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2007 BMW 335i Review

Maybe not a capital

AS
by Autobytel Staff
January 30, 2007
6 min. Reading Time
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BMW 335i – Review: Dark gray and full of attitude, it sat in the parking lot waiting for the next happy driver. Ahhh. The 2007 BMW 335i Coupe, another masterful automotive creation by the boys sporting blue propellers, another great driver’s car ready to go through its paces. This one – with its red leather interior and a smooth, inline six-cylinder engine mated to a six-speed manual transmission – wowed us with its balance, its power, and its looks, enough so that we named it our Editors' Choice for Car of the Year.

What We Drove

Wouldn’t you drive it? With so many luxury performance choices, this new offering from BMW intrigued us, and made us wonder whether it would be just another coupe cum sedan or an actual honest-to-goodness different choice. To our unbridled joy, we found the BMW 335i to be much different than the sedan, and actually better in many driver-oriented ways. Our tester had BMW’s sport package, which added sport seats and 18-inch alloy wheels. That package jacked the sticker up a thou to $42,295, including a $695 destination.

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Performance

Wonder of wonders, the BMW 335i Coupe is a great driver's car, thanks to suspension changes and the twin-turbo engine; it makes everything snappier and more scintillating. Even the six-speed manual feels renewed. The 3.0-liter inline six-cylinder is the sedan engine with two turbochargers, and power is rated at 300 horses at 5,800 rpm and 295 lb.-ft. of torque. Turbo lag is barely discernable. In a word, the powertrain would be described as responsive.

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Handling

We found the BMW 335i to be close to M-level fun to drive – though a little skittish in the corners. Not sure if that’s the driver, the car or the tires, but it adds to the experience. All in all, given the sport seats and the lowered height, you feel close to the road but wrapped in leather protection.

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Visibility

Enough glass all round, big rear view and side views are nicely placed – though smallish. Visibility – for a coupe, excellent, though you sit so low that it feels harder to see than it is. Fact is, there’s enough glass to eliminate most blind spots, but it is what it is – a low slung coupe with tight seats and a low ride height.

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Fun to Drive

Fun defines this car, but without the compromise of a “rattle your cage” ride or an unforgiving interior. Call it fun for grownups – style, sport and sophistication with two doors.

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Front Comfort

These are driver’s seats, meaning that they grip you in a nice tight hug. While they’re excellent and firm, the leather was a bit too stiff for my tastes. The seats offer a power up, down, fore and aft control, along with power lumbar, tilt and a manual thigh support -- as well as the normal recline. Really, it’s a perfect driver’s set up and actually quite comfortable for the long haul as long as you like it firm and well bolstered.

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Rear Comfort

While the seats are comfortable, there’s not much legroom, and shoulder room is also a bit compromised. The center console area that shoots all the way though the vehicle hurts the comfort standard a bit as your legs don’t have much side-to-side area in which to move.

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Interior Noise

The 335i is whisper quiet for a performance coupe, with a little road noise and some faint whispering from the wind, probably coming from the sunroof. Hit a corner hard and you can hear the tires complain, though it’s properly muted and, indeed, necessary. You are driving, after all – not reading a book.

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Loading Cargo

The trunk’s low lift over fits with the profile of the vehicle, and helps usability. A nicely appointed and rather large trunk area swallows just about everything, though there’s no pass through.

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Build Quality

Gaps are consistently tight, with relatively few exceptions, and controls have a nice, weighted feel that bespeaks of quality. Overall, it feels more expensive than it is – which is saying something for a luxury car! Some slight variations in gaps and flush, along door panels and hood line, take some of the joy away, and the front/rear fascias don’t line up perfectly with the metal joints and chrome trim.

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