View Full Version : Buy an e39 or e60? What would you do?
stilljester
09-11-2008, 10:37 PM
I need some help.
I'm looking to replace my touring with another and if you had the chance to buy either an e39 or e60 what would you do?
Pro and Con of each are always helpful....
thanks
Rick L
09-11-2008, 11:33 PM
e60 will cost a lot more than e39. e60 does look much more modern but I still cannot get used to the new e60 design by Chris Bengal. :(
If the price of both car were the same than I would go with e60 but that's not so I would take e39 (2001 or newer) and save $$$$.
I need some help.
I'm looking to replace my touring with another and if you had the chance to buy either an e39 or e60 what would you do?
Pro and Con of each are always helpful....
thanks
632 Regal
09-12-2008, 12:05 AM
go with an E31 and forget the masses
attack eagle
09-12-2008, 01:28 AM
isn;t it a lot easier to find a 540iT/6 in e39 guise? :)
they remind me of tail shortened 94 Chevy Caprice Wagon personally :(
Bonus is there are lots of part s for them, including the subframe bushes it is sure to need.
Ferret
09-12-2008, 03:09 AM
e60's here are notorious for their constant panderings for attention (read: they're service whores) electrical problems and the fact that they have no door protection iirc, so dent easily.
E39 there's a massive following for these days, in the UK they're now the most common 5 as the E34 is dying a slow death. The E34 is now a disposable car that can be picked up for £400 and binned when it comes to MOT time. They're disappearing rapidly.
E39s are doing a roaring trade, especially pre-2001 models who evade the new "green" taxes. Be prepared to have a fight on your hands, the rear E39 suspension is easily as complicated as the floating link E34 suspension and tends to loosen up later in life. If you let them go they eat tyres for breakfast.
There's also been some interesting electrical glitches with the E39 - it's heater 'hedgehog' is prone to failing and flattening the battery, locking you out of the car. (It's called a hedgehog because of the shape of the heatsink on top of the heater resistor) Gearboxes are prone to going pop in the 100-120k miles mark as well. Very common for them to pop up on the uk forums going 'argh gearbox failed!'
Other than that, many think the E39 outhandles an E34 as the E39 was essentially an E34 with floating link rear suspension... the engines are slightly better as well - though more prone to electrical faults and vanos problems. If you buy a straight 6 of either model, get it code read before you buy - they're very prone to exhaust side cam sensor faults that default the vanos unit into a certain position - which then sticks there and the next time it tries to move... it breaks. I'd get it code read at least once every six months as well.
The diesel E39/60s are also prone to having major turbo failure - but I doubt you'll go near one of those :)
The v8's are where it's at - the E39 535i and 540i manuals are the pick of the bunch with the 4.0 M60 going up to a 4.4 M62 after the first few years of production.
Oh, something I nearly forgot: the early E39 straight 6's were NIKASIL blocks... beware, the odd failure still pops up to this day on the UK forums.
You pays your money and you makes your choices :D
Mordan
09-12-2008, 04:18 AM
E39 there's a massive following for these days, in the UK they're now the most common 5 as the E34 is dying a slow death. The E34 is now a disposable car that can be picked up for £400 and binned when it comes to MOT time. They're disappearing rapidly.
what will be the fate of our beloved E34s in the UK?
Last time I went to the UK (2 monts ago), I saw a few still running :)
Same here, but even fewer on the road. I wish engine rebuilding was less expensive.
karl1171
09-12-2008, 04:53 AM
I think maybe its more a case of the lovely UK climate making them slowly rust away!
DaveVoorhis
09-12-2008, 05:21 AM
what will be the fate of our beloved E34s in the UK?
Same as the E28, I suspect. Ten years ago, they were everywhere. Now, except for the occasional enthusiast who brings out a pristine M535i for a Sunday drive, and a battered 520i or two hanging onto life by a thread, they're gone.
Tiger
09-12-2008, 08:56 AM
I have test drove an E39... I like it alot.... Have not driven the E60... In any case, I'd go as new E39 pas possible with spare money for repairs.
repenttokyo
09-12-2008, 09:03 AM
E60 is one of the ugliest designs ever to have been vomited out of human imagination.
whiskychaser
09-12-2008, 11:50 AM
e60's here are notorious for their constant panderings for attention (read: they're service whores) electrical problems and the fact that they have no door protection iirc, so dent easily.
E39 there's a massive following for these days, in the UK they're now the most common 5 as the E34 is dying a slow death. The E34 is now a disposable car that can be picked up for £400 and binned when it comes to MOT time. They're disappearing rapidly.
