Sunday, August 5, 2007

BMW M5


There are sport sedans, and then there's the BMW M5. No other car in recent memory has been able to represent the ideal for this segment as strongly as the Bimmer. For each of its four generations, the M5 has impressively blended sports car performance, sedan utility and luxury ambiance.

The M5 is a product of BMW's performance-tuning M Division. It's based on the 5 Series sedan and historical calling cards include a unique and more powerful engine, a sport-tuned suspension, more powerful brakes, special wheels and tires and aerodynamics-enhancing bodywork. Though the current BMW M5 is the best of the group, a used third-generation car still represents a fantastic choice for a luxury sport sedan. M5s from the 1980s and '90s were also significant performers for their day but are much harder to find because of their rarity.


The current BMW M5 is a five-passenger luxury sport sedan that debuted for the 2006 model year. It's designed to offer more performance than the regular 5 Series sedan on which it's based. The car's most significant change lies under the hood. BMW has shoehorned in a 5.0-liter V10 capable of 500 horsepower and 383 pound-feet of torque.