RE: BMW 530d Touring (E61) | Shed of the Week
RE: BMW 530d Touring (E61) | Shed of the Week
Today

BMW 530d Touring (E61) | Shed of the Week

A frugal family wagon on the one hand, a straight-six, manual BMW on the other - is a 530d a Shed win-win?


Who's up for a BMW estate to load up with all the Christmas presents that you think you'll be buying for your loved ones until you remember with an unpleasant start that you're skint? Your answer doesn't matter, because Shed doesn't believe in democracy and that means you're getting this BMW 5 Series Touring. You should think yourselves lucky actually because you could have ended up with this interesting Focus CC instead

Our Touring is an E60, or if you're feeling pedantic about the estate designation, an E61. It's fair to say that when this fifth-generation 5 went on sale in 2003 it was about as warmly received as the proverbial fart in a spacesuit. That could have been to do with the fact that this was the last Five to bear the distinctive design hallmarks of beardy disruptor Chris Bangle. Many have slagged off Bangle products in the past, but few have had the dignity to apologise when it turned out that he was most likely a genius who just happened to be ahead of his time. A lot of his designs now look good. Admittedly, the E60 probably still isn't one of them, but credit where it's due and who knows what we might think about them five years from now? 

Today, at the end of 2025, we're three generations further down the 5 Series line with the G60/61 that launched in 2024 with a selection of petrol, plug-in hybrid or full electric powertrains. Shed can't remember seeing a single G60 Five on British roads. Not massively surprising perhaps when you see that the starting price for a new 208hp 520i is nearly £55k. The other killer for the 5 Series in the UK, of course, has been the big decrease in saloon sales over the years. 

It's not just us either: after a brief spurt of interest in 2011 when the gen-six F10/11 began to hit its straps, the 5 Series's part in total BMW production has been steadily falling from a 1982 high of 38 percent to a 2024 low of just over 11 per cent - and you suspect the percentage would be a lot smaller than that if you were just looking at Britain.

Shed reckons the E61 estate still has plenty going for it though, especially in 530d guise as here. The horsepower number for the M57D30TU2 3.0 straight six turbodiesel that Shed thinks this car should have is sound enough at 228hp/4,000rpm, although it's the torque of 369lb ft from below 2,000rpm that will really put a smirk on your face. With around 1,750kg to move that translates into a 0-62mph time of 7.4 seconds and a top speed pushing close to 150mph. Combined fuel consumption is 35mpg, with low 40s easily achievable. A stage 1 tune, ideally with a swirl flap delete, will take the M57 to 295hp and 520lb ft, but with bigger turbochargers (and bigger pockets) you can go to 550hp. 

Annoyingly, our E61 was first registered on 27 March 2006, four days after the cutoff for Band K cars that pay £415 a year instead of the £710 it leaps to in Band L. Less annoyingly, if Shed is reading his moth-eaten old chart right anyway, the emissions of 213g/km qualify it for band K as of right now. The ad copy is a jumble suggesting that a whole eco-culture of trees and cows might have supplied the wood and leather for the interior, but by ignoring that and simply relying on our eyesight we can see black Dakota leather in reasonable shape and the always welcome sight (for the postmistress anyway) of a manual knob. 

Bonnet and boot struts give out on these, but according to the MOT history that is now generously provided for free by PH on its classified ads the ones on our car seem to have been replaced in either 2021 or 2022. The rest of the MOT paperwork gives no major causes for concern, the current pass being clean and most of the past advisories being for consumables.

Of course that might mean it's about to give you some long overdue causes for concern, which in the case of one of these could include stuff like the cooling system (water pumps, radiators, thermostats), air suspension, and electrics, usually dash lights, central locking and window regulators. Mechanically, there have been top end oil leaks and turbo failures, but any transmission issues you might have with a 530d are more likely to be found on automatics. 

The three most valuable words in the ad are Full Service History, the last stamp in the book being 4,000 miles ago. With any luck that will mean the suspension has been refreshed at some point. If the documentation backs that up, this wagon could make someone's Christmas at £1,995.


