BMW 5 Series (E28)


The BMW E28 is the second generation of BMW 5 Series executive cars, which was produced from 1981 to 1988 and replaced the E12 5 Series. Pre-series production began in April 1981 and the car was introduced in the autumn that year.
The E28 was initially produced with straight-four and straight-six petrol engines until 1983, when the 524td model became the first BMW car to be powered by a diesel engine. It was also the first 5 Series with the centre console angled towards the driver and to be available with anti-lock brakes.
The first BMW M5 was produced during the E28 generation. It was powered by the M88/3 and S38 straight-six engines. The E24 6 Series coupés were built on the E28 platform from 1982 to 1989.
The E28 was replaced by the E34 5 Series in 1988.

Body and interior

The E28 has a self-supporting body that is welded to the body platform. The passenger cell is a safety passenger cell with deformation elements both in the front and rear of the vehicle. Unlike its E12 predecessor and E34 successor, the E28 has a rear-hinged bonnet. The boot has a volume of. Most models have a fuel tank capacity of, with some models having a smaller tank of. The kerb weight is.
Cruise control, an on-board computer, and a "check control" panel were introduced to the 5 Series on the E28. The glazing is made of single-pane safety glass, the windscreen has laminated glass. As part of developing the air-conditioning system for the E28, several of the BMW engineers in charge of this program drove a previous generation E12 5 Series during the middle of summer in Texas. The E12 528i was painted black with a black interior, and driven in one day.
The styling was developed under BMW's chief designer Claus Luthe, with development of the E28 beginning in 1975. At the time that BMW was designing the E28, the company had only one computer, which was used for payroll management and spare parts logistics. Wolfgang Matschinsky and his team borrowed that computer to perform the calculations necessary to develop the new drivetrain and chassis. This was due to the fact that the addition of an ABS system necessitated a redesign from the previous model due to excessive vibrations under heavy braking.

Engines

The E28 was the first 5 Series produced with diesel engines and with a petrol engined model specifically aimed at increased fuel economy.
The four models available at the launch of the E28 were the 518, 520i, 525i and 528i, with the 518 using a straight-four petrol engine and the other three models using a straight-six petrol engine. Over the course of the E28 model, the following models were added: the 524d and 524td using diesel engines, the 518i, the 525e/528e as fuel-economy models, and the upper-specification 533i, 535i, M535i, and M5 models.
A liquid petroleum gas option was introduced for some petrol engines in 1984.

