How to Open Bmw E46 Door Without Key
Here's a segment where EPA highway numbers between 25 and 27 mpg are considered good. A few cars beat those figures, but if you want rear- or all-wheel drive, the list is pretty short. There's the Lexus IS250, at 29 mpg with an automatic, but even the manual-transmission version is pokey compared with the competition. The BMW 128i and 328i both get 28 mpg on the highway, but we'll get to why these aren't our choices. The only gasoline-powered luxury car that gets 30 mpg is Audi's A4 2.0T Quattro. If you're looking for gas misers, think diesel, which means either the Mercedes-Benz E320 BlueTec (with EPA ratings of 23 mpg city, 32 highway) or the BMW 335d (23 mpg city, 36 highway).
TOM DREW
The 335d is, well, a 3-series, and that means all the exceptional dynamics that make it a perennial 10Best Cars winner come along with it. Simply put, the Bimmer is not just the mileage champ, it's more fun to drive than the E320 and the A4 as well.
Ah, but perhaps you've read Patrick Bedard's piece on the future of mpg [see page 94], or maybe you're just a know-it-all who thinks that the premium cost of diesel fuel doesn't always pay back in fuel savings. That's not the case here because the 335d posts a 28-percent mileage improvement over the 328i automatic in the city and 29 percent on the highway. With diesel currently selling at less than five percent more than the premium fuel required in the 328i, the 335d will definitely cost you less at the pump.
We'll have to wait until BMW announces pricing to know how long it will take the extra cost of the diesel to pay itself back in fuel savings, but putting price aside, the 335d could be the best of the 3-series lineup except for the M3. It has 265 horsepower, only 35 short of the 335i's, and the 425 pound-feet crushes the torque figures of both the 335i and the M3. Forget your preconceptions about diesels being slow. If you can resist the urge to do a massive, tire-smoking burnout, the 335d will go from 0 to 60 mph in 5.7 seconds. The quarter-mile happens in 14.2 seconds at 100 mph. Those numbers put the 335d right between the 328i and 335i in acceleration. Besides using more gas, both of those cars lack the chest-flattening punch of torque that the diesel delivers when the turbo boost kicks in. You might wonder how you ever lived without it.
The biggest downside to the 335d is that it only comes with an automatic transmission. Also, the clatter of a diesel, however slight, doesn't match the dulcet engine tones of an inline-six. If you're determined to reduce your fuel bill but still want the full BMW experience, it seems like a small sacrifice to make .
TOM DREW
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How to Open Bmw E46 Door Without Key
Source: https://www.caranddriver.com/features/a15145641/bmw-335d/