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PressClub USA · Article.
THE NEW BMW 5 SERIES GRAN TURISMO
Fri May 22 10:00:00 CEST 2009 Press Kit
Woodcliff Lake, NJ - May 23 2009... The BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo adds new facets to BMW's Ultimate Driving Machine tradition and refines the concept of first-class travel. For the first time, attributes of an elegant sedan, a contemporary Sports Activity Vehicle and a classic Gran Turismo are masterfully melded into a single, harmonious vehicle concept.
Press Contact.
Thomas Plucinsky
BMW Group
Tel: +1-201-307-3701
send an e-mail
Author.
Thomas Plucinsky
BMW Group
A unique blend of style, space, luxury and sportiness.
Woodcliff Lake, NJ - May 23 2009… The BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo adds new facets to BMW’s Ultimate Driving Machine tradition and refines the concept of first-class travel. For the first time, attributes of an elegant sedan, a contemporary Sports Activity Vehicle and a classic Gran Turismo are masterfully melded into a single, harmonious vehicle concept.
The traditional European term Gran Turismo (Grand Touring) was first applied by Italian carmakers in the 1950s when they combined the performance, handling, and style of a 2-seat sport car with luxurious amenities and luggage room for each occupant. BMW’s new Gran Turismo nurtures this tradition in its own contemporary way, providing exceptional space, style, luxury, and comfort for four passengers1, plus the performance and driving pleasure of a BMW.
It does so with 21st-century performance. BMW’s wide-ranging EfficientDynamics initiative endows this new automobile with an outstanding balance between performance and efficiency. Thanks to its innovative twin turbo V-8 engine and 8-speed automatic transmission, the 550i Gran Turismo can accelerate from rest to 60 mph in just 5.4 seconds, yet delivers remarkable fuel efficiency in everyday driving.
Design: Abundant sportiness, elegance, luxury and versatility.
• Typical BMW proportions communicate dynamic
character and sportiness.
• Long wheelbase and
graceful, coupe-like roofline.
• An interior with
contemporary design, generous dimensions and premium materials.
The BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo radiates a unique blend of sportiness and stylish presence. Typical BMW proportions, four doors with frameless windows, and a coupe-like roofline combine into a harmonious, highly distinctive silhouette that visually represents this vehicle’s unusual blend of capabilities.
This vehicle’s visual presence is a captivating fusion of established BMW identity and new elements. Its elongated hood and long 120.7-inch wheelbase coalesce with a “greenhouse” set well aft and a fastback roofline into a profile that’s immediately recognizable as a BMW, yet at the same time communicates a new vehicle concept. From the first glance, it’s clear that this is an exceptionally roomy conveyance, yet also a highly dynamic one.
Inside the 5 Series Gran Turismo, users find generous dimensions, inspired contemporary design, and individualized luxury. Sweeping contours – such as those of the interior door panels – combine with elegant and premium-quality materials to create an ambiance that’s equally satisfying to front and rear occupants.
At the front: thoroughly modern, traditionally BMW.
The Gran
Turismo’s frontal aspect has a marked forward thrust, with its
traditional BMW “kidney grille” leaning slightly forward
and emphasized by its separation from the flanking (also traditional)
four round headlights.
BMW’s signature corona rings have taken on several functions: as parking lights, as an identifying element when the headlights are on, and as Daytime Running Lamps – this last with 100% of their lighting power, the other functions with just 10%. For the first time, on the Gran Turismo they employ LED technology.
In profile: frameless door windows and a new form of
“Hofmeister Kink.”
The 5 Series Gran Turismo is also
the first 4-door BMW to have frameless door windows – a feature
BMW usually reserves for Coupes and Convertibles. These give an
“open” look to side and angled views of the vehicle.
Over the years, another window detail has become a tradition: BMW’s so-called “Hofmeister Kink,” named after Wilhelm Hofmeister, who headed BMW design when this shape first appeared. On the Gran Turismo, it appears in “6-window” (3 windows per side) form in the rear quarter windows aft of the rear doors, framed in matte black plus chrome or optional high-gloss Shadowline black trim.
At the rear: aesthetically and functionally distinctive
Another
BMW design tradition, in evidence since a new-generation 7 Series was
introduced for 1988 is the freely interpreted L-shape of the rear
lighting clusters. On the 5 Series Gran Turismo this theme is retained
but newly interpreted LED lighting wraps far around the body sides and
provides yet another recognizable BMW design cue. Together, these
elements reinforce the impression of the Gran Turismo’s wide
stance, which is further enhanced by strong horizontal lines spanning
the bi-modal trunk and likewise tying in with character lines of the
side profile.
Function, more even than the handsome aesthetics, is the main attraction of the 5 Series Gran Turismo’s interesting rear view. Below the rear window is a conventional, though shorter-than-usual, sedan trunklid that opens separately to reveal a fully enclosed trunk – sealed off from the passenger cabin by a movable partition that renders the interior as quiet as that of a sedan.
To take full advantage of the 5 Series Gran Turismo’s great cargo capacity, though, the liftgate – including the lower trunklid, rear window and an upper section reaching a few inches above the window – can also be opened. There are two releases, one for the trunklid alone, the other for the entire liftgate including trunklid.
Interior design: spacious luxury at its finest.
The BMW 5 Series
Gran Turismo interior combines space, luxury and stylish materials to
create a premium ambiance. In the rear seats as well as up front,
there’s a sense of generous space and comprehensive amenities,
promoting relaxed and accommodating travel.
