Press Articles & Your Comments Post links to 5 Series related magazine articles along with your commentary.

Evo Magazine Article on UK BMW Delivery

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 12-04-2004, 12:36 AM
  #1  
Contributors
Thread Starter
 
Steve Gill's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Scotland, UK
Posts: 600
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Default

I found this interesting article whilst doing a search. It describes the delivery process from factory to UK dealer. I'm amazed at how quick it can be for some cars - check out the 318i mentioned!

Article here

I've also cut and paste the article below - please let me know if this is not good and you want me to remove it!

<span style='font-size:9pt;line-height:100%'>Searching around BMW's vast UK distribution centre at Thorne in Lincolnshire, I finally spot what I've been looking for. There, in a sea of some 2000 new BMWs, is a black 645 Ci. It's been freshly delivered from Immingham docks and hanging in the windscreen is an A4-sized sticker. Effectively this is its passport and birth certificate all in one, and amongst other things it tells me that 'B524131' (the car's only identity before it gains a UK registration number) popped off the production line at Dingolfing on March 15, 2004. At precisely 13.22 and 56 seconds. Only in Germany...

In a few days' time B524131 is destined to become evo's latest Fast Fleet addition, but before it arrives I've come to see how it travels from factory to showroom, and exactly what happens along the way.

The first part of the journey to the UK starts with a 24-hour train journey from the factory to the port of Cuxhaven. Four to five trains leave every day, each carrying 200 cars, made up of a mixture of 5-, 6- and 7-Series. (In Germany, trains have taken over from lorries for transport of heavy goods, following years of lobbying by the Green Party.) At Cuxhaven the cars are off-loaded and sorted onto ships to be delivered all over the world. There's one ship destined for the UK that leaves every day, each carrying around 500 BMWs at a time, and from the sticker on the steering wheel I can see B524131 undertook the 22-hour trip to the UK on the boat Tor Hollandia in load 25, position 6 (or last car on the middle deck to you and me).

On arrival at Immingham the cars are unloaded and trucked the 30 miles up the M180 to Thorne. Once there they can either be put in a holding compound (if a dealer has requested it) or join a queue to be de-waxed by the mother of all automated car washes.

B524131 looks so cool in matt black, it's a shame you can't order it in this format, but the wax has to go. The wax coating is put there to protect the fresh paint from industrial grime and the dreaded seagull poo, which I'm told can be mighty impressive in terms of its sheer quantity and paint-stripping qualities.

The 22-metre-long car wash cuts the job of removing the wax to just five minutes (rather than four hours using a pressure washer). The car gets dragged through a torture chamber of high pressure jets spewing a cleaning agent mixture heated to 80deg C. The whole area is filled with a heady mix of steam as cars emerge to be blow-dried and driven to check-stations. This is the area controlled by an army of white-coated inspectors armed with a computer, bar- code reader and an eye for detail as they scan the cars for any defects. Top of their list are paint faults like lacquer swelling, boil-up, micro blisters or 'in to out' dents. They have to look very hard to find anything though, as the defect rating is running at just 0.01%, or one in every 10,000 cars coming through Thorne.

As with every car, B524131 is also checked to see if it's carrying all the right equipment. Code 850 stands for 'Zusaetzliche Tankfeulling Expo' which means it has had a pre-determined amount of fuel added that's precisely the right amount for its trip to the UK dealer (BMW got the amount wrong with the E38 M5 apparently and the cars ran out of fuel on their journeys to dealers). Code 880 covers the English service book, together with colour-coded screws to fix the UK number plate to the car. Code 902 is a surprise though; it's labelled 'Pressewagen' and might explain why B524131 has covered 43 miles, compared with the two or three miles most of the other cars have been driven. The inspectors pass B524131 for delivery and the computer designates a parking bay. There it'll wait before being delivered.

The most amazing part of the whole operation is the sheer speed with which a car can go from the production line in Germany to a UK dealer. Beside our 645 Ci is a blue 318i that, according to its sticker, left the production line at 10.05pm just four days ago. Tonight it will be off to the dealer in London and be PDI'd (pre-delivery inspection) ready for delivery. That's just five days after being bolted together in Germany. I only wish our 645 Ci was being processed as quickly. I blame that 'Pressewagen' label...
</span>
Old 12-04-2004, 01:11 AM
  #2  
Senior Members
 
BangleBox_530d's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Kent, UK
Posts: 689
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
My Ride: E60 530d Sport - Carbon Black, Black Dakota Leather, Media Pack (satnav, bluetooth, CD changer), heated font seats, through load
Default

....and another week for the dealer to allow me to collect mine
Old 12-04-2004, 01:25 AM
  #3  
Contributors
Thread Starter
 
Steve Gill's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Scotland, UK
Posts: 600
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Default

Originally Posted by BangleBox_530d' date='Dec 4 2004, 11:11 AM
....and another week for the dealer to allow me to collect mine
[snapback]64441[/snapback]
What's the story there then? The dealer couldn't 'book you in' for a week to collect your own car even though it was ready? :'(
Old 12-04-2004, 01:49 AM
  #4  
Senior Members
 
BangleBox_530d's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Kent, UK
Posts: 689
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
My Ride: E60 530d Sport - Carbon Black, Black Dakota Leather, Media Pack (satnav, bluetooth, CD changer), heated font seats, through load
Default

Hopeless bunch.

I was told "car arrives Thursday", and that it would be ready for collection "early the next week".

I was in China until Saturday, so I called them first thing Monday morning to check "progress". Was told "err....oh...err....it's being prepared tomorrow". I suspect they did sod all, and just scabbled about for an answer.

I asked "can I collect it Wednesday then". And was told "ooh....err.....maybe, but there....err.....might be somehting wrong with it". Definitely sounds like they were bulls***ing me. They promised to call Tuesday afternoon/evening, after the car was prepared, with the hope that it's be ready for Wednesday collection.

No call Tuesday. I called at 4:30pm, and was told "salesman is busy, he will ring you". No return call. I rang again every half hour until 7pm, and finally gave up at 7:30 and went home. NO CALL.

I rang Wednesday morning to be told "it's his day off today". At which point I went berserk. Surely someone else could just give me the god damn keys, if the car was ready. Of course the salesman hadn't told me on Monday that Wednesday was a no-go.

Eventually spoke to the business manager, who then told me "lease paperwork isn't finished, so no car THIS WEEK". After waiting since Sept 1 (ordered), they had plenty of time to get the paperwork done. And again , the salesman forgot to tell me this on Monday.

I eventually got to collect my car 4pm Friday. 8 days after it had arrived at the dealer.

Built Oct 27. Arrived with dealer Nov 4, Collected Nov 12
Old 12-04-2004, 01:53 AM
  #5  
Contributors
Thread Starter
 
Steve Gill's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Scotland, UK
Posts: 600
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Default

Not good I'd certainly be refusing to buy anything from there again.
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
TroyE60
Private Member Classifieds
9
05-30-2019 05:01 PM
trev0006
F10 Discussion
5
05-05-2015 01:44 PM
JonathonK
Other BMW Models
0
03-27-2015 08:13 AM
DerekShiekhi
F10 M5 Discussion
0
03-20-2015 11:11 AM
reckamech
E60 Discussion
1
09-08-2003 01:24 PM



Quick Reply: Evo Magazine Article on UK BMW Delivery



All times are GMT -8. The time now is 07:51 PM.