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

Master Bean

Original Poster:

4,738 posts

140 months

So ugly when they were released. Who knew they'd age so well. Perhaps the current 5 Series will look good in about 20 years time.

cerb4.5lee

39,965 posts

200 months

I personally think they're ugly(like most BMW's to be fair), but this is definitely a nice blast from the past though for sure. smile

Here's my old sack of shi4t! biggrin



yme402

581 posts

122 months

The BMW 5 series hit its peak with the E39 that came before this E60 model. But nevertheless, compared to the cheap and nasty looking car that a 5 series is today, this looks classy and restrained.
Pleasing to see it has escaped the indignity of black wheels, Halfords tints, and Vape Vents.

oilit

2,766 posts

198 months

I think these have got better with age, and actually are ideal dog car territory.

The timing chains in the back of the engine and the reputation of some of the engine reliability would be only concern (I think that is the N47?)

Billy_Whizzzz

2,451 posts

163 months

e60/1 needs to be M sport - then looks great… tho not in beige and with a brown interior. Haters going to hate the manual but I love these paired with a manual because, frankly, the 6 speed auto of this generation is totally dimwitted (as is my ZF8 tho’ a little less so). So, all things considered, shed of the year for me.

FrankandLynn

47 posts

13 months

The car with all the bases covered - full history, unmolested and clean. So it’s a bit of a poverty-spec but it’s pretty much all the car you’ll ever need and will keep going forever with regular maintenance. I’ll take it!

StuntmanMike

12,319 posts

171 months

I think these are a great looking five series, but as its an estate thats a no from me.

I don’t need the space and thought the estate was ugly tbh.

I would also have the 550/545 as have zero love for a three litre diesel.

greenarrow

4,418 posts

137 months

Agree with all the above, for me peak 5 series will always be the E39. The E60 was the first 5 I can recall that didnt win group tests in the car mags when new. I think the run flats (it was the first BMW to have them) spoiled the ride and the looks were polarising. A nice E60/E61 actually looks decent now. I would take a E60 M sport or M5 over the version that followed any day of the week (F10?). The one after that wasnt so bad but by then for me had just got too large. Nice to see an E61 in SOTW. With that 3 litre diesel (which can be expensive for bills) you've got a decent winter hack there if you put all seasons or winter tyres on it.

helix403

265 posts

18 months

oilit said:
I think these have got better with age, and actually are ideal dog car territory.

The timing chains in the back of the engine and the reputation of some of the engine reliability would be only concern (I think that is the N47?)
It has the reliable M57 with timing chain at the front. Re power is has 218hp and a remap is more like 250hp. Water pumps are also not a common failure point on the M57.

Billy_Whizzzz

2,451 posts

163 months

StuntmanMike said:
I think these are a great looking five series, but as its an estate thats a no from me.

I don t need the space and thought the estate was ugly tbh.

I would also have the 550/545 as have zero love for a three litre diesel.
Ha I’m the opposite - I hate saloons and love estates, and love 3L Diesels!

J4CKO

45,264 posts

220 months

Two grand and that manual 550i the other day was ten times more ?

Looks alright, lot going for it.

Blackpuddin

18,630 posts

225 months

helix403 said:
oilit said:
I think these have got better with age, and actually are ideal dog car territory.

The timing chains in the back of the engine and the reputation of some of the engine reliability would be only concern (I think that is the N47?)
It has the reliable M57 with timing chain at the front. Re power is has 218hp and a remap is more like 250hp.
The date of this one means it should have the later TU2 engine tho?

MikeM6

5,717 posts

122 months

A lot of car for £2k, I imagine it's something that (provided it's well cared for) is like a faithful old hound. Probably works well with a manual and a lazy attitude to driving.

I think peak 5 series is actually the F10 F11 that followed this, which was just modern enough without being too modern (real buttons etc) and had more restrained and elegant looks. Not as good as an M car, but as a regular 5 series that one felt closer to the older 5 series models.

BAMoFo

958 posts

276 months

I owned a two year old '54' plate 530D Sport with manual gear box in early 2007. It was solidly built, and interior wise felt like a decent step up from the 3 series of that time, but it wasn't without it's problems. During the 18 months I owned it I had to have two new turbochargers fitted and a DPF. I also removed the inlet manifold and removed a lot of black muck.