The outstanding feeling – and reality – of spaciousness is enhanced by design and materials. Dash and instrument panel lines are decidedly horizontal; door panels sweep dramatically and harmoniously from front to rear. Thanks to their frameless design, the door windows are larger than they would be with frames, adding to the openness of the remarkable cabin; the dual-panel panoramic moonroof, standard on the U.S. model, also contributes to these effects.
In standard form, the rear seating accommodates three passengers, with a 40-20-40 split of the backrest allowing for selective fold-down. In addition, the entire seat cushion can be adjusted 3.9-in. fore and aft and the individual backrest sections can be adjusted over a range of 15?-33?. Yet there’s more here than just adjustability: there’s also outstanding personal space, with legroom on the scale of BMW’s 7 Series Sedan and headroom comparable to the BMW X5 Sports Activity Vehicle. Indeed, first-class comfort is afforded all occupants of the Gran Turismo.
Optional as part of the Luxury Rear Seating Package are individual, multi-adjustable power seats, separated by a center console with cupholders and a storage compartment; here the backrest range is 15?-40? and even the fold-down function is powered. In addition to the power adjustments, a further attraction of this configuration is that it transforms the cabin into a sportier, strictly 4-seater configuration that some customers will prefer for its aesthetics, intimacy and greater luxury.
Accompanying the variable seating accommodations is variable cargo capacity, ranging from an already generous 15.5 cu ft. in the sedan-style enclosed trunk to fully 60.0 cu ft. (DIN rating) with folded rear seats and SAV-style long cargo floor. A variable partition between the trunk and passenger compartments provides occupants with sedan-type climate and noise insulation even when the trunk is being loaded, yet moves with the seats when they are adjusted and folds flat when the greatest capacity is needed.
Optimum outward view for the driver.
Thanks to its ideal front
seat height, the BMW 5 Series Gran Turismo driver and front passenger
enjoy excellent outward visibility. For comparison, the Gran
Turismo’s standard seat height from the ground is 22.6 in., vs.
the previous-generation 7 Series’ 20.8 and the X3’s 26.6.
In other words, the Gran Turismo seat is higher than the typical BMW
sedan for easier access and an enhanced outward view, yet not so high
as to require “climbing up.” Rear seating is also slightly
higher than in BMW Sedan models.
As in all BMWs, thoughtfully researched ergonomics allow for optimum operation of driving controls and other functions. All displays, knobs and buttons serving comfort functions are situated centrally for use by the driver and front passengers; controls for the driver’s use only are to the left of the steering wheel, on or near the steering wheel, or on the front center console. The steering wheel has power tilt and telescopic adjustment and tilt-away for exit and entry; and of course both front seats come standard with 10-way power adjustment including head-restraint height.
Instrument panel in Black Panel technology.
Like so many aspects
of the 5 Series Gran Turismo, its instrument cluster combines BMW
tradition with advanced, beautiful new executions. Here the entire
cluster is in a high-resolution Black Panel display, in which four
classic circular instruments are most prominent; other
driving-relevant displays and readouts – including Navigation if
present, vehicle-monitoring functions, upcoming service requirements
and other information – also appear here in their various (and
function-related) graphic forms. Climate-control settings and controls
are located in a second Black Panel display in the center console stack.
So it is that the advantages of mechanical and electronic displays are ideally combined with eye-catching visual and graphic effects. As the user enters the vehicle, the circular instruments’ “chrome rings,” until now open at the bottom, close and become brighter. Once the ignition is activated (by pressing the Start/Stop button), the numerals plus all other displays and warnings illuminate. As the engine starts, functions that have been previously activated by the driver are then revealed as well.
4th-generation iDrive: more user-friendly, more intuitive,
faster.
With the 5 Series Gran Turismo, BMW’s all-new, 4th
generation iDrive system appears in two versions: with 7.0-in.
dimensions and 800 x 480-pixel resolution in standard form, or with
the optional Navigation system, in a dazzling 10.2-in., 1280 x
480-pixel version with a wider range of features and functions as in
the new BMW 7 Series. Displays are transreflective so that light from
the sun actually enhances the images on the screen.
The instrument cluster interacts in new ways with the iDrive control display and the available Head-up Display. According to selected function, users can call up phone numbers or radio stations via the steering-wheel controls. The cluster display also augments iDrive’s optional Navigation display with road-realistic directional instructions, helping the driver with to change lanes or turn at a complicated intersection. If the optional Head-up Display is activated, the relevant directions appear there.
Materials and colors: enhancing the elegance.
The choices of
colors and materials further enhance the impression of personal luxury
and the interior’s interplay of lines and surfaces. For the
dash’s finely grained upper section, there are two colors
depending upon the chosen interior color. Dakota leather is standard,
and available in six color schemes of which three are new; BMW’s
luxurious Nappa leather is optional, and available in three color schemes.
Dark Burl Ash wood trim interior trim is standard, appearing in sweeping expanses on the dash, doors and front center console; Ash Anthracite (gray tone) and another distinctive wood called Fineline Matte are optional. As a special visual and tactile treat, ceramic trim is optional for the shift knob, iDrive controller surround, and audio and climate controls.
5. Powertrain.
The essence of
EfficientDynamics.
