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BMW 530

2011 · Diesel · Automatic · Wagon/Estate · Brūna
5,610
🇱🇻 Latvija
View on SS.lv

Specifications

Year2011
Mileage368 tūkst.
Engine3.0D
TransmissionAutomatic
FuelDiesel
Body typeWagon/Estate
ColorBrūna
LocationLatvija
Interior colorbrown

Description

BMW 530 (2011) — diesel engine 3.0D automatic transmission with 368,000 km mileage. Body: wagon. Color: Brūna. Location: Latvija. Price: €5,610. View details, price history and similar listings on autopase.lv.

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First seen: 6/15/2026

🎬 Video reviews

BMW 5 Series F10 (2010–2017)

Digest from the reviews

Based on transcripts of 2 reviews

  • Both of the 2 reviewed transcripts favor the F10 diesels — less hassle than the petrols — but the timing chains sit at the flywheel side and replacement is costly: across the two reviews N47 chains last ~100-200k km, N57/M57 ~250k km; one reviewer picks the post-2014 B47 if budget allows, while warning its EGR module can fail within 20-30k km.
  • The workshop transcript recalls the worldwide EGR-cooler recall on these diesels: cracked coolers let coolant meet soot in the intake and hundreds of cars burned — verify the recall was done; the other review adds that city-only crawling quickly kills the EGR and particulate filter, and a clogged EGR then damages the intake flaps.
  • Both treat the N20 2.0 turbo petrol (520i/528i) as liveable only with strict oil service: with ~10k km oil changes it can reach ~300k km, but both flag the oil-pump drive chain defect (snapped chains wrote engines off; fixed in 2014 — check the dealer fix on earlier cars) and spun rod bearings around 150-200k km; one adds chip-tuned 245-hp 520i units rarely pass ~120k km.
  • The ZF 8-speed is praised in both reviews but is not maintenance-free: change ATF every 50-60k km, watch the leak-prone plastic pan, and expect an overhaul at 150-250k km depending on version and driving style — an aggressive previous owner can kill the torque-converter lockup by ~100k km, so both advise a diagnostic scanner read-out before buying.
  • Both call the F10 body very rust-resistant with one caveat: the sealant at the steel-aluminium joints must be intact or galvanic corrosion becomes near-irreversible; cracked headlight-lens plastic is a known trait that costs the xenon units their sealing, and one reviewer warns most sellers wind back odometers — verify mileage independently.

Opinions belong to the review authors

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