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Author Topic: Wife’s CX-7, new to me winter beater, and brother’s X6  (Read 987 times)
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initial_D
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« on: September 04, 2010, 01:17:49 am »

Started a thread about changing the white CX-7 we had more than a year, and we returned the leased 2007 vehicle, and swapped it for a 2009 model, before the face lift. Had it for over one year now, but it only travelled 6500 Km so far.

The white wheels, and a new set Toyo’s summer and 3 year old Toyo’s winters were from the previous CX-7. The BS oem tires only lasted 2 summers and less than 25,000Kms.




After 8 years of winter service, the 1990 325ix is showing some wear & tear. The steering rack is leaking power fluid, about 1/4 L a month, and locks, front passenger, 2 rear doors, and trunk, will not fully close and lock when temperature is below -20C. Don’t really want to sell it, want to repair it, with used parts, and DIY. In the mean time, want something else, and very different.

Enter the 2004 GMC Sierra 2500, 6.0L V8, 4WD, and towing capability up to 10,000LBs. One owner, full service record, all receipts, even the original window sticker.





My brother swapped his 528xi for a 2011 X6, with 3.0L TT and 8 speed. Taken care of it for him while he is in China for business for a couple of months.

Love the smoothness of the drive train combo, silkiest auto shifter driven. Heavy steering, firm ride, and tank like presence travelling on the highway. Rear visibility is rather poor, with a car the size of a Ford Focus, can only see the top of its windshield when it is behind at a light. With a full size van behind, its windshield than can be seen thru the rearview mirror. No standard backup camera, just sensors and a beeper.





The gauges in the dash is traditional, a lot of similarity to my E30, but the dials and numbers area bit on the small side. The paddle shifter on the steering is not really needed with this drivetrain, the parking brake button’ up/down function is rather video game like. The steering has a small ‘dead center’ feel, wiggle it a bit at speed, the car has no responds, un-BMW like, in my experience anyway. Suspension setup is firm, soaks up bumps nicely. The X6 is a very heavy vehicle, and BMW hide its weight rather well. However, in doing so, some of the road feed back is isolated and eliminated, so the driver doesn’t have a true sense of the actual road grip.

My favourite thing out of the X6 is actually the iDrive, and I really like using it. Don’t think a person need  to read the user manual page by page to use it, its functions and controls are very logical and straight forward. I had more difficulty trying to open the glove box and center console.


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« Reply #1 on: September 05, 2010, 06:42:32 pm »

That's quite the collection!

What did you do with your old Dakota? Did it die? The new GMC looks like a very nice truck. I think it should be up to the task of any truck duties you will throw at it.

How have the 2 CX-7's worked out for you?

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« Reply #2 on: September 06, 2010, 07:58:52 pm »

Hey, thanks for the pics initial!   Smiley 

1) Great truck.  You'll have no issues with winter in that.

2) Great looking house; love bungalow style houses like that.

3) I'm not a big fan of the X6, but she looks very imposing and I love the gauges for some reason (same as mine; I guess I like their straight-forward, simple design).  I also find the new iDrive easy as pie, and really like the new short-cut buttons around the knob that you can distinguish by feel.

4) More pics of the RX-8 when you get a chance?  Smiley
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« Reply #3 on: September 06, 2010, 10:31:13 pm »

I do not care for the X6 - but if I had to have one, the 4.4L V8 would be the only way to go imo. This vehicle is too heavy for less than the 8.
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« Reply #4 on: September 07, 2010, 11:32:55 am »

That's quite the collection!

What did you do with your old Dakota? Did it die? The new GMC looks like a very nice truck. I think it should be up to the task of any truck duties you will throw at it.

How have the 2 CX-7's worked out for you?




Still have the Dakota, works the same as the day I bought it. It’s mechanical is rather simple and old school. I have a nephew and a niece who are learning how to drive a manual, and I though it would be good to have them try a RWD w/ no ABS on slippery surface this winter. No sure if the Dodge have ABS or not, but will disable it anyway. Maybe selling it next year.

The CX-7(s) worked well for us. Certainly there is sufficient sportiness in the driving characteristic to qualify as fun to drive. It is the wife’s daily driver, and I used it on occasions as well. The cargo area with the rear seats folded can hold large articles, including 46” flat screen TV, and 21’ folding ladders. The 1st CX-7 had a bit of hiccup, one of its intake mapping sensors went faulty, and there are times the engine would not respond properly at full throttle. It was fixed under warranty. We liked it enough for an encore when the lease was up.

One member at this forum mentioned a while back with his Acura MDX and its state of the art SH-AWD, it was stuck with one of the front wheel on ice. I did a test with the CX-7, drive one wheel up on a small bank of melting snow one spring morning, sure enough, the wheel just kept spinning, and the vehicle wouldn’t go anyway.

We went thru some tough winter driving conditions with the CX-7, never had any traction problems. There are limits with computer controlled systems, I guess. The truck have low and high range 4WD mode, one of the reasons I bought it. 
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« Reply #5 on: September 07, 2010, 11:33:50 am »

Hey, thanks for the pics initial!   Smiley 

1) Great truck.  You'll have no issues with winter in that.

2) Great looking house; love bungalow style houses like that.

3) I'm not a big fan of the X6, but she looks very imposing and I love the gauges for some reason (same as mine; I guess I like their straight-forward, simple design).  I also find the new iDrive easy as pie, and really like the new short-cut buttons around the knob that you can distinguish by feel.

4) More pics of the RX-8 when you get a chance?  Smiley


Thanks, Dr. Julie. Might have a camping trailer or car trailer in the near future, the truck will server double duty.

Love the dash layout of the new BMWs, and the driving characteristic is unmistakingly BMW, even in this bloated X6. Very sure I can identify the brand if were put in a blind test.
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« Reply #6 on: September 07, 2010, 11:34:54 am »

I do not care for the X6 - but if I had to have one, the 4.4L V8 would be the only way to go imo. This vehicle is too heavy for less than the 8.


The Turbo 6 is sufficient, does not feel slow at all. But it never fell fast either. The engine revs at 2000 rpm at 140Km/h, and fuel consumption is not too bad.

Good highway vehicle, horrible is the city with traffic, and headaches at tight parking lots. I wouldn't get an X6.
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« Reply #7 on: September 07, 2010, 11:59:12 am »

Rear visibility is rather poor, with a car the size of a Ford Focus, can only see the top of its windshield when it is behind at a light.

That is intentional. It is absolutely unacceptable for an X6 driver to have to acknowledge or even be aware of the existence of the little people. Smiley

From a 5-series to an X6....BALLER Smiley
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« Reply #8 on: September 08, 2010, 12:41:01 am »

Rear visibility is rather poor, with a car the size of a Ford Focus, can only see the top of its windshield when it is behind at a light.

That is intentional. It is absolutely unacceptable for an X6 driver to have to acknowledge or even be aware of the existence of the little people. Smiley

From a 5-series to an X6....BALLER Smiley

The SNOB meter dial is on full.

Easier to park the GMC 3/4 ton, visibility out of pick up truck is very good.
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« Reply #9 on: September 08, 2010, 07:51:57 am »

Make sure you know how to take the door panel off in the GMC, someday soon the window will stop working Tongue
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« Reply #10 on: September 15, 2010, 07:47:05 am »

sach beautiful car i like it .....
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« Reply #11 on: September 15, 2010, 11:05:37 am »

The truck is my favourite of the bunch. Thumbs up
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« Reply #12 on: September 18, 2010, 10:38:36 pm »

http://www.topgear.com/uk/photos/wild-things-are?imageNo=1

I loves me some top gear.

I thought that Jeremy Clarkson seemed to hate the X6 before, but this trip sounds fun!
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« Reply #13 on: September 23, 2010, 11:26:36 pm »

The X6 is an awesome highway travelling vehicle, great for long trips.

Make sure you know how to take the door panel off in the GMC, someday soon the window will stop working Tongue

Hope that won't happen. In 5 months of ownership, had to replace the signal/cruise switch module already, over $500 parts & labour. The rear muffler has a small rattle sometimes, the CEL came on twice, reset it with the scan gauge tool.

So far, really liking the truck. Gas is about $70 a week right now, without any long trips. Even thought love driving small nimble cars, the truck(s) ownership experience is very positive, wonder why I have not bought one earlier.
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« Reply #14 on: September 24, 2010, 05:45:51 am »

Never had a problem with that

I am about 500Km ish on 100 L over driving
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