RE: BMW M760Li xDrive | Spotted
RE: BMW M760Li xDrive | Spotted
Thursday 8th December 2022

BMW M760Li xDrive | Spotted

As you might expect, depreciation has not been kind to BMW's last V12. Which is great news for bargain hunters


It’s been a year of hard truths for car enthusiasts. Porsche is fully committed to eventually removing the engine from the Boxster and Cayman, Mercedes-AMG has slashed the cylinder count of the C63 in half, and BMW has officially canned its V12. No great surprise, really, and the final dozen V12s will be sold exclusively in the USA, but the loss of any twelve-cylinder engine is always a bitter pill to swallow.

BMW’s relationship with V12 power is a strange one. Typically, twelve-cylinder engines only appeared in screaming, high-performance guise with the likes of the S70/2 that powered the McLaren F1, the S70/3 in BMW’s LMR Le Mans machine, and various nutty concepts such as the E31 M8 prototype. But on the production side, particularly in recent years, the V12 was a symbol of effortless performance, featuring in BMW’s flagship luxo barges and the odd Rolls-Royce.

You'll probably recall that our last taste of sweet BMW V12 goodness was this thing: the M760Li xDrive. Despite weighing 2.2 tonnes (still lighter than the new S63, mind) and measuring in at nearly 5.3 metres, the M760Li was a surprisingly capable performance car, all things considered. Dan T actually took one out on track a few years back, where it was, admittedly, completely out of its comfort zone. Armfuls of understeer and brake fade after a handful of laps, but its electromechanical anti-roll bars and rear-wheel steering do their very best to disguise the fact you’re driving about in a presidential suite on wheels. “It’s no M2”, he noted, “but as a demonstration of the breadth of ability engineered into the package it's a success.”

Not that many examples of the car – somewhere in the low hundreds in the UK, if HowManyLeft is anything to go by – will find their way onto a racing circuit. Good thing, then, that all you need to enjoy the car's party piece is a sufficiently long stretch of road. The M760Li packs BMW’s N74 6.6-litre twin-turbo V12 developing 610hp and 590lb ft of torque, sent across both axles through an eight-speed automatic gearbox. 62mph comes about in 3.7 seconds, and despite its laid-back nature, there’s still a satisfying growl from the M Sport exhaust – even if the engine note is artificially amplified into the cabin.

Truthfully, though, the M760Li is at its best on a Munich to Hamburg autobahn blast. For instance, the car’s Adaptive mode can assess your driving style, along with the terrain and road layout to switch between different driving settings. Self-levelling suspension works its backside off to prevent the car from wallowing in the bends, and it’ll even park itself if you’re feeling extra lazy. Those in the back, meanwhile, can make use of the massage seats while messing about with the TVs integrated into the back of the front seats. No wonder people bought these to be driven in.

When this M760Li was brand-new back in 2017, costing £132,310 before ticking any boxes, it was squarely aimed at those who were wealthy enough to not break out into a sweat when the MPG reading would inevitably dip into single digits. Now, after five years of heavy depreciation, this one’s fallen to £49,950. Not far off the price of a new Civic Type R. In many ways, the heavyweight tech and last-of-the-line status made it something of a bargain right out of the box - now, just five years later, it's a positive steal. 


SPECIFICATION | BMW M760LI XDRIVE

Engine: 6,592cc V12, twin-turbocharged
Transmission: 9-speed automatic, all-wheel drive
Power (hp): 610@5,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 590@1,500rpm
MPG: 22.4 (NEDC combined)
CO2: 294g/km
Year registered: 2017
Recorded mileage: 36,000
Price new: £132,310
Yours for: £49,950

See the original advert here

Author
Discussion

breezer42

Original Poster:

146 posts

178 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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Quite astonishing value now! And nice to see in one in an actual colour. I like it!

Augustus Windsock

3,761 posts

182 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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Ouch, an £82k kick in the trousers for some fat cat (or their business) or around £16.5k per year.
Can’t say the colour does it any favours but at least it’s unusual compared to the usual palette of black / grey / silver you see these in.

