-series, the N20 might be a little too rough. BMW officials assured us that the N20 would receive a revised NVH package in the 5-series, and as it turns out, they didn't lie.
We had an opportunity to slide behind the wheel of a 528i wagon equipped with the N20. In this application, the N20 is rated at 245 hp and 258 lb-ft. Bolted to an eight-speed automatic and thrown under the wagon's hood, the engine is powerful enough for a 6.3-second run to 62 mph, according to BMW. Top speed is electronically limited to 155 mph. We'll let those numbers speak for themselves.
More important, like we mentioned above, is what the engine is like. The N20 is phenomenally quiet and refined at low rpm. The standard start/stop works so well, in combination with an engine that's so quiet and smooth (even in gear with the air conditioning engaged) that you sometimes need to look at the tachometer to see if it's running.
The 528i isn't all about isolation, either. Refinement is more the word, because once the revs start climbing, you can very clearly hear the engine. What you hear, though, is all sweetness and light until about 6000 rpm: up until that point, the sound is unmistakably four-cylinder, just with all the bad bits removed. It sounds throaty, purposeful, and completely and totally in line with what the buyer of a base-model BMW 5-series would expect.
Is the new, downsized, four-cylinder BMW 528i a home run? Almost -- let's call it a triple. Even though the turbo is responsive enough in normal driving that you don't even notice its existence (oh, but you do hear lots of delicious turbo sounds with the windows down) you can occasionally catch the entire powertrain sleeping. Cruising along, you tip into the throttle and the engine and transmission start to fight about whose turn it is to work. Eventually, they both do: you get a downshift and lots of power, but the wait is a good bit longer than you'd expect. That, combined with fairly conservative throttle mapping (in Comfort mode; it's better in Sport) means the 528i feels a tad lazy around town.
Of course, this is a small engine pushing around quite a large sedan. Or, in the case of our particular test car, a large, stunningly beautiful station wagon. Oh, how we hope BMW will bring the 5-series Touring back to the United States. It's even better looking than the sedan and provides tons of extra usability with absolutely zero drawbacks. And it's more than quick enough with the 2.0-liter, as will be the sedan.
Final EPA numbers aren't in, but BMW says to expect a significant improvement over the 528i's already stunning fuel economy numbers. (The 528i sedan with the normally aspirated 3.0-liter six already achieves 32 mpg on EPA highway testing.) Expect that number to improve slightly with more of a gain on the 22-mpg EPA city number.
With significantly more torque (over a far larger rev area) and no real loss of refinement in driveability, we're easily sold on the N20-powered F10 5-series. As long, that is, as a turbocharged inline six remains in the lineup. Why? Well, even though BMW could (and probably will) get more power out of the 2.0-liter, we'd miss the character of the straight six. Luckily for us, that's not going anywhere any time soon. Bravo.


Read more: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder - Automobile Magazine
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

sounds good for F10 528i !
MTL ..... :D


** chey .... i tot this is a local fr from hitmee
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

N20 perfect for 3 series...
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

yup ... even more perfect for z4 power-to-ratio :D

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cpMkB29UF7U]2012 BMW Z4 sDrive 28i Dyno Test Video - Inside Line - YouTube[/ame]

zorro;697916 said:
N20 perfect for 3 series...
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

wt_know;697913 said:
sounds good for F10 528i !
MTL ..... :D


** chey .... i tot this is a local fr from hitmee

i dun give FR on cars........
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

I heard the 528 test drive car at Alex-PML was "Test-Driven" till broke down. My friend wanted to test but no luck yet.....lol
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

Good review, bro! Thanks!

I noted your comment on torque and was wondering (on a slightly separate note) whether it is true that in Singapore (given our short runways), torque is more important than bhp. I know it's a bit of a generalization but I recall hearing this before. I'm no car expert so wanted to get some feedback as to whether there is truth in that statement.
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

Torque = acceleration
HP = Top Speed.

Spore is urban and acceleration is needed to beat the Sonata Cab and to haul heavy occupants/car from rest..
Gearing ratio can play a part too..
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

zorro;697937 said:
Torque = acceleration
HP = Top Speed.

Spore is urban and acceleration is needed to beat the Sonata Cab and to haul heavy occupants/car from rest..
Gearing ratio can play a part too..

Thanks, bro. Very useful!
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

torque makes ur drive more relaxing as u dun have to squeeze the power out.
slight tap on the accelerator and the car cheong.
much like the lighter jap cars
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

hitmee;697940 said:
torque makes ur drive more relaxing as u dun have to squeeze the power out.
slight tap on the accelerator and the car cheong.
much like the lighter jap cars

Got it, thanks :)
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

I thought Hitmee went down to test drive and then steady steady wrote a long poon pee pee FR.

Jase;697935 said:
I noted your comment on torque and was wondering (on a slightly separate note) whether it is true that in Singapore (given our short runways), torque is more important than bhp. I know it's a bit of a generalization but I recall hearing this before. I'm no car expert so wanted to get some feedback as to whether there is truth in that statement.

Hitmee is an advocator of this. Which I think to a certain extent it's true. But above a certain speed, bigger bhp/engine will rule, MW say one.
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

wt_know;697913 said:
** chey .... i tot this is a local fr from hitmee

C3P0;698017 said:
I thought Hitmee went down to test drive and then steady steady wrote a long poon pee pee FR.

.


One look and you know cannot be him cos his legs cannot reach the accelerator or brake pedals
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

Heard you can indent BMW with customised brake/throttle pedals...


MW;698022 said:
One look and you know cannot be him cos his legs cannot reach the accelerator or brake pedals
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

C3P0;698017 said:
I thought Hitmee went down to test drive and then steady steady wrote a long poon pee pee FR.



Hitmee is an advocator of this. Which I think to a certain extent it's true. But above a certain speed, bigger bhp/engine will rule, MW say one.

a speed u r not supposed to reach.
even if u did, is only less than 5% of ur total drive time.
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

hitmee;698037 said:
a speed u r not supposed to reach.
even if u did, is only less than 5% of ur total drive time.

+1.
So when you getting 535? A5 too slow, Justin say one.
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

C3P0;698078 said:
+1.
So when you getting 535? A5 too slow, Justin say one.

when i am 30 years old.

is justin really following every thread?
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

zorro;697937 said:
Torque = acceleration
HP = Top Speed.

Spore is urban and acceleration is needed to beat the Sonata Cab and to haul heavy occupants/car from rest..
Gearing ratio can play a part too..
That's why must buy 535d. 600NM of torque at the price of 15.4km/L. IL6 twin turbo diesel power FTW.
 
Re: First Drive: 2012 BMW 528i Four-Cylinder

wt_know;697913 said:
sounds good for F10 528i !
MTL ..... :D


** chey .... i tot this is a local fr from hitmee

+1. I thought hitmee was giving a local field report.
 
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