5 MILES
here’s just so much of it. It seems
to stretch on forever. To take
it all in you have to recalibrate
your peripheral vision, reset
your sense of scale. Yep, the
desertscape in rural California
is vast beyond comprehension,
and so is the X7’s grille.
BMW’s new flagship SUV wears the largest version of the
company’s trademark kidney grille ever applied to a production
car. There have been semi-sporty BMW SUVs (X5), there have
been coupes (X4/X6), there have been dull-but-worthy ones (X3)
- now there’s a Range Rover-esque luxury one, and it’s certainly
keen to let you know it’s here.
Available with the choice of six or seven seats, the 5.1m-long
X7 starts from around £72k in the UK, but North America
will be its biggest market. That’s also where it’s built – at the
Spartanburg plant in South Carolina. This journey begins on
the opposite coast in Palm Springs, east of LA, and will involve
heading into the desert.
When you first see the X7 in the metal its sheer heft and
comprehensive chroming gel more fluidly than in photos. The
interior is as agreeable as the exterior is polarising; it’s all about
soft leather, crisp fit and finish, glossy trim and a full toy box.
Wireless phone charging is standard, as is onboard Wi-Fi (with
an excellent connection even in the back of beyond), heated and
cooled cupholders are an option, there are five climate control
zones, and just about everything that moves is motorised. No
wonder it weighs more than 2300kg, when you have electric
motors for six or seven seats, and for a split tailgate, and for a
massive three-part sunroof.
Whether you have two or three seats in the middle row,
they can’t be folded manually, and nor can the two in the back.
Instead they fold via switches at their side and in the boot. It’s a
fiddly process that has us pining for a manual lever or two as we
load our X7 up. But when the rearmost pair have dropped into
the boot floor there’s a giant luggage area.
Palm Springs is a genteel kind of place, where the pace
of life is slow and the golf courses plentiful. The X7 feels at
home here. The archetypal Palm Springs car is the classic
Cadillac sedan; there are plenty of them tucked away among
the manicured sprinkler-tended lawns and Art Deco houses.
Grandiose and unashamedly built for comfort, the X7 feels like
a spiritual successor to the Cadillacs that, prior to the SUV’s rise
to power, used to symbolise US automotive luxury. Air springs
on both axles are standard on the BMW, and it’s a cushy way to
travel – mostly. This car rides on optional 22-inch wheels (20
and 21s are also available), and although large bumps are ab-
sorbed, there’s an annoying low-level patter on smaller bumps
and surface joins. Gigantic blindspot aside (the standard-fit
warning monitor lamps in the mirrors really earn their keep),
it’s incredibly easy to manoeuvre for a car of this size, and to
park, thanks to the superb 360º camera system. But then this
is America, where the streets are wide, the lanes are many and
tight parking spaces are the exception rather than the rule.
We strike out of the Palm Springs oasis towards the desert
wilderness. This X7 is the 40i, the mainstream petrol option
starting at £74,155. A turbocharged 3.0-litre straight-six with
335bhp and 332lb ft, it’s a stalwart BMW motor, as found in
the 340i and the Z4 M40i (and its Toyota Supra sister car). The
difference is that in the 2320kg X7 the straight-six doesn’t feel
like it’s overflowing with power; no 155mph limiter required
here. The performance is quick enough without being outright ⊲
Plant the throttle and
you’ll hit 124mph in
7.9sec – and be in
jail shortly after
Passengers have
more fun than the
driver on some roads
Off-Road package
brings extra
modes: xSand,
xSnow, xGravel
and xRocks. Really
T
Chunky A-pillars limit
visibility, but the blindspots
over your shoulders are so
meaty you can lose an SUV
in them, let alone a golf cart
crewed by tanned retirees.
PICK-UP: 0 MILES
The X7’s key is as lavish as the car,
capable of raising and lowering the
suspension remotely and checking
how much fuel is left in the tank. It
c h a r g e s w i r e l e s s l y.
First drives 300-mile test
MAY 2019 | CARMAGAZINE.CO.UK 35