Reviews: Walk Around/ Interior

2008 BMW X3

Editor: New Car Test Drive
The BMW of small SUVs.

Walk Around

The BMW X3 resembles the larger X5, but a closer look reveals significant styling differences.

Notable design cues include the front bumper that frames the traditional twin-kidney grille, its chrome vertical slats complemented by a chrome strip along the base of the side windows. The headlight assembly has a clean look, as do the foglights. The optional xenon headlights include the corona light rings. When the Cold Weather package is ordered, the headlight washers retract into the bumper.

From the front, the stance looks much the same as the X5's, with fenders tautly blistered over wide and widely spaced tires, giving the X3 a BMW-like, road-grabbing face. The headlamp lenses and kidney grilles are shaped differently, as is the bumper and lower grille openings, and the bumper is black as opposed to the X5 bumper's body-color treatment.

The X3 looks like the X5 in side view, though the cut line from the front wheel wells to the front doors was eliminated for a cleaner look. A mild character crease bridges the space between the fender blisters, and a relatively low beltline adds openness to the side windows.

From the rear, the new X3 displays a clean, well organized light cluster with horizontal LED taillights.

Standard running gear are 17-inch wheels with all-season tires, while 18- and 19-inch wheels are available.

Interior

People familiar with BMW interiors will immediately feel at home in the X3. Controls are located where you?d expect them to be, with the proper heft and texture to the controls. Instruments are easy to read at a glance and communicate the proper and necessary information.

Overall, the interior materials provide a refined driving and riding experience. In a few areas, however, the X3's level of materials and finish quality isn't quite in the same league as its more expensive big brother, the X5.

There's much to like, including the three-spoke steering wheel, the finely grained dashboard material, the materials for the instrument panel and door panels, and the design of the gauge cluster with the instrument hood integrated into the dash.

The display for the navigation system is one of the most thoughtfully positioned of the lot, rotating up out of the top center of the dash, gray instead of black, so it's visible to driver and navigator but nestled unobtrusively halfway down in the recess where it stows when not in use.

Passengers will climb in over aluminum doorsill trim with the BMW logo and will find refined interior trim and materials. Dark ash wood trim is standard; gray poplar or light natural poplar, which we especially like, are no-cost options.

The front seats are supportive and comfortably bolstered. The standard seats are more comfortable than the Sport seats and quite adequately restrain occupants' posteriors when the road begins to wind. Seatbelts feel right, properly tensioned. Ranges of seat adjustment are extensive, to the point a six-footer can enjoy major amounts of headroom and actually put the steering wheel and forward footwell well out of reach; at these extremes, however, rear-seat legroom is seriously diminished.

In terms of roominess, the X3 interior compares favorably with its most likely direct competition, the Lexus RX 330 and Infiniti FX35, giving up or gaining an inch or so here and there. On the downside, the X3's rear seat is quite firm and virtually flat, like a bench, where the others offer more form fit and comfort.

Cargo area, at 71 cubic feet, is impressive, exceeding the X5's by 10 cubic feet with the rear seats folded, and slotting in between the RX 350's 84.7 cubic feet and the FX35's 64.5 cubic feet. With the second row of seats flipped down, Caesar, our 170-pound English mastiff tester, was happy here.

Storage areas are numerous and flexible, many fitted with netting that stretches to accommodate odd shapes and medium-sized water bottles. The mesh nets in the lower front doors, though, have been replaced by dual storage bins for better small-item storage. Rear-door map pockets forfeit several square inches to ash trays.

So much for the tape measure. Where the X3 disappoints is in the intangible and tactile, how the interior looks and feels. There are two front cup holders, but the one mounted on the center console is sized more for soda pop cans than coffee cups or water bottles and looks like an afterthought, something cobbled together and glued in place forward of the armrest/storage bin. The passenger cup holder pops out of the end of the dash by the door, where it gets bumped by knees when the passenger is climbing in or out of the car. Door closings are followed by a hint of a hollow echo, instead of the solid thunk we expect of BMWs.

 

* While every reasonable effort is made to ensure the accuracy of these data, we are not responsible for any errors or omissions contained on these pages. Please verify any information in question with a dealership sales representative.