2007 BMW X5 Interior Review

Base Sport Utility
The sports car of SUVs gets bigger.

Interior

reviewed by New Car Test Drive
2007 BMW X5 Review

You wouldn't know that you're inside an SUV in the BMW X5. Rather, the cabin is appointed and designed like BMW's sedans. Materials are first-rate, and fit and finish are top quality, with controls that work well with minimal slop and maximum precision. This is equal in the benchmark standard to the Lexus, Infiniti and Mercedes SUVs.

Our test X5 had the optional Sport Package seats, and our passengers complained of exiting the front seats and hitting the side bolsters. We understand that spirited driving requires coddling the driver in a stationary position, but not many of us sporting drivers can wring out a car with a full load of spectators. In fact, most passengers prefer we drive like grandmas, so we see little benefit to locking in passengers into their chairs as tightly as the driver.

Rear-seat passengers report to us that the cushioning of the rear seats is soft on the road, and very comfortable. The extra length not only adds some cargo ability, but the rear seats are adults sized, we found.

A third row of seats is optional, raising capacity to seven people, most of them adults. BMW claims adults up to five-feet, four-inches tall will be comfortable.

Visibility is compromised by the thick D-pillars of the longer body, which means you have to slowly exit parking lots, though it doesn't seem a big giveaway in exchange for the trim styling.

The surface upholstery feels luxurious, and the perforated seats kept us feeling fresh after a three-hour drive without stops. The optional active driver's seat is like a Sharper Image massaging lounge chair, and it really keeps your back in shape on drives longer than three hours.

The climate controls are able to be used separate from the devilish iDrive system, which means you can immediately set them for cooling and heating. When accessed through the iDrive system, you need an instructor and a two-credit college course to master the best use of the system. People over 35 are not ready for this technology, whether it be ultimately good or bad, although younger buyers younger are likely used to this serial-delay electronic reaction: push button, wait, wait some more, then accept the function works without any feedback.

The audio, like the climate control, is also usable separate from the iDrive system. There's an actual knob for volume control, which to date is mankind's best solution for this function. We found the sound from the optional premium system to be tremendous. However, we were discouraged from taking full advantage of the sound processing features because of the complexity of the iDrive control to set it.

Simple does not mean fewer buttons. Cadillac's Allante of 1986 had rows of dozens of buttons on its center console to operate all of its advanced functions, and although it looked complex, each button had only one function, and therefore was stunningly easy to use. At the same time, Buick introduced a touch-screen cathode ray tube touch control for its functions, that required different screens just to operate simple commands like climate and audio, and it was universally panned by critics. BMW obviously missed this episode in auto history. A side note, however, is that Buick Riviera owners really liked the touch-screen system once they learned it. Buick still killed the system a few years later under pressure from critics.

Perhaps the best function of the BMW iDrive system is that it solves problems inherent with on-board GPS-based navigation systems, which like every other system is based on the exact same software data. Navigation systems are usually slow to move maps so you can see where you want to head before you know where your exact destination is. The iDrive control allows you to rapidly zoom in and out of maps, more the way you'd look at a paper map to get a sense of where you are.

Like all other functions where the controls actually operate more than one function, the turn signal operational pressure level is a bit frustrating until you take BMW iDrive 101 and get your two college credits. If you want more than three blinks of a turn signal, you have to hold the lever down to keep it working. Then you have to tap it to shut it off. While we normally pride ourselves in maintaining awareness of our environment so that we never leave our turn signals on, and we find the BMW system introduces an extra needless step in the process. Also, if you signal to change lanes, then change your mind a moment after you touch the lever, you're stuck with the three blinks or trying to remember how to cancel it.

The rearview camera didn't seem to work as well as similar systems on other vehicles. When we selected reverse with the electronic video game style shifter, the rearview camera automatically turns on, and in the audio/navigation/climate screen on the dashboard appears a camera view of the rear environment behind the car. You can see behind you an image reminiscent of the early days of bad video cameras, which is low resolution, but it works. Then, when we selected Drive to go forward, the rear camera stayed on until we got to where we needed the navigation screen to come on, yet it didn't. It continued to display the rear view long after we were moving forward.

Meanwhile, the rear parking distance alert had a difficult time detecting what was behind us, often alerting when there was nothing close, so we ended up hitting the well-placed disable button for this feature often.

The brilliant body design of the X5 uses a mini-tailgate and a short rear hatch, which are tops in convenience to use. First, if you load the rear area with delicate vintage wine bottles and other items, you don't have to worry they'll fall out the moment you raise the hatchback, which has happened on other SUVs, because a small tailgate holds all the cargo. We'd be happy if all SUVs copied this arrangement. It also limits the size of the liftgate, making it easier to open in crowded garages. Next Page


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