E39s are doing a roaring trade, especially pre-2001 models who evade the new "green" taxes. Be prepared to have a fight on your hands, the rear E39 suspension is easily as complicated as the floating link E34 suspension and tends to loosen up later in life. If you let them go they eat tyres for breakfast.
There's also been some interesting electrical glitches with the E39 - it's heater 'hedgehog' is prone to failing and flattening the battery, locking you out of the car. (It's called a hedgehog because of the shape of the heatsink on top of the heater resistor) Gearboxes are prone to going pop in the 100-120k miles mark as well. Very common for them to pop up on the uk forums going 'argh gearbox failed!'
Other than that, many think the E39 outhandles an E34 as the E39 was essentially an E34 with floating link rear suspension... the engines are slightly better as well - though more prone to electrical faults and vanos problems. If you buy a straight 6 of either model, get it code read before you buy - they're very prone to exhaust side cam sensor faults that default the vanos unit into a certain position - which then sticks there and the next time it tries to move... it breaks. I'd get it code read at least once every six months as well.
The diesel E39/60s are also prone to having major turbo failure - but I doubt you'll go near one of those :)
The v8's are where it's at - the E39 535i and 540i manuals are the pick of the bunch with the 4.0 M60 going up to a 4.4 M62 after the first few years of production.
Oh, something I nearly forgot: the early E39 straight 6's were NIKASIL blocks... beware, the odd failure still pops up to this day on the UK forums.
You pays your money and you makes your choices :D
John (Powerflex Bushes John!:D) and I were at the N England BMW 'show' at Tatton Park last weekend. Hardly any E34s there:( I've been offered an E39 4litre of a P plate for £2K. Its an auto though. Any views?
DaveVoorhis
09-12-2008, 01:57 PM
I've been offered an E39 4litre of a P plate for £2K. Its an auto though. Any views?
I'll take it! :D
Er, maybe.
whiskychaser
09-12-2008, 05:24 PM
I'll take it! :D
Er, maybe.
You sound enthusiastic:D. Its said to have full leather, aircon, OBC. But my contact doesnt know if it has a rear sun blind or tweeters in the doors:D Its silver and not that horrible mint green so thats a start. Parkers seems to list all 4 litre as year '96. Anyone know if thats a misprint? Or they had a lot of '96 4.0 motors and took years to get rid:(?
e34.535i.sport
09-12-2008, 06:34 PM
You sound enthusiastic:D. Its said to have full leather, aircon, OBC. But my contact doesnt know if it has a rear sun blind or tweeters in the doors:D Its silver and not that horrible mint green so thats a start. Parkers seems to list all 4 litre as year '96. Anyone know if thats a misprint? Or they had a lot of '96 4.0 motors and took years to get rid:(?
Doesn't Parkers work on a 'from' 1996 basis so to speak? So that one would go from 1996 to 2000, then it got a facelift or whatever and went 2000-....
Paul in NZ
09-13-2008, 03:47 AM
John (Powerflex Bushes John!:D) and I were at the N England BMW 'show' at Tatton Park last weekend. Hardly any E34s there:( I've been offered an E39 4litre of a P plate for £2K. Its an auto though. Any views?
thats a lot of car for 2000
Ferret
09-13-2008, 04:00 AM
John (Powerflex Bushes John!:D) and I were at the N England BMW 'show' at Tatton Park last weekend. Hardly any E34s there I've been offered an E39 4litre of a P plate for £2K. Its an auto though. Any views?
See that's what you'd pay for a good 4 litre E34 manual here :)
It'll have a tiptronic box, so when you want to get more involved you can change the gears yourself!
(Though, you'll have to do the microswitch mod, bmw put the tiptronic switches a stupid way around)
How many miles it got, and has it had a fluid change? If it's had a fluid change post 70k miles you're on dicey ground (though if the box hasnt 'sploded after 12 months you've got a much better chance,) if it's not had a fluid change post 70k it'll likely run to 140-150k before the box explodes. If it was fluid changed pre-70k miles rip his arm off :)
Other than that, you're going to have to get handy with a ball joint separator and some specialist tools.
Would I buy it? Hell yes, I need another project atm :D you're going to get a lot of car for the cost of a well sorted E34, and all the joy of fixing a knackered E34 up (One of these days the wife's going to run me over with one of my 'damn projects')
Just make sure it's not a nikasil - some of the early 4 litres were as they used up the M60 stock!
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.3 Copyright © 2024 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.