Weekend Herald

7 ALMIGHTY

Meet BMW’s largest, most expensive BEV, the i7 xDrive60 sedan

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If the luck associated with number seven is any indication, this new BMW flagship should win Lotto. As the seventh generation of the leader of the luxury team, the BMW 7 Series was first launched in 1977, and carries with it the legacy of introducin­g to the brand some technical innovation­s many of us take for granted in our own cars: things like ABS, Xenon lights, moving sat-nav and Head-Up Display.

At a time where the moving world is migrating to cleaner and greener, these luxury vehicles are also leading the way in renewable and sustainabl­e materials, and electric over petrol; or in this latest G70 BMW 7 Series’ case, either: the 2023 7 Series, launched in Melbourne in late-January, is offered as either the 740i, with a convention­al turbocharg­ed petrol six-cylinder engine with mild hybrid and rear-wheel drive, or as the first fully electric 7 Series, the BMW i7 xDrive60 — whose name more resembles a password than a car (just needs the underscore).

But there’s a catch, as NZ won’t get the petrol version. So, it’s the new BEV-only BMW i7_xDrive60 that headlines the new 7 Series, locally, with some really distinct and standout features.

Possibly the most memorable of those is the BMW Theatre Screen, a massive 31.3-inch TV screen that drops from the roof in the rear to offer massive 8k resolution in super-wide 32x9 format, allowing multiple configurat­ions for work or play. Like a Smart TV, it hooks up and into the range of apps and streaming platforms, Netflix, Disney et al, including Amazon Fire TV. If that last one doesn’t ring a bell, it probably shouldn’t, because the asterisk is that NZ can’t access Amazon Fire’s entertainm­ent platform. Yet. But it’s coming.

It does, however, offer an HDMI port to replicate content from a device in the interim; for which there is plenty of accommodat­ion, including a smartphone charging mat in the rear, a pair of pop-out cup holders from the rear centre console and, different from the previous 7 Series, the ability to stow said centre console, enabling the fifth seat.

The rear doors also house their own touchpads, for controls of the seat massaging, heating/cooling, sunblinds for the sides and rear window and, of course, the big TV, that’s also business-focused, with a rear-facing camera for video conferenci­ng.

Overall taller in almost every way, the rear seats also sit higher than previous, offering more of an SUV-style ease for ingress/egress, but also comfort, with quasistadi­um seating for rear seat passengers. The rear seats also recline, with calf-support for a luxe movie/moving experience, and cashmere seat trim as the default, rather than leather, which is a lot more appealing, luxury and comfortabl­e in many ways. Rear leather is an option for those who must.

New for this model are electric automatic doors; inspired by RollsRoyce, they can be programmed to open any/all doors. Once the driver is in and puts their foot on the brake, the auto-closing feature is a handy trick.

There’s also an external light show, with the large illuminate­d kidney grille, while the slimline headlights offer a little razzle and dazzle from Swarovski crystals that sparkle and shine with the twopiece DRLs.

The front seats also have Swarovski crystal styling and finishes everywhere, including the strip across the dash with haptic buttons that BMW calls the Interactio­n Bar with Shy Tech, a design-aesthetic that semi-hides the controls, such as seat settings and door locks with touch settings.

All these features can be a bit overwhelmi­ng initially, especially on our relatively short drive from Melbourne CBD to Yarra Glen area, a 200km round trip, sampling both models from the driver’s and rear seats. The i7 is not the smoothest from 0-20 per cent throttle in Sport mode, but that’s the nature of EVs, so we selected Comfort: just as quick, a fraction smoother. While 400kW/745Nm sounds a lot, tamp that down with 2.64 tonne, and the i7 becomes a luxury cruiser.

The new curved, widescreen display with a big 14.9in infotainme­nt and 12.3in instrument cluster works with voice, touch or iDrive control, while augmented reality navigation (introduced in iX) adds to the navigation.

Ride quality is outstandin­g with dual axle adaptive air suspension covering a lot of the comfort, also allowing adjustable ride-height from +20mm (in Comfort) to -10mm in Sport. There’s also opposing four-wheel steering with an active rack to help tight parking moves, which switches to parallel steering above 60km/h.

On the charging front, the i7’s large 106kWh battery is good for over 600km claimed, though our range gauge was showing 550km at 100 per cent.

It’ll be a big few months for BMW, with the Z4 update, launch of the new M2, M3 Touring and XM and two others all due in March and April. Probably just coincidenc­e, that makes seven.

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Dean EVANS

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