• Twin turbo V-8 engine delivers 400
hp and 5.4 second 0-60-mph time, plus silken refinement and impressive
fuel efficiency considering the performance.
• New
8-speed automatic transmission contributes to performance and fuel efficiency.
With the 5 Series Gran Turismo, BMW lays the cornerstone for a new type of automobile – while also demonstrating BMW’s traditional mastery of an all-important aspect of automotive performance: the powertrain.
The Gran Turismo debut model is the 550i, powered by BMW’s stunning 4.4-liter, 400-hp twin turbocharged V-8 engine. Compared to BMW’s normally aspirated V-8, displacement is reduced from 4.8 to 4.4 liters, and incorporates twin turbochargers and High Precision direct injection. In quantitative terms, the new engine delivers 400 hp and does so over a range from 5500 to 6400 rpm. Maximum torque is 450 lb-ft., and available over the extremely broad range of 1800 to 4500 rpm. The result is greater power and torque delivered over a wide range of operating conditions with greater fuel efficiency. Aside from the dramatic thrust that drivers will notice subjectively, the objective data are dramatic too: 0-60 mph in just 5.4 seconds and a top speed when equipped with the Sport Package of 150 mph. For models equipped with all-season tires the maximum speed is limited to 130 mph.
Through its unique reverse-flow layout, the 550i’s V-8 engine is able to achieve even higher performance without correspondingly higher fuel consumption. In technical terms, the approach involves some very new design details. For the first time, twin turbochargers and the exhaust-cleansing catalytic converters are placed between the V-8’s two cylinder banks. In turn, this required the exhaust camshafts and valves to be inboard so that the path from cylinders to turbochargers (which are driven by exhaust gas) would be efficiently short. A key benefit of this layout is a more compact engine package. This is the reverse of a traditional V-8 layout, and opens a new era of V-8 engine development potential.
A key feature of the engine is BMW’s High Precision direct injection. Positioned centrally in the combustion chambers for optimum combustion, the injectors deliver fuel at very high pressures. To meet BMW’s ambitious performance/efficiency/emissions goals with the necessary long-term durability, a “stack” of piezo crystals reacts lightning-fast to impulses from the Digital Motor Electronics, governing the injector needle’s opening stroke and duration for ultra-precise control. This contributes 2-3% fuel savings and reduces emissions by 20%. The engine (also as featured in the new 7 Series and BMW X6) meets U.S. ULEV II (Ultra Low Emissions Vehicle) limits. And High Precision direct injection contributes to the acoustic presence of the engine.
Playing a supporting role: innovative new 8-speed automatic
transmission.
The 5 Series Gran Turismo’s innovative
character is further supported by its all-new 8-speed automatic
transmission, which brings smooth shifting, sportiness and efficiency
to a new level of perfection. Compared to the exemplary 6-speed
automatic offered in most current BMW models, the 8-speed’s
“taller” cruising gears make a significant contribution to
reduced fuel consumption and carbon-dioxide emissions as well as
quietness. And its wider spread of ratios from lowest to highest gear
enhances acceleration and response across the range of driving speeds.
Technically speaking, this new automatic’s attributes have been achieved via an innovative concept that provides the two additional ratios (7 and 8) with no increase in bulk or weight. In an arrangement not heretofore employed in an 8-speed automatic, four planetary gearsets and five clutch packs are controlled in a way that no more than two of the five clutch packs are freewheeling at any given time. The modest increase in the number of mechanical elements allows the new transmission to achieve unusually high efficiency: the so-called “gearing efficiency” is higher than 98% in all eight gears. In 6th gear, it’s highest of all because that is direct drive, with no gearing at all. Combine this with reduced friction and the ability to keep the torque converter “locked up” more of the total driving time, and you have a transmission that is very much a part of the 5 Series Gran Turismo’s overall efficiency concept.
Two additional gears mean threefold progress: quicker shifts, greater
smoothness, enhanced efficiency.
The wider spread of ratios
allows the engine to run at lower speeds, mainly in the
“tallest” gear, 8th. Yet even with this wider spread, the
steps between adjacent gears are reduced; in turn this means a
stronger, smoother flow of power during acceleration.
And for the same reason, faster shifts are a further benefit because only one clutch pack is disengaged to shift up or down by one or two gears. On the other hand, downshifting more than two gears is accomplished as a direct shift. For example, a downshift from 8th to 2nd gear is made with only one clutch pack disengagement, and thus occurs without stepping down through the intermediate gears. Thus at one instant the driver can be enjoying the quiet, fuel-efficient low rpm of 8th gear, and in the next instant getting maximum acceleration.
Brake Energy Regeneration: an energy-saving innovation.
For the
first time in a U.S. BMW model, the new 5 Series Gran Turismo is
equipped with BMW’s Brake Energy Regeneration system.
To save energy and reduce the vehicle’s fuel consumption, this system controls the times at which the alternator charges the battery. Conventionally, a car’s alternator runs continuously and thus charging is always available to the battery; in the Gran Turismo, it charges only when the vehicle is decelerating or braking; otherwise, it freewheels, drawing virtually no power from the engine. An electronically controlled clutch, somewhat similar to that used with the air-conditioning compressor, is added to engage and disengage the alternator.