The early E60 530D was the first model of BMW to be fitted with DPFs. When mine failed there was no prior warning because I don't think they were fitted with pressure sensors to indicate that the DPF was starting to block. Either that or the logic built into the ECU wasn't sophisticated enough to warn of the onset of failure.Whatever the reason was the DPF catastrophically failed and, prior to failure, I suspect the increased back pressure took its toll on the turbocharger so both the DPF and turbocharger had to be replaced by BMW under warranty.

Within less than a year the replacement turbocharger seemed to be breathing hard / struggling, so had to be replaced again by BMW. The car was completely standard, so I have no idea what the cause was, but i sold it soon afterwards because I had lost confidence in the car. Prior to selling it I compared the sound of the turbocharger spooling up with a friend's 330D and it sounded different. It's hard to explain, but it sounded like it was working harder when revving the engine whilst the car was stationary. A blockage in the exhaust downstream of the DPF perhaps?

To sum up, I thought it was a great car but I'd go for a later model that has benefitted from all the modifications that manufacturers incorporate.

86wasagoodyear

816 posts

116 months

An ugly duckling, but I'd take it for sure. Good shed

CMTMB

268 posts

15 months

Great shed. I'd prefer it in auto form as it suits the engine better but I wouldn't complain at that price.

cerb4.5lee

39,965 posts

200 months

Billy_Whizzzz said:
e60/1 needs to be M sport - then looks great tho not in beige and with a brown interior. Haters going to hate the manual but I love these paired with a manual because, frankly, the 6 speed auto of this generation is totally dimwitted (as is my ZF8 tho a little less so). So, all things considered, shed of the year for me.
Mine was only the lowly 20d model(a terrible decision from me at the time really), plus it was the manual as well. The actual throw was nice enough I thought in it, but the manual was a terrible match to the engine for me though. So with hindsight now, I'd have definitely preferred it with the auto really.

I do agree that the ZF6 auto isn't up to much though for sure.

Magikarp

1,480 posts

68 months

I had a 56 plate 530d saloon in a very curious bronze-ish colour - it was a brilliant car. On a long run it was extremely economical - drove to Huddersfield from Hayle and back in a day and was gutted not to crack 50mpg (got it to 49.7 before I ran out of motorway). I loved it. IIRC cruise control was set north of 90mph. When I bought it my only criteria was a cream leather interior, and I ended up buying an Olivin green one (SE spec) which I didn’t mind at the time but was a pig to shift on as nobody wanted it.

I thought it looked wonderful at the time, and I still think that.

I’d have another for sure.

cerb4.5lee

39,965 posts

200 months

Billy_Whizzzz said:
StuntmanMike said:
I think these are a great looking five series, but as its an estate thats a no from me.

I don t need the space and thought the estate was ugly tbh.

I would also have the 550/545 as have zero love for a three litre diesel.
Ha I m the opposite - I hate saloons and love estates, and love 3L Diesels!
I'm with you on that too. thumbup

Saloons are a waste of space for me(literally because you can't get anything big in them), and I've been a fan of BMW's 6 cylinder diesel since back in 2006 when we had the 2006 E90 330d for example. We're also currently rattling around(again literally because at low revs diesels aren't great!) in a 2024 X5 40d now as well. smile

Rob 131 Sport

4,125 posts

72 months

I bought my first a 6 month old 520d (my first diesel) Saloon in 2007. Whilst I missed the sharp handling of my E90 3 Series with young children the additional space and comfort was a revelation, especially on those long European holiday jaunts.

It was replaced in late 2008 by a fully loaded 525i Saloon, that incidentally was my only company car. My E60’s were the most unreliable BMW’s I have ever owned, with the 520 needing a gearbox replacement and the 525 suffering various electrical issues that required the car to be recovered. The interior quality wasn’t the greatest and the 525i with its lighter trim looked very worn after only 12 months.

I missed the next generation of 5 Series and bought an E class returning to the BMW fold in 2019 with a G30 530d that was a superb car.

At the price point of this shed, I would be very concerned about buying any 5 series.