We drive the BMW ActiveHybrid 5 to see if it is sporty and efficient

You may not have heard, but BMW now offers its luxurious 5 Series sedan as hybrid. We recently spent a few days with a BMW ActiveHybrid 5 to see if it lives up to the promise and share our first impressions.

The car was borrowed from BMW for a fee. The German carmaker's latest foray into the world of hybrids behaves a lot like the slick 535i we tested in 2010, and it uses the same smooth-and-punchy turbocharged 3.0-liter inline-six-cylinder engine. With its electric drive motor, combined horsepower climbs from 300 to 335 hp. "Hybridizing" this 5 Series isn't cheap. This car, starting at $61,100, stickers for $8,000 more than a regular 535i.

The hybrid brings all the virtues and vices of the regular 5 Series: a comfortable ride, quiet cabin, and impeccable interior along with complex controls and somewhat vague steering.

2013-BMW-5-Active-Hybrid-badge.jpgWe've also noticed that the extra money doesn't buy much of a fuel-economy gain. We've been observing an average of 25.5 mpg in mixed driving, compared with the 23 mpg overall from our tested 535i. That 2.5-mpg gain is much less than we measured with our tested Toyota Camry sedans: The Camry hybrid got 11 mpg more than the regular four-cylinder Camry. Jumping to the upscale category, a Mercedes-Benz E-Class diesel registered 26 mpg overall in our tests and doesn't cost appreciably more than a conventional V6-powered E-Class, which got 21 mpg.

Thrift is not the first thing that comes to mind regarding BMW, but it's worth noting that the relatively frugal $47,500 528i, with its turbocharged, 2.0-liter four-cylinder engine, gets better fuel economy than BMW's Hybrid—24 mpg city/34 mpg highway, according to the EPA, versus 23/30. And, you don't lose the fold-down rear seat feature that you must sacrifice to get the Hybrid. If fuel economy were the name of the game, then maybe that's the car BMW should have hybridized.

The ActiveHybrid 5 uses a small .675-kWh lithium-ion battery sandwiched between the rear seat and trunk. It can propel itself on electric power alone at up to about 15 mph with a light throttle. The car is also designed to shut off the engine when coasting, once below about 40 mph. Fortunately, the automatic start/stop at idle is unobtrusive enough—which was not our experience with our last tested 3 Series. In that car, start/stop lacked smoothness, shaking the car when it shut off in a decidedly non-luxurious manner. BMW uses this same technology for hybrid versions of the 3 and 7 Series. Experience gained there will be used as the springboard for future plug-in hybrids and pure electrics such as the lease-only 1 Series electric.

Clearly, as a hybrid, a 10-percent fuel-economy gain at best is nowhere near the roughly 30-percent improvement we see with the Camry Hybrid. Instead, it's more in line with the "eAssist" mild hybrid you get with a Buick LaCrosse, which in our tests improved fuel economy from 23 to 26 mpg. So with all due respect to BMW's technical wizardry, we wonder why they bothered.

Visit our guide to alternative fuels and guide to fuel economy.



More from Consumer Reports:
2013 New Car Preview
Best & worst used cars
Complete Ratings for 200 cars and trucks

Consumer Reports has no relationship with any advertisers or sponsors on Yahoo!. Copyright © 2007-2012 Consumers Union of U.S., Inc. No reproduction, in whole or in part, without written permission.

Follow Yahoo! Autos

RESEARCH A CAR

More Articles

  • Should states lower the blood alcohol content levels for drunk driving?

    The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) recently recommended that states reduce their blood alcohol content (BAC) limits from .08 to .05, or even lower, in an effort to eliminate alcohol-impaired driving. The move is a bold one, so we decided...

  • Road-trip friendly cars that can go the distance

    Memorial Day is fast approaching and that means millions of Americans will be hitting the road for a family trip. The roads will be crowded and you should expect lines at gas stations. A car bred for long-haul driving, with...

  • First ride: BMW C 600 Sport maxi-scooter has the brand's sporty flair

    With a brand forever linked with the "ultimate driving machine" tagline, you might not associate BMW with scooters. But BMW has built scooters for years in Europe, and it has been making inroads stateside with its own take on efficient,...

  • Tesla Model S

    When it comes to the hype surrounding electric-car maker Tesla Motors Inc., one man says he has put his money where his mouth is.

  • Motorcycle buying tips for women Consumer Reports News
    Motorcycle buying tips for women

    As the popularity of motorcycling continues to grow, more women are learning to get their motors running and head out on the highway. Industry experts say that about 12 percent of all riders are now women, drawn by the same...