Accommodating the less frequent charging is a special, more powerful battery that can satisfy a contemporary vehicle’s high electrical demands without access to continuous charging. The battery uses a technology called “glass mat,” in which its internal plates are separated with saturated absorbent glass-boron silicate rather than the usual liquid electrolyte. This construction sharply reduces the battery’s conversion of charging energy to heat, and can provide the necessary electrical power for longer periods between charges.
6. Chassis engineering.
State-of-the-art BMW capabilities,
adjustable to suit personal tastes.
• Comfort, dynamics and precision – all promoted by
the new combination of multi-link front and rear suspension
systems.
• Driving Dynamics Control and self-leveling
rear air suspension – standard.
• Adaptive Drive:
optional Active Roll Stabilization and Dynamic Damping Control further
refine the Gran Turismo’s amazing blend of handling dynamics and
riding comfort.
True to BMW tradition, the new Gran Turismo exploits the creation of a new vehicle generation to advance the art of chassis technology and engineering. Improving both driving dynamics and riding comfort are always the core goals of the transition to a new BMW generation, and in these regards the Gran Turismo upholds the tradition brilliantly.
Just as the new engine combines sporting performance with luxurious refinement, all-around new suspension technology endows the Gran Turismo with uniquely agile handling for a luxury automobile, yet also an exceptional level of riding comfort. Beyond these “basics,” this new vehicle allows the driver to decide at any time what priority to assign to either of these attributes via Driving Dynamics Control.
Front suspension: a new multi-link system.
Until recently, all
BMW front suspension systems since 1965 2 had been of the strut type,
in which a long, essentially vertical strut carries the shock absorber
and participates in the suspension geometry – that is, along
with the lower arms it helps determine the angles wheels take as they
move up and down. With the double-pivot lower arms of most current BMW
Series, the strut concept has been taken to a high level of
sophistication in handling, straight-ahead stability and riding
comfort. However, time and progress never stop; BMW
conceptualists and engineers continually seek even better solutions.
So it was that when the 2nd-generation X5 made its debut in ’07,
BMW introduced a type of front suspension that achieves even better
results, particularly in a large, relatively heavy and very powerful vehicle.
Now this system has made its debut in the automobile side of BMW’s vehicle line, first in the new 7 Series for ’09 and now in the 5 Series Gran Turismo for 2010. In place of the strut, this new system has an upper lateral A-arm. The double-pivot lower arms are retained, so that on each side there are three links or arms. While the two lower arms preserve the double-pivot strut system’s advantages, the new upper arm facilitates the system’s handling and riding comfort by relieving the strut of its geometric duties.
Among the strengths of the double-pivot system
are:
• Small positive steering offset, for best
steering feel and control under all road conditions. Though the two
lower arms don’t actually intersect, if you visually extend
their axes to a point where they would intersect, you find a
“virtual pivot point” that is ideal for achieving this
result. Steering offset is the “lever arm” through which
road forces act on the suspension system.
• Large
steering caster, for outstanding stability in straight-line driving
and excellent steering return action coming out of
curves.
• Space for large brakes, allowed by the
arrangement of the two lower arms.
The 5 Series Gran Turismo’s multi-link configuration adds
further virtues:
• Reduced friction because the shock
absorber (which remains essentially concentric with the spring, as it
was with the strut system) no longer helps locate the wheel, and is
thus no longer subject to lateral forces. This allows the shock
absorbers to damp the wheels’ up-and-down motions in a more
efficient, targeted way, enhancing both ride and handling
(particularly on uneven road surfaces).
• Anti-roll
(stabilizer) bar attached to wheel carrier. This arrangement, which
differs from many competitors’ attachment to a suspension link,
applies the wheel’s entire vertical movement (up or down) to the
anti-roll bar, thus allowing thinner bars to be used. Effective
control of body roll (lean) and weight savings are thus
achieved.
• Greater freedom to optimize both suspension
geometry and shock-absorber action.
In keeping with another BMW tradition – aluminum suspension
components to reduce unsprung weight and thus improve road adhesion
and riding comfort – most major elements of the new front
suspension are aluminum:
• Upper and lower lateral
links (1 upper, 2 lower per side)
• Steering
knuckle/vertical link (1 per side).
Further reducing unsprung weight are the front brake calipers, which
are of composite aluminum/cast-iron construction. The suspension
subframe, which is sprung weight but important in terms of front/rear
weight distribution and total vehicle weight, is also of aluminum. Yet
more advantages are found in certain details:
• The
trailing (forward) lower arm has a rubber/hydraulic cushion, which
provides the most effective “compliance” for reducing road
shock.
• The transverse (rearward) lower arm is
cushioned by a finely tuned rubber element that fosters direct and
precise response to the steering wheel in curves and corners.
Rear suspension.
The rear suspension, too, is a significant
evolution for BMW. Like the front suspension, it is a multi-link
system; BMW calls it the Integral system for its small, essentially
vertical Integral Link connecting the upper and lower lateral control
planes.
The Integral suspension concept has been in use for some
years in BMW automobiles, appearing currently in the 5 and 6 Series in
4-link form. With one additional link per side, the Integral V
(5-link) system moves one step closer to perfection in its combination
of handling response, road adhesion and riding comfort. Here too, most
major elements are aluminum, and the rear suspension subframe is also
of aluminum.
This complex multi-link system controls rear-wheel geometry very precisely, minimizing unwanted effects under load changes (such as lifting off the accelerator while cornering, or hard acceleration and braking) and achieving a comfortable, supple ride. In the new 5 Series Gran Turismo, it adds yet another capability via optional Integral Active Steering as introduced on the 2009 BMW 7 Series.
