Currently reading: Used car buying guide: BMW 6 series
Just £3000 can put a BMW 6 Series on your drive – but it might leave the odd oil stain on it. John Evans gives a warts-and-all guide to this consummate GT

Have you got shale oil welling up through your lawn? You might need it if you’re considering a BMW 6 Series (E63/64 generation) of 2003 to 2011. It loves the stuff, necking it when you least expect it and blowing it out through the exhaust, past rocker cover gaskets, through breather hoses, down cylinder bores…

Best to get that little problem on the table from the start. We wouldn’t want you thinking this was just another dewy-eyed tribute to a snazzy BMW GT powered by a choice of thumping V8s (a 4.4 and later a 4.8), a sweet straight six 3.0-litre and a sensible-as-brown-shoes 3.0-litre diesel with twin turbos.

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Who can forget its predecessor, the CSi of the 1980s? A car like that plays with your mind and wants you to see echoes of it in the one that follows. There were gasps of astonishment when the E63 did eventually turn up, 14 long years later. Folk couldn’t get enough of it. There was only the 328bhp 645Ci Coupé to begin, with a choice of manual (almost non-existent), sequential (rare) or automatic (plentiful) gearboxes. A convertible body style followed later.

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The 6 Series’ four-seat cabin was even better made than the contemporary E60 5 Series’. It was not as roomy (no one older than five will thank you for sticking them in the back) but fit and finish were excellent, and remain so. The boot can take a couple of large suitcases. 

The less juicy straight six 3.0-litre, producing 254bhp, arrived towards the end of 2004. A healthy 630Ci auto coupé will crack 0-62mph in 6.5sec compared with the V8’s 5.4sec, but will slurp much less fuel – one gallon every 30 miles, 10 more miles than the V8. Sweeter-handling (it’s 130kg lighter) and potentially less troublesome, it’s the one to buy.

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Towards the end of 2005, BMW replaced the 4.2 with a more powerful 4.8, producing 362bhp and capable of 0-62mph in 5.1sec. Amazingly, economy was around 2mpg better. Economy? It was becoming a hot topic to the extent that BMW took the opportunity in 2007 to slip its Efficient Dynamics package of economy and CO2-boosting measures into the model’s mid-life facelift. The major beneficiary was the 630i (the ‘C’ was dropped from the model name), now capable of 35mpg. Extra power, LED lights, and subtly tweaked front and rear ends topped the update.

The 635d was introduced at this time, too. A diesel-powered GT was pretty novel then, but BMW didn’t muck about: the 635d’s 3.0-litre straight six produced 282bhp for 0-62mph in 6.0sec, just 0.1sec shy of the now uprated 264bhp 630i. Economy was 40.9mpg.

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It’s a strong engine but the good economy and low CO2 emissions that once attracted company car buyers are not uppermost in the minds of used car enthusiasts. For them, the straight six petrol is the model of choice. Just remember to dip the oil every few minutes.

An expert’s view…

STEVE BUCK (A1BN)

“They can leak oil — lots of it: hoses cracking or getting blocked, gaskets failing, gearboxes running dry… these are the problems we see all the time. Would I buy one? ‘Buyer beware’ is all I can say. Go in with your eyes wide open and don’t buy the first you see, or the second. I’m bound to say it, since we can offer this service, but pay for a pre-purchase inspection by a professional. We charge £102. It takes a couple of hours and we go through the whole car. That flushes out the problems.”

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BMW 6 Series problems

PETROL ENGINE

A ‘check engine’ light could indicate that the camshaft position sensor needs changing. Vanos solenoids and actuators can fail, leading to poor running. Oil leaks from the rocker cover gaskets, the oil filter housing and the oil lines to valve timing units. V8 engines can suffer high oil consumption, which could be valve stem seals, bore wear or perished breather hoses. Idle for 30sec and then blip the throttle, watching for smoke. The 630i suffers oil separator breather pipe issues. V8s run at high pressure, and older hoses and thermostats can fail. The expansion bottle can explode.

DIESEL ENGINE

Check the turbos’ pressure converters and vacuum pipes. The crank dampener can separate. Inlet manifolds and swirl flaps leak. Checka faulty exhaust gas recirculation thermostat isn’t letting the diesel particulate filter soot up.

TRANSMISSION

Plastic sump cover can leak fluid, requiring replacement since the filter is part of it. It’s sealed for life but not unknown for 100k-milers to have just two litres of oil left (it takes six). Check the shifts for a thump changing down, snatchy and lethargic going up. It could be pressure sensor oil starvation.

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BRAKES AND SUSPENSION

Road humps destroy the front control struts (feel for a shudder through the brake pedal) and front shocks, which leak. Lower rear hub bushes wear and springs break.

ELECTRICS

A new battery must be coded to fit.

BODY AND INTERIOR

Should be rust-free. Fabric roof sensors can fail. Check the bulkhead drain holes are clear.

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Also worth knowing…

The 6 Series hood can be troublesome but don’t despair: folding roof specialist Cayman Auto Services (01306 885566) should be able to fix it.

BMW 6 Series prices

£3000-5495

Early 645Cis with more than 100k and some with full service history.

£5500-7495

More 645Cis, including cabrios, but also tidy 2005-2006 630Cis appearing now, plus the first 650Cis, with sub-100k cars of all types closer to £7495.

£7500-10,995

More 2006-2008 630is surfacing with around 90k miles, plus low-mileage early 645Cis and 650is.

£11,000-12,995

Many more 2007-2009 635ds with around 100k miles plus usual spread of petrol cars.

£13,000-17,995

Many more tidy 2008-2010 mid-mileage 635ds.

John Evans

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Comments
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Warid Uddin 27 September 2020

6 series

I don't think the E63 is as bad as most people make it out. Yes they do have there preventive maintenance but which car doesn't have faults. With that said if you are confident with a spanner most of the work can be carried out on the driveway. I say this from experience as in 2019 I took the plunge purchased 630i with 105k. Carried out the following works all 6 spark plugs, timing belt and tensioner with pulleys. Oil cooler gasket, pcv valve(oil separater) all filters and cabin filters. Vanos solenoid and vanos filters. Gearbox oil and filter change the only thing carried out in garage as I don't have a lift. In conclusion naturally aspirated engines are becoming rare to non existent as all new cars are turbocharged. There something really satisfying about N/A linage performance. These cars do need attention and don't like 3rd party parts if looked after they will last more than 200k can't say that to newer vehicles. This may sound like am a bmw fanboy prior to 630 I had Merc E270 that was riddled with electric faults and gearbox kept for 3 yrs sold with 180k before that Audi A6 2.0tdi again had it major faults. But the bmw E63 are getting rare on the roads and in my opinion have aged well and more pleasure to drive as they are a high revving engine and need to be revved past 6500rpm to keep the engine sweet. In my case for the performance and true mpg round town 26mpg motorways 38mpg isn't to bad and will surpass most cars on the road. 

Leslie Brook 17 July 2017

Does any other manufacturer

Does any other manufacturer other than BMW require the battery to be coded to the car. I appreciate this is to do with the different charging rates required by Lead Acid and AGM batteries, but surely an automatic demand detection system could have been fitted. Apparently Mr AA man is not allowed to jump start them either/

johnhg 17 July 2017

6 series

Have you ever seen a stricken 6 series by the side of the road? I haven't. I ran a 635d from 6 months old to 5 years old and the only thing that went wrong with it was a need to recharge the aircon just before I sold it. I averaged 38mpg (but that compares with 44mpg in my current 640d GC). I had two XK8s before the 635d and enjoyed them, notwithstanding the sometimes wayward tail (and 23mpg) but as soon as I saw how little usable luggage space there was in the successor XK I switched to the BMW.

 

Bob Cholmondeley 17 July 2017

[quote=johnhg]

[quote=johnhg]

Have you ever seen a stricken 6 series by the side of the road? I haven't. I ran a 635d from 6 months old to 5 years old and the only thing that went wrong with it was a need to recharge the aircon just before I sold it. I averaged 38mpg (but that compares with 44mpg in my current 640d GC).[/quote]

That's all very well but, you can't buy one that's only six months old now.

johnhg 17 July 2017

6 series reliability

No you can't buy a 6 month old one of this generation but mine showed no sign of stress after 5 years - and you should be able to buy a 6 year old one. As ever, check the service history. I'm sure some BMWs do 'go wrong' but we have driven close to 200,000 miles in various BMWs that have not skipped a beat.