START OF A DYNASTY? One day, the 2009 BWM 7 Series will be seen as having been the progenitor of a new dynasty of Baby Rollers - less regal, perhaps, but just as luxurious.
Price: R928 000.
Top speed: 245km/h, 0-100km/h 7.2sec.
Consumption: 13 litres/100km.
CO2 emissions: 192g/km.
Best for: Social climbing.
Also worth considering: Mercedes-Benz S-Class, Jaguar XJ, Lexus LS, Audi A8.
Is this the best car in the world?
It isn't a question you would normally ask about a BMW, not even the limo-sized 7 Series, and yet it is pertinent for the British car industry.
The reason is that this, the new Seven, is the basis for the "Baby Rollers" project that has been gestating inside the BMW combine for some time, the company having bought the rights to the Flying Lady and all that some years ago.
Obviously, there will be some important changes: the pocket Rolls-Royce to be sold alongside the gigantic Phantom will be even more refined than the Seven, even better kitted and will, one hopes, retain that all-important Roll-Royce ambience and elegance, symbolised in the fabulously slim steering wheel in the Phantom.
However, under all that will be a 7 Series, and that is an excellent starting point.
The Seven's most impressive feature is its diesel engine. BMW is one of a dedicated band of manufacturers who made it their mission to make Rudolph Diesel's old oil-burner fit for humans, sporty even.
They achieved that at least a decade ago but this is something else.
The straight-six, three-litre engine as fitted to the 730d is, to answer my earlier question, one of the best (if not the best) diesel units in the world.
You know the usual adjectives that are applied to decent engines – smooth, powerful, effortless, torquey. Well, it's all true about this one. Subjectively, it compares well with the five-litre, 12-cylinder petrol engine found in the Bentley Continental GT though the BMW is only half as powerful.
So, it would be good enough for a Bentley. Indeed, it is perfectly apparent that BMW has engineered a diesel engine fit for a Rolls-Royce. I suggest that they go for it, reap the whirlwind of publicity for such an audacious act, and, ever so casually, also mention that this superb unit will return 13 litres/100km on a run and has correspondingly low CO2 emissions.
CROSSWAYS CAMERAS
A Rolls-Royce to answer the twin challenges of the credit crisis and global warming: quite a tour de force.
The second most impressive feature of the Seven, by the way, is the "sideview camera", something I'd not come across before, even on a Lexus, a brand usually first with the toys. Not sure what it's for – but it provides a "dog's eye view" of the world from the front of your car. Something to relieve boredom at the traffic lights, I suppose.*
And what needs fixing before they turn the Seven into a Rolls-Royce? Well, the handling is a little fruity if you chuck it about, so that needs taming, and the boot lid is excessively heavy to close.
WHY WAIT?
An electric motor should sort that in the Rolls-Royce but they also need to tweak it for 7 Series drivers. Otherwise, leave well alone.
If you can't wait for the new small Rolls-Royce, be assured that the surprisingly economical and soberly styled 7 Series is – nearly – the best car in the world. - The Independent, London
*BMW says the cameras peer around corners, such as when leaving a garage or alleyway or out into the street between parked cars.
wellcom to Auto/Motor Cars Space!