2.6

hardly worth mentioning
Crashes / Fires:
0 / 0
Injuries / Deaths:
0 / 0
Average Mileage:
58,000 miles

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problem #2

Dec 282007

X5

  • 83,000 miles
Front doors are freezing up in cold weather. Once the temperature rises the doors will open. Happens early in the morning/ late night when I need to leave for work. Sometimes you can force the handle to open but then the door will not close and have to drive holding the door shut. There must be a recall on this, there have been so many complaints about this issue. This has happened to me dozens of times. Went to dealer many times, replaced bowden cable/actuators. Cost me $600 to fix, will see if it works next winter.

- Fall River, MA, USA

problem #1

Feb 092005

X5 8-cyl

  • Automatic transmission
  • 33,000 miles
I have a 2001 BMW X5 which has problems with freezing front doors (BMW has acknowledged the design defect, reference # 200503100195, si 510204, and S.I. 51 51 02 dated March 2002.) that pose a significant safety hazard, and have not received an adequate response in dealing with the matter. I have filed a complaint with the NHTSA. I am an active duty army officer stationed in garmisch, germany. The car was with us in California and Kansas from 2001 to 2004. The car did not have the door freezing problems while under warranty; we kept it in a garage and the bowden cables did not get wet during cold weather. We have no garage here, and any time the weather gets a few degrees below freezing, the front doors cease to operate. One must run the car between 15 minutes to 1.5 hours before the doors operate normally. When the car cools down, the doors freeze again. The problem with the doors here in germany is severe and poses a significant safety risk; does BMW really want to risk litigation for someone trapped in the car in the event of an accident? I do not understand why the car was not recalled for such a serious and acknowledged safety design defect. Our local dealership in garmisch is unable to locate the below si in his database. He does not know how to fix the problem. I am also disturbed that I will have to pay upwards of $1000 to fix the problem---this would have been covered under warranty and should have been fixed when the car went under services in late winter of 2004 (and also had other si work done, such as a faulty radiator fan that could have caused the car to burn----heck of a combination if the freezing doors had been acting up at the same time!).

- Apo , NY, USA