At the front wheels, Integral Active Steering electronically varies the steering ratio (the number of degrees the steering wheel must be turned to achieve a 1º steering angle at the front wheels) on the basis of vehicle speed and other driving conditions. This reduces the steering-wheel movements required for parking maneuvers, U-turns and sharp corners.
Also with Integral Active Steering, the rear wheels are steered up to a maximum of 3? via a servo motor acting on track rods. At low speeds, they are steered oppositely to the front wheels, reducing the turning circle by more than 2 feet. At higher speeds, the rear wheels steer in the same direction as the fronts, enhancing stability. Additionally, the rear-seat passenger comfort is improved thanks to reduced lateral forces in highway lane-change conditions.
Appropriately for a vehicle designed to carry the cargo of active lifestyles, the 5 Series Gran Turismo comes standard with self-leveling rear suspension. Self-leveling is achieved by an electrically powered air compressor and ride-height sensors that recognize changes in vehicle loading. Whenever the sensors detect a longer-term change in ride height at the rear (as when a full passenger load is aboard or heavy loads are carried in the trunk), the air pressure is increased to bring the vehicle back to its normal attitude. Additionally, when one of the rear tires suffers pressure loss, the air springs act to equalize the ride height on the two sides.
Newly evolved, new name: Dynamic Damping Control.
For the first
time in a U.S. 5 Series model, electronically controlled shock
absorbers are available on the 5 Series Gran Turismo. Dynamic Damping
Control, first introduced on the 2009 BMW 7 Series, is an evolution of
the Electronic Damping Control (EDC) that has been available on
several BMW models. On the 5 Series Gran Turismo, Dynamic Damping
Control (DDC) is combined with Active Roll Stabilization (ARS) into an
option called Adaptive Drive.
Dynamic Damping Control adjusts the shock absorbers to any level of firmness between their softest and firmest settings, quickly adapting to road conditions and the driver’s demands at any given moment. Suspension control is always at the optimum level for current road conditions, vehicle speed and the load the vehicle is carrying (again, passengers and luggage). The shocks default to the softest appropriate setting for the vehicle’s speed, and when the vehicle encounters an irregular road surface, they adjust instantaneously to the optimum firmness level to control ride motions, preserve riding comfort and maintain adhesion to the road. At highway speeds, the system can encounter a pothole at a front wheel and adjust the rear-wheel damping before it reaches the same pothole.
Dynamic Damping Control is the first BMW system to vary the shock absorbers’ jounce and rebound strokes (wheel moving upward and downward) both steplessly and independently; this capability results in a unique combination of desirable firmness (for handling) and excellent comfort on uneven road surfaces.
The other element of Adaptive Drive: Active Roll Stabilization
(ARS).
This high-tech system reduces body roll, popularly known
as “lean,” in cornering. It improves handling by virtue of
better suspension geometry (wheel angles relative to vertical), but
there is a psychological component as well: Drivers and passengers
alike marvel at the “flat cornering” that results from ARS.
Whenever the vehicle enters a corner or curve, or begins an avoidance maneuver, “lateral acceleration” is generated. This is read by a sensor, which transmits a signal to the ECU. The ECU processes this signal and transmits it to the valve/sensor block. In turn, the valve/sensor block determines the hydraulic pressure applied to the active anti-roll bars to control body roll.
The key word here is “active.” Active Roll Stabilization
–
1. Generates resistance to body roll by twisting the
front and rear anti-roll bars.
2. Does so in a stronger and more
“tailored” way than can conventional anti-roll
bars.
3. Does not offer resistance to bumps in straight-ahead
driving, as do conventional anti-roll bars.
4. Increases the
vehicle’s maximum cornering capability.
5. Improves
steering response, particularly in the range of cornering where body
roll is most tightly controlled.
Driving Dynamics Control: the driver chooses vehicle
dynamics.
Adjacent to the E-shift lever is the Driving Dynamics
Control selector (logically, on the driver’s side). Driving
Dynamics Control provides three standard settings that tailor vehicle
behavior to different moods. The settings are Normal, Sport and
Sport+; vehicle parameters affected include:
• Engine
throttle response
• Transmission shift
characteristics
• Power-steering assist
level
• Dynamic Traction Control mode (Sport+).
In 5 Series Gran Turismo models equipped with optional Adaptive Drive, a fourth mode, called Comfort, is added. This puts the Dynamic Damping Control into its most comfort-oriented mode. Clearly the vehicle’s driving dynamics can be widely adjusted by these different calibrations of so many elements.
Another control in this area affects Dynamic Stability Control alone. A brief push on the DSC button switches the system to Dynamic Traction Control, in which DSC’s intervention threshold is raised. A long push on the same button de-activates DSC altogether, though two of its functions (antilock braking and electronic limited-slip) are always active.
Electronic limited-slip differential
When DSC is fully
de-activated, an electronic limited-slip differential comes into play
in vigorous driving. By judicious application of the individual
rear-wheel brakes, DSC simulates a traditional mechanical limited-slip
differential. This has the effect of better apportioning power between
the two rear wheels and thus improving traction in this driving situation.
