Doing 25k to 30k miles per year in a E60 M5
Doing 25k to 30k miles per year in a E60 M5
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smokey145

Original Poster:

616 posts

176 months

Monday 17th October 2011
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Hello gents, long time lurker first time poster.

currently looking at buying an E60 M5 early next year, my dream car. i currently own a E46 M3 coupe, wonderful car, probably out grown it though. 16 month old daughter and all that hehe. anyway, due to the nature of my job i do say 25k to 30k miles per year. i know the M5 will cost me more money through wear and tear (not concerned about petrol as i have a company fuel card). but are these cars capable of doing these types of miles per year without too many issues?

is it a bad idea?


rassi

2,515 posts

277 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
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Do you work for Shell?

ecain63

10,647 posts

201 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
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The effect of mileage on these cars is minimal with it being a large engine. The issue is going to be servicing.

If you are going to be using it as a motorway car then you will be looking at 1 litre of oil every 1500 to 2000 miles. The faster you drive the earlier it needs it. That works out to be around £250 per year in oil top ups.
Servicing will probably be every 4 months for you and you'll be seeing 2 small services and one major one every year. Youre looking at around £3k per annum all in for your standard servicing (2 x oil change services and 1 x plug job).
At a guess you'll be doing 2 sets of rear tyres in a year. Add £1000+ for that. You might even get through a set of fronts in a year if youre that way inclined. Add £500+ for that.
If its motorway stuff then you proabably wont need brakes every year, but if you drive hard then add £1500 to £2000 for discs and pads.

Other stuff will be based on the cars needs, but to be honest you wont know until it does.

Fuel wise (i know you said it doesnt matter) youre looking at a best case example of £8325. Worst case is £13200. How do you manage to get a fuel card for an M5 then? lol

If you can afford it then go for it.

slippery

14,093 posts

265 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
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I'm in the same situation mileage wise. I ended up buying a VXR8 due to it's mechanical simplicity, younger age and lower miles for the same price. After 20k miles in 8 months, my bills for fixing problems outside normal servicing will run to somewhere between £4-5k. Air con parts, control arms, diff, clutch, 02 sensors, etc. It's only done 47k miles now. Meanwhile, my wife's BMW, admittedly only an E46 330i, hasn't missed a beat in 3 years. I shouldn't have bought privately on this mileage. I should have gone main dealer for a proper warranty and haggled hard. That's the best advice I can give you, above average mileage drivers in complicated cars, get our money's worth out of AUC warranties! smile

JNW1

9,372 posts

220 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
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For doing that sort of mileage you could obviously make a sensible case for something like a 535d but if the M5 is your dream car and you can afford it then I'd say go for it! You're in a relatively fortunate position if you can ignore the cost of the fuel but one thing that might bug me slightly if I was doing a high mileage would be the range (or rather the lack of it!). I'm guessing that you wouldn't see more than 300 miles from a tank (probably less if you're using the performance!) and multiple visits to the petrol station each week would probably start to irritate me quite quickly; however, if that doesn't bother you and the M5 is something you really want then do it before good ones start to become more difficult to find!

Beardy10

25,243 posts

201 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
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And don't forget the dreaded D word.....a leggy M5 will be hard to shift. I'd buy a high mileage one with a good service history to ease the pain I think ? No point in paying for low mileage when you will put a lot on it yourself.

smokey145

Original Poster:

616 posts

176 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
quotequote all
thank you guys, some very insightful feedback thus far.

ecain's cost of breakdown is a little eye watering but, i expect to pay alot considering what type of car it is. a real shame to own one of these exceptional beasts and not be able to look after it properly.

no i dont work for shell lol.

i had considered a 535d (read the evo review on this, excellent really, 360bhp, 0-60 in 5.5 seconds, enough torque to rip your face off) or even 335d with a DMS remap but, you know,its just not a M5.

is it really worth getting a higher milage one? i am looking at spending about £22k. so a 2006 plate with sub 50k miles.


Zod

35,295 posts

284 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
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You could have bought my 18k mile 06 M5 from Stratstone last month for £23k.

Beardy10

25,243 posts

201 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
quotequote all
smokey145 said:
is it really worth getting a higher milage one? i am looking at spending about £22k. so a 2006 plate with sub 50k miles.
When you look at total running costs probably not! Just get the best one you can.

Though you may want to make sure it has less than the mileage threshold required (60k miles IIRC) if you buy UAC and want to extend the warranty at the end of the first year.


playalistic

2,270 posts

190 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
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Probably want to think about planting some trees or saving a few whales too biggrin

Slurms

1,254 posts

230 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
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playalistic said:
Probably want to think about planting some trees or saving a few whales too biggrin
I think doing 30k a year in an M5 gets you a death threat from greenpeace..

Skrambles

1,357 posts

290 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
quotequote all
Zod said:
You could have bought my 18k mile 06 M5 from Stratstone last month for £23k.
That is staggeringly low mileage! Must have been a bargain for someone out there.

Panthro

777 posts

244 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
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If you have a company fuel card then this really is a no brainer. You have plenty of room for your children and one of the greatest engines ever built at your disposal, with only maintenance costs to worry about. Providing you can accept the depreciation, servicing and consumable costs then you should do it.

Zod

35,295 posts

284 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
quotequote all
Skrambles said:
Zod said:
You could have bought my 18k mile 06 M5 from Stratstone last month for £23k.
That is staggeringly low mileage! Must have been a bargain for someone out there.
I had too many cars. Down to three now. Will soon be down to two.

Vixpy1

42,697 posts

290 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
quotequote all
Zod said:
Skrambles said:
Zod said:
You could have bought my 18k mile 06 M5 from Stratstone last month for £23k.
That is staggeringly low mileage! Must have been a bargain for someone out there.
I had too many cars. Down to three now. Will soon be down to two.
4 is not too many cars biglaugh

Zod

35,295 posts

284 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
quotequote all
I found myself feeling guilty for having neglected the M5 by not driving it for a week or two!

How on Earth do you get round to driving your lot?

Deva Link

26,934 posts

271 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
quotequote all
I guess it's not too big a change if you're coming from an M3 but there was a high mileage user on here recently getting rid of his M5 - I forget the exact description he used, but basically he was saying it was just too intense to do long distances every day.

Personally, I'd be worried about losing my licence!

Vixpy1

42,697 posts

290 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
quotequote all
Zod said:
I found myself feeling guilty for having neglected the M5 by not driving it for a week or two!

How on Earth do you get round to driving your lot?
To be fair only about 4 of them seem to work at any one time hehe

outnumbered

4,832 posts

260 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
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Presumably you need them all to be a bit unreliable otherwise you'd never be able to use
"Mercedes 308D Recovery Truck" smile

smokey145

Original Poster:

616 posts

176 months

Tuesday 18th October 2011
quotequote all
Deva Link said:
I guess it's not too big a change if you're coming from an M3 but there was a high mileage user on here recently getting rid of his M5 - I forget the exact description he used, but basically he was saying it was just too intense to do long distances every day.

Personally, I'd be worried about losing my licence!
id be interested in hearing this guys story.