I had rad the same too: if you are in town - i.e. slowing down, accelerating,... then hybrid is better. Otherwise, on highway, the hybrid tends to do worse than a regular equal 4 cylinder.
Off course, do not listen to me for advise on gas mileage. I drive every week to Houston, TX with my chevy truck - i.e 15-18 mpg to save my "baby 545" from taking too many miles - This way, I have the whole week end to enjoy it, .. and still at 26 mpg on highway!
Like all you guys said - it is maybe not a sound investment, but it is still "the Ultimate Driving Machine"
AMEN
Off course, do not listen to me for advise on gas mileage. I drive every week to Houston, TX with my chevy truck - i.e 15-18 mpg to save my "baby 545" from taking too many miles - This way, I have the whole week end to enjoy it, .. and still at 26 mpg on highway!
Like all you guys said - it is maybe not a sound investment, but it is still "the Ultimate Driving Machine"
AMEN
As for the 545i, hey 26mpg is nice for 75 I'm guessing. There is a 535i with better interior amenities (why does BMW do this, it would irk me if I dropped 55k on a car only to have it lacking the latest features 2-3yrs later) it also gets 30mpg on the highway (forget the new 2008 EPA sticker it's under harsher driving, if the 335i could average 29mpg, and BMW is known to get better than posted gas mileage on the highway, I bet the 5 series which is roughly 200lbs heavier I believe, should get 28-30mpg as well.
I do wonder why BMW made a 535i which offers the same or better performance than the 545i, and almost .1 or .2 slower to 60 performance as compared with the 550i. Why bother with the heavy V8 if you can have the turbo I6 with 300hp and torque. If it pulls better at 100mph, well fine, but how is that useful for daily driving. I also agree with keeping the miles off the bimmer, the 5-series is one sweet car, it has the most comfortable back seat on any BMW.