Intelligent driving dynamics: Integrated Chassis Management and
FlexRay
All such driving-dynamics functions are coordinated and
overseen by BMW’s Integrated Chassis Management. Via sensing and
analysis of a multitude of inputs, this powerful electronic control
scheme applies and governs the interaction of these functions to
ensure maximum stability. Under rapidly changing conditions, such as
changing road surface, spontaneous steering input, abrupt acceleration
or sudden braking, ICM reacts with ultra-quick and ultra-precise
interventions via the DSC actuators plus – where present –
Dynamic Damping Control, Active Roll Stabilization and Integral Active Steering.
For this extremely sensitive and powerful networking of functions, the 5 Series Gran Turismo employs FlexRay data-transmission technology. Developed by a consortium of which BMW is a leading member, FlexRay achieves heretofore unheard-of communication speed, some 20 times that previously possible. In the 5 Series Gran Turismo, up to 16 electronic control units can be networked; in no other competitive automobile can longitudinal, lateral and vertical vehicle motions be so precisely monitored and influenced. BMW was the first motor-vehicle manufacturer to offer FlexRay technology in production vehicles; it made its debut in the current X5, is also employed in the X6 and now comes to BMW automobiles in the new 7 Series and 5 Series Gran Turismo.
Generously dimensioned disc brakes with composite front
rotors.
In this patented construction, each front brake rotor
(disc) consists of two pieces: the high-carbon cast-iron outer
portion, which functions conventionally as the surface onto which the
brake pads grip to slow or stop the vehicle; and an aluminum
“hat” in the center, which mounts the rotor to the
vehicle. The concept’s advantages include reduced unsprung
weight, complementing the aluminum suspension in benefiting ride
comfort and road adhesion.
Reduced rotor deformation under hard braking is the other benefit. This means less tendency of the brakes to vibrate when hot, and reduced likelihood of rotors cracking under extreme heat conditions.
The Gran Turismo’s brake system is supported by the comprehensive functions of Dynamic Stability Control (DSC). These include antilock braking (ABS), Automatic Stability Control (ASC), Cornering Brake Control and Dynamic Brake Control; each of these functions contributes to vehicle stability and some of them do so specifically during braking. Other braking enhancements via DSC include Brake Fade Compensation, which compensates for loss of braking power (fading) under hard or repeated brake use; Brake Standby, which snugs the brake pads up to the rotors upon sharp deceleration to reduce inherent lag time in brake application; and Brake Drying, which brings the pads to the rotors periodically during wet-weather driving to keep the brakes ready. Automatic Hold, a function included in the Gran Turismo, 7 Series, X5 and X6 models, holds the brakes for an indefinite time when the vehicle is stopped anywhere, preventing rollback or creep; it can be activated or de-activated by the driver with a console button.
Wheels and tires: 18-in. standard, 19- or 20-in. optional, run-flat
across the board.
All Gran Turismo wheel/tire equipment is
decidedly sporty. The 550i Gran Turismo comes standard with 18 x 8.0
alloy wheels, fitted with 245/50R-18 run-flat all-season tires. With
the Sport Package, there are two choices of special wheel/tire
equipment, each with performance-type tires (also run-flats) and
distinctive wheel designs: 19 x 8.5 front/19 x 9.5 rear, with
245/45R-19 front / 275/40R-19 rear; or 20 x 8.5 front/20 x 10.0 rear,
with 245/40R-20 front / 275/35R-20 rear.
7. Body and safety.
Variable passenger and cargo space,
comprehensive safety features.
• A first: aluminum doors with frameless
windows.
• Immensely strong body structure, extensive
measures to protect pedestrians.
• Bi-modal trunk with
unique design and functional features.
The 5 Series Gran Turismo’s innovative and multifaceted character springs from many factors, but most of all from the unique attributes of its body. Here, conceptual ideas have been translated into the actual vehicle design and engineering with BMW’s typical function-oriented approach and premium quality. New, technologically advanced solutions ensure that BMW’s goals of sporty elegance, personal luxury and contemporary versatility are achieved in convincing ways; in turn these are the foundation of a new kind of BMW experience.
Beyond these more subjective attributes, the Gran Turismo embodies in its intelligently conceived body structure a meticulously coordinated system of optimized passive safety and occupant protection. For example, the use of high-strength steels as well as a large proportion of aluminum helped BMW realize great structural strength with relatively moderate weight. In particular, the important relation of torsional rigidity relative to vehicle footprint and weight has been brought to a new high.
Innovative in design and construction: the aluminum doors.
In
addition to the Gran Turismo body’s hood and front spring
towers, its four doors are of aluminum, saving a significant 61.7 lb.
compared to steel. Also, this is BMW’s first 4-door with
frameless windows, which contribute greatly to the interior’s
bright, airy ambiance. (Optionally, power-operated sunshades are
available for the rear door windows.) Producing the sharp contour
lines which are a part of today’s BMW look in aluminum required
intensive engineering effort.
Unique: 2-piece bi-modal trunk with full, independent
functionality.
To achieve maximum convenience and versatility of
loading various cargo items, BMW developed a remarkable system,
consisting of a smaller, trunklid-like opening under the rear window
and a large liftgate similar to that of BMW’s X models. The
“trunklid” can be opened separately; when the liftgate is
opened it includes the lower lid. (As part of the optional Premium
Package, liftgate operation is powered.)