Petrol

ModelEnginePowerTorqueFuel supplyYears
518
M10B18 I4

at 5500 rpm

at 4000 rpm
Pierburg 2BE
carburettor
1981–1984
518i
M10B18 I4

at 5800 rpm

at 4500 rpm
L-Jetronic1981–1987
520i
M20B20 I6

at 5800 rpm

at 4500 rpm
K-Jetronic1981–1982
520i
M20B20 I6

at 5800 rpm

at 4000 rpm
L-Jetronic1982–1987
520i
M20B20 I6

at 6000 rpm

at 4000 rpm
LE-Jetronic1985–1988
520i
M20B20 I6

at 6000 rpm

at 4300 rpm
Motronic1986–1988
525i
M30B25 I6

at 5500 rpm

at 4000 rpm
L-Jetronic1981–1987
525e,
528e

M20B27 I6

at 4250 rpm

at 3250 rpm
Motronic1982–1987
525e,
528e

M20B27 I6

at 4250 rpm

at 3250 rpm
L-Jetronic,
Motronic
1982–1987
525e,
528e

M20B27 I6

at 4250 rpm

at 3250 rpm
Motronic1984–1988
525e,
528e

M20B27 I6

at 4250 rpm

at 3250 rpm
Motronic1985–1987
528i
M30 I6

at 5800 rpm

at 4200 rpm
L-Jetronic1981–1987
533i
M30 I6

at 6000 rpm

at 4000 rpm
Motronic1982–1984
535i,
M535i

M30 I6

at 5500 rpm

at 4000 rpm
Motronic1985–1988
535i,
M535i

M30 I6

at 5400 rpm

at 4000 rpm
Motronic1985–1988
M5
M88/3 I6

at 6500 rpm

at 4500 rpm
Motronic1985–1988
M5
S38 I6

at 6500 rpm

at 4500 rpm
Motronic1986–1988

518: Sold only in some European markets where it suited local tax categories, the 518 was the lowest specification model which used a four-cylinder engine with a carburetor. Factory performance figures for the manual transmission cars are a top speed of and 0–100 km/h acceleration in 14.0 seconds.
518i: The base model in Japan and some European countries, the 518i used a fuel-injected four-cylinder engine. Factory performance figures for the manual transmission cars are a top speed of and 0–100 km/h acceleration in 12.6 seconds. This version was not sold in West Germany until the 1984 facelift, when it replaced the carburetted 518.
520i: A mid-range model with the smallest of the available six-cylinder engines. Factory performance figures for the manual transmission cars are a top speed of and 0–100 km/h acceleration in 11.4 seconds.
525e / 528e: The 525e uses a longer stroke 2.7-litre version of the 6-cylinder M20 petrol engine, is optimised for fuel economy and torque at low engine speed rather than the traditional high revving characteristics of BMW straight-six engines. The "e" stands for the Greek letter eta, for economy. According to BMW, the 525e is more fuel efficient than the 520i, which has the same rated power of 92 kW. Since many markets tax cars based on engine displacement, the eta's larger engine meant that it was not suitable everywhere. The model was expressly developed with the American market in mind. BMW's corporate average fuel economy was at risk of not meeting requirements by 1984, primarily due to higher sales of their bigger, more expensive cars in the early 1980s. In Austria, the 525e was detuned to.
Factory performance figures for the manual transmission cars without a catalytic converter are a top speed of and 0–100 km/h acceleration in 10.7 seconds. With a catalytic converter, the figures are a top speed of and 0–100 km/h acceleration in 11.3 seconds
525i: This mid-range model is powered by a 2.5-litre 6-cylinder engine. The 525i was only sold in Europe. Factory performance figures for the manual transmission cars are a top speed of and 0–100 km/h acceleration in 9.8 seconds.
528i: Initially the highest specification available, the 6-cylinder 528i became a mid-range model following the release of the 533i and 535i models. Factory performance figures for the manual transmission cars are a top speed of and 0–100 km/h acceleration in 8.4 seconds.
533i:
Only sold in Japan and North America, the 6-cylinder 533i was the highest specification model during its production years of 1983–1984. It was replaced by the 535i.
535i/is: Released in 1984, the 535i replaced the 533i and uses the same 6-cylinder drivetrain as the M535i. In the US there was also a 535is model, which included sport seats and spoilers at the front and rear. Factory performance figures for the manual transmission cars without a catalytic converter are a top speed of and 0–100 km/h acceleration in 7.2 seconds. With a catalytic converter, the figures are a top speed of and 0–100 km/h acceleration in 7.9 seconds
M535i: The top of the regular production model range, the M535i uses the drivetrain from the 535i plus M-Technic suspension, and wheels and body panels not found on any other E28. The M535i was assembled on the standard E28 assembly lines in Dingolfing and Rosslyn. Factory performance figures for the manual transmission cars without a catalytic converter are a top speed of and 0–100 km/h acceleration in 7.2 seconds. With a catalytic converter, the figures are a top speed of and 0–100 km/h acceleration in 7.9 seconds

Diesel

524d: At the 1986 Geneva Motor Show, four years after the introduction of the more powerful 524td model, the naturally-aspirated 524d model was introduced. 4,239 examples were built; this was only sold in some markets.
524td: This turbodiesel model was the first diesel car produced by BMW. It entered production in late 1982, when 100 pre-series cars were built. Factory performance figures for the manual transmission cars are a top speed of and 0–100 km/h acceleration in 12.9 seconds.

Drivetrain

BMW offered the E28 with both manual and automatic gearboxes. The torque is transmitted from the engine with a single-disc dry clutch with a torsional damper in the models with a manual gearbox, the automatic models have a torque converter with built in lockup-clutch.
;Manual transmissions
The 4-speed manual transmissions are:
The 5-speed manual transmissions are:
  • Getrag 240
  • Getrag 245
  • Getrag 260
  • Getrag 265
  • Getrag 280
  • ZF S5-16
;Automatic transmissions
The 3-speed automatic transmissions are:
The 4-speed automatic transmissions are: