Weird it's almost like it was actually euro-centric xenophobia driving anti Japanese car rhetoric, and not the supposed superiority of German engineering.
Ignorant, euro supremacist behaviour is nothing new.
not euro, german, or Alfa, Lancia and Maserati would not be where they are now (non-existent).
Looks much better without the oversized nostrils, no question. Don’t feel like it was wise for BMW to take the risk they did, we will see in a couple of years what the sales numbers are….The new BMW grille is okay once you get used to it, but then you see those renderings of how good it looks without the gigantic grille.
I quite admire the fact they're embracing this off the deep-end approach with everything nowadays. Is it really frickin' weird? Yeah. But being nonsensical is much more entertaining to me all around, so I don't mind it at all. And if they continue to deliver on the great driving/powertrain dynamics, and incredibly refined tech like they have been with their most recent M cars, then I see no reason to worry about them sales-wise.Looks much better without the oversized nostrils, no question. Don’t feel like it was wise for BMW to take the risk they did, we will see in a couple of years what the sales numbers are….
I wish this was sold here so badly. BMW made a huge mistake not certifying the wagon for the US.
I wish this was sold here so badly. BMW made a huge mistake not certifying the wagon for the US.
Americans don't buy mid-sized sedans and they buy even fewer station wagons.Did they? Other than Subarus, I haven't seen a wagon on the road in like 5 years. Though I did see a covered wagon this fall on a road trip through rural Iowa.
You can't buy what's not offeredAmericans don't buy mid-sized sedans and they buy even fewer station wagons.
Correction: Americans do buy station wagons, but only if they ride on large wheels and tires and raised suspensions, have black lower-body and wheelwell cladding, and are labelled as "crossovers" or "SUVs" (and not called station wagons).
Did they? Other than Subarus, I haven't seen a wagon on the road in like 5 years. Though I did see a covered wagon this fall on a road trip through rural Iowa.
Corrected.Correction: Americans do buy station wagons, but only if they ride on large wheels and tires and 20 mm raised suspensions, have black lower-body and wheelwell cladding, and are labelled as "crossovers" or "SUVs" (and not called station wagons).
Agreed. But the reason they are not offered is because there are not enough potential drivers willing to buy them, making it not worth the expense to build and import North American versions for sale here.You can't buy what's not offered