I'm a little bit confused about the transformations for scalars fields and vector fields in classical field theory. I've learned that a scalar field is a smooth function
$$\phi : M \longrightarrow \mathbb{R} \tag1$$
where $M$ is the Minkowski space
Under a change of coordinates (actually a boost), this field satisfies
$$ \phi'(x') = \phi( \Lambda^{-1} \Lambda x) = \phi(x) \tag2$$.
However, we still have smooth vector fields in Minkowski space wich are maps
$$ A: M \longrightarrow M \tag3$$
If I choose some basis $\{e_\mu\}$, a vector field $A$ can be written as
$$A(x) = A^\mu(x) e_\mu(x)\tag4 $$
I'm not sure about it, but I think that the components $A^\mu(x)$ are scalar fields
$$ A^\mu : M \longrightarrow \mathbb{R} \tag5$$ such that scalar field transformation (2) should be correct. However, I know that the vector field components transform under a Boost as
$$ A'^\mu(x') = {\Lambda}^\mu _{\ \nu}A^\nu(x) $$
Can someone explain my conceptual mistake?