A 635d? Hmm, potentially an interesting combo…
Indeed. Mating the excellent twin-turbo 3.0-litre diesel to BMW’s mildly-facelifted 6-Series Coupe and Cabriolet, creating (they say) the world’s first diesel GT 2+2, is something we’ve been anticipating with intrigue. The 282bhp unit has the same power as an ‘80s M 635 CSi, yet the 427lb ft of torque is over 10 percent up on the current M6. Oh, and it’s delivered between 1750 rather than 6100rpm. And 95 percent is yours at 1500rpm, too. As such, BMW promises near-instantaneous throttle response from the sequential turbo set-up, aided by a quick-fire auto (no semi-auto nonsense here). It’s also the world’s first 40.9mpg luxo-sports car.
You’ve sold me on the figures but, as a petrolhead, I’m still to be convinced…
Try this. Cruise at 60mph, then tweak the throttle. Just a tweak, that’s all. Feel that? Instant response, linear as you like, with shove like no other 6 in normal use. With 62mph taking 6.3 seconds, this is a fast car – but all that torque means it’s real-world fast. It makes a mockery of all the flurried downchanges you need in an M6, and yet the other failing fast diesels can suffer – runaway, uncontrollable surge – is also metered. It’s like a very powerful petrol turbo (with similar response), and pretty additive to boot. Other than at tickover and near 4,000rpm, it doesn’t even sound dieselly: the straight-six vocals are throbby, bassy and very smooth.
It all sounds like diesel’s where it’s at…
BMW certainly thinks so. From the circa-2700 6-Series they sell each year in the UK, the 635d is quickly going to take around 60 percent of volumes; not bad, given that it’s starting from zero. That BMW is first to this sector and is already claiming such numbers suggests that others will have to soon follow. How appealing would a Jaguar XK with the 2.7 V6 or 3.6 V8 diesels be? Or a Mercedes SL 320 CDI? A 4.2 V8 TDI Audi R8 wouldn’t be without merit, either. Shame none are here, yet…
Verdict
Diesel gives the 6-Series the focus it’s needed, and is both a quicker and more satisfying car than the M6 in the real world, if you don’t fancy giving Senna-qualifying-at-Monaco commitment levels. It sounds nice and barely clatters either, while snappy throttle response and linear delivery puts paid to those diesel downers, too. All this and 600 miles per tank? Suddenly the 6-Series seems a one-car range to us. And once BMW starts fitting its EfficientDynamics technology to six cylinder cars it'll be even better, too.
So the ‘DIESEL’ inscription on the fuel gauge doesn’t spoil the big coop, then?
What else have they done to the 6?
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