The overall frame for this assembly is of aluminum, of great strength and unprecedented precision of manufacture and fit. Both sections are on tubular hinges; the liftgate comes standard with Soft Close, requiring only to be set down and then being drawn tight automatically. Opening of either section may be accomplished via buttons on the remote or inside the cabin. Each section has one of BMW’s convenient grip cutouts to facilitate pulling it down for closing.
Panoramic moonroof: more light, strength and head room.
The U.S.
model of the 550i Gran Turismo comes standard with a new version of
BMW’s dual-panel Panoramic moonroof. Encompassing about 55% of
the roof’s surface area, the entire assembly is 45.7 in. long
and 37.1 in. wide; its forward glass panel slides open 17.3 in. or
tilts upward. The rear glass panel is fixed, bound to the roof so as
to serve as a highly rigid part of the overall body structure.
The moonroof’s forward wind deflector rises to different heights on the basis of vehicle speed, more effectively taming potential low-speed air drumming or high-speed wind road; its interior sunshade is also powered. A further refinement is the moonroof’s harmonious integration into the roof contours: its front edge is curved parallel to the roof’s front edge for an unusual and subtle design touch.
Exemplary occupant protection.
Robust structural members,
generously dimensioned and precisely defined deformation zones, and
sophisticated electronically controlled restraint systems constitute
the 5 Series Gran Turismo’s state-of-the-art concept of occupant
protection. In a frontal crash, impact forces are channeled over
multiple paths into the floor structure, side members, front bulkhead
and roof; absorbed in deformation zones; and just generally kept away
from the passenger compartment. For the force paths, multi-phase and
heat-treated steels are employed extensively.
In the interior, 2-stage front airbags, seat-mounted side-impact airbags and curtain-type, front-to-rear head protection are all standard equipment, controlled according to crash type and severity for optimum effect. Airbags that are not needed for the impact at hand are not deployed, yet remain ready to deploy in case of a secondary impact. The power tilt/telescopic steering column includes a robustly dimensioned deformation section, improving its ability to protect the driver from structural intrusion into the cabin.
All seating positions are equipped with 3-point safety belts; all have force limiters, the front ones also adding automatic tensioners plus pre-tensioning during emergency braking. For protection against head and neck injuries in a rear-end impact, the front seats include active head restraints, which deploy up to 2.36 in. forward and 1.57 in. upward as required – all between the time the rear impact begins and when the occupants’ heads would be thrown rearward.
The rear outboard seating positions are equipped with LATCH (Lower Anchors and Tethers for Children) for securing a child restraint seat.
BMW Assist, Enhanced Roadside Assistance, Enhanced Automatic
Collision Notification – all standard with the 5 Series Gran
Turismo.
Every new 5 Series Gran Turismo comes standard with BMW
Assist, a system of telematics and user services of sweeping scope.
Among the services included in the BMW Assist Safety Plan –
whose subscription is paid by BMW for the first 4 years after purchase
of a new vehicle, – include emergency services, a wide range of
roadside-assistance benefits, stolen-vehicle recovery, and Enhanced
Automatic Collision Notification. In the event of a severe accident,
the BMW Assist system automatically transmits the vehicle’s
location and crash information to a response specialist, who will
speak to the vehicle occupants to determine if they are all right,
while a second specialist requests dispatch of emergency services as needed.
Features that can help prevent accidents: also standard.
All BMW
vehicles excel in features and attributes that make driving both safer
and more pleasant. Here are some key points about the 5 Series Gran
Turismo features that contribute to active safety:
Xenon Adaptive
headlights with auto-leveling – by providing outstanding forward
illumination, “steering” around curves and staying aimed
correctly, these advanced headlights benefit the BMW driver and
passengers as well as those in other vehicles.
Cornering lights
– provide targeted illumination to the side for turning corners
or sharp curves at relatively low speeds.
Automatic headlight
control – turns on the headlights in conditions of marginal
ambient light, when the driver might not yet think of doing
so.
Halogen foglights set into the front end’s lower air
intake.
Rain-sensing windshield wipers – standard on all
current BMW models.
Park Distance Control – reduces
likelihood of fender-bending and bumper-scratching low-speed
collisions. Standard front/rear on the 5 Series Gran
Turismo.
Adaptive brakelights – indicate to following
drivers when the BMW driver brakes hard, potentially lessening the
probability of a rear-end collision.
Responsive,
predictable handling made possible by advanced and sophisticated
suspension design, generously dimensioned wheels and tires, accurate
steering, and optional features like Adaptive Drive and Integral
Active Steering.
Powerful 4-wheel ventilated disc brakes with
antilock braking (ABS) – enhanced by the Dynamic Stability
Control system’s braking features.
Run-flat tires –
eliminate necessity of potentially dangerous roadside tire
changes.
Tire Pressure Monitor – via direct measurement of
pressure at each tire, alerts driver to pressure
loss.
Auto-dimming interior and exterior mirrors – by
automatically reducing glare from headlights and foglights of vehicles
behind, improve BMW driver’s ability to see ahead and
concentrate on driving.
Dynamic cruise control – can apply
brakes lightly to help control downhill speed, and reduce speed in curves.
8. Features and options:
Abundant standard features,
appealing options.
• 4th-generation iDrive system with direct-selection keys,
Programmable Memory Keys and other new features
standard.
• Extensive array of driver-assistance
options available.
• An extensive selection of comfort,
convenience, audio, technology and luxury features are also available
to enhance the 5 Series Gran Turismo’s unique character.
