Real world MPG for 635d Sport
Discussion
If you do a lot of "urban driving" the MPG plummets. I live in London and had one of the first 535d's and now run an X5 SD (same engine)....great on a motorway but stop start traffic kills them. I reckon you'd be doing very well to see mid 20's in town. I have no idea how BMW calculate their MPG's but I can't get close to what BMW claim even if I am doing a very gentle 50mph.
335d coupe does 40-42mpg over a tank.
High 30's booting it over a tank or shorter journeys. Don't do short journeys and town traffic is minimal.
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What toxic said applies to me. I only really use my car for a daily commute which is steady traffic, rarely getting above 55mph. Avg. speed is 32mph and steady flow for 20 miles with a few miles of stop start town, rest is a-road with a few roundabouts. On the a-roads the mpg needle is fixed at 50mpg. So with slowing down which uses no fuel i quite easily get 42mpg over a tank.
High 30's booting it over a tank or shorter journeys. Don't do short journeys and town traffic is minimal.
...
What toxic said applies to me. I only really use my car for a daily commute which is steady traffic, rarely getting above 55mph. Avg. speed is 32mph and steady flow for 20 miles with a few miles of stop start town, rest is a-road with a few roundabouts. On the a-roads the mpg needle is fixed at 50mpg. So with slowing down which uses no fuel i quite easily get 42mpg over a tank.
Edited by briers on Monday 31st January 23:30
Beardy10 said:
If you do a lot of "urban driving" the MPG plummets. I live in London and had one of the first 535d's and now run an X5 SD (same engine)....great on a motorway but stop start traffic kills them. I reckon you'd be doing very well to see mid 20's in town. I have no idea how BMW calculate their MPG's but I can't get close to what BMW claim even if I am doing a very gentle 50mph.
It's a good point. Mine drops very significantly in heavy traffic.Our E70 is way worse than our E60 (same engines) even allowing for weight, 4 wheel drive etc. 10 MPG difference overall.
Beardy10 said:
If you do a lot of "urban driving" the MPG plummets. I live in London and had one of the first 535d's and now run an X5 SD (same engine)....great on a motorway but stop start traffic kills them. I reckon you'd be doing very well to see mid 20's in town. I have no idea how BMW calculate their MPG's but I can't get close to what BMW claim even if I am doing a very gentle 50mph.
Just realised we exchanged PMs when I bought the E70 for the OH - you were right - great cars!!richterswil said:
Just realised we exchanged PMs when I bought the E70 for the OH - you were right - great cars!!
So we did! Yeah we'll be keeping ours for a while....probably until the next generation X5 comes out which is probably three years away. Nowt else I really want that can do the job we need it and do it better....we specced ours up with every bell and whistle when we bought it so it wasn't cheap.....
I also have a 2010 635d coupe. This time of year with cold weather I average about 35 mpg a mix of long (20+ miles) and short journeys, in better summer temperatures on long journeys (100+ miles) anything upto 45 mpg.
Large diesels take longer to reach operating temperature than petrol engines. Much depends on how heavy your right foot is.
Large diesels take longer to reach operating temperature than petrol engines. Much depends on how heavy your right foot is.
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