Martin 480 Turbo

694 posts

214 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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still too expensive. discounted heavily when new.

parabolica

6,985 posts

211 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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Have to say that looks pretty nice, especially compared to the latest 7 series.

Numeric

1,499 posts

178 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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I was trying to imagine why someone would get one even at this price, then had a bit of a rethink, what would this amount of money buy in second hand Range Rover?

If you are willing to forego the high driving position, does this represent no more of a financial risk than a full fat Range Rover in terms of reliability etc. in which case it would only be continuing depreciation, so which would I actually like to own more?

And that is a tricky question, I might actually look at this as in some way a more appealing proposition, especially as I would not be using the Range Rovers off road ability on my driveway.

As for the colour I reckon you'd have to see it in the flesh - the size will make it all work or not as the case may be, for me the most off putting bit is the grill, but I still like a bit of chrome which I suspect puts me in a minority of 1. Interesting car!

Edited by Numeric on Thursday 8th December 07:16

lrdisco

1,701 posts

114 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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I bet the dealer selling it paid mit to low 30’s for this. It will sit a long time unsold.

S600BSB

7,836 posts

133 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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Had almost forgotten BMW still make the 7 series. Quite a rare sight.

mooseracer

2,728 posts

197 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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Lovely, but what kind of person buys one of these but then doesn't service it for its first 4 years?

FlukePlay

1,171 posts

172 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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mooseracer said:
Lovely, but what kind of person buys one of these but then doesn't service it for its first 4 years?
Good point, 4 years and after 26K miles for the first service. Seems odd.

I do like these but not with the black grille and wheels and it has to be the pre 2019 version which has the smaller grille. From 2019 it's face changed, became cartoonish, ugly...just like Simon Cowell's recent cosmetic procedures.

raspy

2,714 posts

121 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
quotequote all
Martin 480 Turbo said:
still too expensive. discounted heavily when new.
Agreed. PH articles tend to ignore that a lot of new cars (especially 7 series type cars) were heavily discounted pre pandemic and nobody ever paid anywhere list prices.

Hence, the actual depreciation on this car will be a lot lower than the article makes out.

Yes, it's too expensive, these models were considerably cheaper pre pandemic. Back in 2019, I saw a similar car with fully loaded spec but at 2 years old with less miles for around the same price from a BMW main dealer.

Dombilano

1,417 posts

82 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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It'll be shed money before the decade is out

GreatScott2016

2,422 posts

115 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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Does nothing for me. Huge price drop but still seems high at £50k. At lot of car though but loose the wheels, please!

SteveStrange

7,202 posts

240 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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Arethese the ones with ceramic buttons? It's still a chunk of cash, but what a thing to blast around in.

cerb4.5lee

43,222 posts

207 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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I really like this. I love the colour combo/V12 engine, plus I've always wanted a 7 series. It also seems like a lot of car for the money too, very nice.

Roy H

36 posts

185 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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It’d be nice if you could see it. All the pics are close ups

cerb4.5lee

43,222 posts

207 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
quotequote all
FlukePlay said:
mooseracer said:
Lovely, but what kind of person buys one of these but then doesn't service it for its first 4 years?
Good point, 4 years and after 26K miles for the first service. Seems odd.
It does seem weird to spend all that money on this(either cash or PCP), and then skimp on the servicing I agree.

ETA...I wonder if the first service is a typo and it should say 2019 instead of 2021?

Edited by cerb4.5lee on Thursday 8th December 08:11

yme402

627 posts

129 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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Those black wheels are truly horrific and look more suited to a Chav’s Corsa or Seat Leon, than a V12 BMW.

Hairymonster

1,671 posts

132 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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So one service at 4 years old and 25k miles, then another service 5k miles and less than 2 months later. Odd.

Fast and Spurious

1,802 posts

115 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
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GreatScott2016 said:
Does nothing for me. Huge price drop but still seems high at £50k. At lot of car though but loose the wheels, please!
Lose? Or loosen?

wpa1975

14,351 posts

141 months

Thursday 8th December 2022
quotequote all
Nope, looks awful