mikekopstain
Mike Kopstain
mikekopstain

Also, just took a look at your post history. Read your posts and see if there's a trend. You appear to enjoy throwing yourself into a rage over nothing.

You don't know what the sport package offers and you're trying to argue BMW with me? The sport package on a rear wheel drive E60 adds active dampers with a hydraulic coupler in the center that loads them up during aggressive cornering, lower springs, firmer dampeners and generally larger wider rubber. The difference

I'm sorry, you mean to tell me that an E60 in sport guise (or even standard fare) is not safe at 100mph? I'm sorry but if you're going to make such an absurd assertion I think you've pretty much rendered the rest of your bench racing argument moot.

Also, just for the sake of clarity, the S85 weighs 530lbs not 446.

I understand, and did read the article - however, I do not understand how you can/still are saying that it is a better car.

If you would have actually read the article I wrote you'd see that I was:

Touché.

Thank you. This has nothing to do with an Italian tuneup. DI engines have this problem regardless of how hard they are pushed. On the DI BMW engines we add an oil catch can that prevents a lot of this but you really can't eliminate the problem.

There are a lot of business incentives to leasing if you put the car under the company name and drive a lot of company miles, both of which he's most likely doing. In addition to that you're only paying tax on the portion of the car you're using versus paying on the entire amount of the car. With a car like that,

No he's not. If he buys it outright he pays taxes on the entire amount. If he leases he pays on his lease payments. If he puts it under his business name (and I'm sure he does) he can also write the lease payments off, at least the portion of them that were used for business purposes.

There are a lot of enticing

Looks amazing and seems like a great bargain until you get to the engine. 2 liter 4 cylinder? 240hp? Ok, well it's a turbo 4 so I'm sure it's oozing torque. What's that? 250 lb/ ft? And in the age of 5 series BMW's weighing well north of two tons it's almost certainly going to be tipping the scales at 4500 -

While this hasn't happened to me, I'm inclined to cut the guy a little bit of slack. Here's why:

See the problem with the BMW is people do notice, especially other BMW drivers. You can pretty easily spot a low option 320 versus a well optioned 328 or 335. The low option cars don't have angel eyes, have small wheels, smaller displays inside (because of the lack of NAV). Sure, to 95% of the people out there

You didn't make a mistake. He mentioned the fact that he paid 10k over sticker. Once he put that on the table, discussing price was fair game. It's not like you walked up to him un-provoked and told him it was a dumb decision. He throw it in your face and you gave him a reaction other than the the one he was

I don't think you fully understand the demographic. Many people that can afford these cars can afford them because they factor stuff like this into their purchasing decision and considering things like that in the equation are what got them the means to afford a car like this in the first place. Likewise, many

My 8 year old 550i was also flawless. Over 100,000 miles and the only issue it ever had was a leaking coolant expansion tank. $140 and 5 minutes and I was back in business.

My 2010 535 has been amazing and it's a "new" BMW no less, not one of those old school models that you could fix with a paper clip and a gum wrapper. Now if you want to talk about used Audis...

As someone that's been there and done that a lot, is in the income bracket you cited and who owns a business, you're not quite accurate in your assessment. You can often make a tax case for a new car if it's 100% business use but unless you're leasing it even that's limited. I own a business and have a great

That is priceless advice and a perfect way of summarizing my point.

"They don't age well" really is a perfect way of putting it. VAG tends to use cheap quality components and the cars appear to be built mechanically to last as long as their typical owner demographic will keep it. As far as flagships go the A8 was heads and tails better than the last gen 7 series or Merc but has