My thoughts after many, many hours and kilometres (2,000km+) of long distance driving over the past 2 weeks.
Time to hand the keys to the SO for the next few months until the next family trip.
Pros:
- Comfortable seats. Not the softest but designed to not give you backache over long distances.
- ZF gearbox is buttery smooth and responsive in most conditions.
- Not a 3 series, but still handles very well for a family SUV. Steering has nice weight in Sport steering mode.
- Sport Individual mode is a nifty feature - having the Engine and Steering in Sport but with gearbox in Comfort (Sport holds gears a bit too long) is the best compromise for me for long distance driving. The M/S switch on the gearlever is good for overtaking in tricky situations.
- Engine has sufficient go for 90% of conditions.
- Spacious cabin for passengers of most body shapes
- Well built cabin that does not rattle or squeak even after gravel road driving
- Respectable ground clearance, plump tyres and a comfort oriented suspension make this a great gravel and poor tar road cruiser.
- Decent sounding audio system - no distortion at higher volume. Even though it is a basic system (no equaliser or mids adjustability), it sounds good to most listeners.
- Excellent fuel consumption - 6.5 average. I feel that one can get it below 6 litres per 100km if you avoid sport mode
Cons:
- Mid range punch is good for a 2.0, 4 cylinder motor but those drivers used to more torque will feel slightly short changed when overtaking, with a load, on hills. Not really a fault of the car, but just align your expectations accordingly.
- Spare space saver wheel (regardless of whether it was optioned with one at factory or if you fitted one afterwards) eats into the boot space. I am seriously considering a roof rack/box. Not a problem with a small family, but if all the seats are occupied, then luggage space is tight in the boot with that spare wheel eating up a chunk of it.
- Boot/hatch sliding luggage cover is badly designed. Because you have to pull it down slightly before it catches, it does interfere with a fully loaded boot's contents as you pull it. It would be better if the cover was hooked onto the hatch window, similar to normal hatchbacks or the Mazda CX5, so that it does not interfere with the luggage. This may be a personal gripe, especially since the spare wheel made the luggage sit higher up that normal in the boot area.
- Standard gearlever feels insubstantial and plasticky. When slotting into M/S, it does not feel that great to touch.
- No digital speedo readout is frustrating when driving long distance. Maybe a personal preference issue, since my EcoSport and Macan have this feature.
- The routing logic of the standard sat nav system leaves much to be desired. Even though it is great that I can send destinations from the BMW App (and also from Google Maps) on my phone to the car, via Connected Drive, the routing/navigation logic is very poor in the car. On more than one occasion it sent us long winded routes. Playing with the route settings did not help. The live traffic did work, but was very delayed. Sorry BMW, but your basic sat nav sucks. I guess they want you to upgrade to the fancier sat nav system.
- Road noise is quite loud at cruising speeds on national highways. I suspect it may be the Bridgestone Alenzas, but I also suspect that this car has less sound deadening materials than other cars in its league. I guess less sound deadening means less weight, which means better fuel economy and performance.
Summary:
As a family car, the G01 X3 20d is a good choice in this popular market segment. While it does not excel at everything, it excels at most things and with used prices (2018 models) undercutting similar engined used rivals from Volvo, Audi and Merc, it becomes a no brainer. It is the best of the 2.0 compact European SUVs. Add the reliability and fuel consumption of the proven 20d motor and it sweetens the deal.
Another thing to note is that the car does not feel precious - meaning that it is confident and comfortable getting dirty and being driven offroad (mild bundu bashing). The car takes the knocks in its stride. I don't see a GLC, Q5 or XC60 being as dirt ready as an X3. The interior of the X3 also feels like it can take on some abuse, whereas the other cars look and feel like fancy lounges inside and one will be reluctant to mess it up with dust and mud.
Anyway, that's my ramblings for this year on the X3 20d. The car will be called upon for the school and wife's work commute soon. The next long distance road trip being in April.