Several of the important options have been described or mentioned earlier, in connection with the product categories they affect: Integral Active Steering, Adaptive Drive, premium hi-fi system, Luxury Rear Seating Package. For completeness, here’s a summary of the entire offering of 5 Series Gran Turismo options, both packages and stand-alone. It is a brilliant selection, enabling customers to expand and enhance the 5 Series Gran Turismo’s unique combination of versatility, sportiness and luxury:
Packages.
Driver Assistance Package. Deploys three of
BMW’s newest systems to enhance active safety: High Beam
Assistant, which automatically switches between high and low beams
according to nighttime traffic conditions; Lane Departure Warning,
which vibrates the steering wheel if the vehicle begins to cross lane
markings without the turn signals activated; and Active Blind Spot
Detection, which vibrates the steering wheel and flashes a warning in
the appropriate exterior mirror housing when other vehicles are in the
Gran Turismo’s rearward blind zones.
Camera Package. To
many customers, a rearview camera is a familiar option; here usefully
augment the standard Park Distance Control. A recent BMW innovation is
the Sideview Camera, which enables the driver to see traffic from both
directions before pulling out onto a busy street.
Active
Ventilated Seats Package. This package includes a full measure of BMW
seating comforts for the driver and front passenger: 20-way Comfort
seats with Active Ventilation, Active Support (a fatigue-reducing,
massage-like function) and multi-zone heating.
Convenience
Package. Comfort Access, BMW’s system of keyless access, locking
and engine start/stop; Soft Close automatic doors, which let users
gently pull doors to, then draws them in; and power liftgate
operation.
Luxury Rear Seating Package. Takes luxury
accommodations for rear passengers to the ultimate with
multi-adjustable, ventilated and heated rear Comfort seats in a
4-seater interior configuration; power sunshades for the rear door
windows; and a 4-zone climate-control system.
Cold Weather
Package. Heated steering wheel, front seats and rear
seats.
Premium Sound Package. 16-speaker hi-fi audio system with
audiophile components and speakers, iPod/USB adapter.
Stand-alone options.
Integral Active Steering as described
earlier.
Adaptive Drive (Dynamic Damping Control and Active Roll
Stabilization), enhancing sporty handling and riding comfort with
these two high-technology suspension systems.
Active Cruise
Control with radar-based sensing to help the driver maintain safe
and/or desired distance from traffic ahead.
Night Vision with
Pedestrian Detection, another safety enhancement; employs infrared
sensing to detect hazards, living or otherwise, that the unaided
driver might not perceive.
Navigation System, adding Navigation,
Real-Time Traffic Information, and other amenities to the standard
4th-generation iDrive display-and-controller system.
Head-up
Display, elegantly and helpfully projecting important driving
information – including Navigation guidance if the Navigation
System is present – onto the windshield ahead of the driver. The
display appears to the driver to be “out front” over the
hood.
Rear Seat Entertainment with DVD player, controls and dual
monitors for rear-seat passengers.
Satellite Radio – with a
dazzling array of broadcasting choices; includes one-year
subscription.
Smartphone Integration to bring the benefits of
smartphones into the vehicle audio and phone systems.
Alternate
interior trim – two choices of wood as alternatives to the
standard Dark Burl Ash.
Ceramic controls for the shift knob,
iDrive controller surround, and audio and climate controls.
Ski
bag – can be stored under cargo floor when not in
use.
Features of packages also offered as stand-alone options:
Comfort front seats, heated front seats, 4-zone climate control,
iPod/USB adapter, rear side-window sunshades.
BMW Group In America
BMW of North America, LLC has been present
in the United States since 1975. Rolls-Royce Motor Cars NA, LLC
began distributing vehicles in 2003. The BMW Group in the United
States has grown to include marketing, sales, and financial service
organizations for the BMW brand of motor vehicles, including
motorcycles, the MINI brand, and the Rolls-Royce brand of Motor Cars;
BMW Group DesignworksUSA, a strategic design consultancy in
California; a technology office in Silicon Valley and various other
operations throughout the country. BMW Manufacturing Co., LLC in
South Carolina is part of BMW Group’s global manufacturing
network and is the exclusive manufacturing plant for all X5 Sports
Activity Vehicles and X6 Sports Activity Coupes. The BMW Group
sales organization is represented in the U.S. through networks of 338
BMW passenger car centers, 335 BMW Sports Activity Vehicle centers,
142 BMW motorcycle retailers, 83 MINI passenger car dealers, and 30
Rolls-Royce Motor Car dealers. BMW (US) Holding Corp., the BMW
Group’s sales headquarters for North America, is located in
Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey.
Information about BMW Group products is available to consumers via the Internet at:
www.bmwgroupna.com
www.bmwusa.com
www.bmwmotorcycles.com
www.miniusa.com
www.rolls-roycemotorcars.com
# #
#
Journalist note:
Information about the BMW Group and its products is available to
journalists on-line at the BMW Group PressClub at the following
address: www.press.bmwgroup.com.
Broadcast quality video footage is available via The NewsMarket at www.thenewsmarket.com.
# # #
1 Standard configuration includes seating for 5
passengers.
2 – Except the M1, an exotic mid-engine sports
car never officially offered in the U.S.
Article Offline Attachments.
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090523_BMW_5_Series_GT_release_Update.doc DOC, EN, 136 KB
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090523 2010 5 Series GT Technical Data.pdf PDF, EN, 44.98 KB