The Maxima's new "Liquid Motion"
ethos looks fishier than cocktails at Sponge Bob's.
Except for the Audi Quattro-like
haunches, there's not a single surface where a drop of rain could tarry. The
smeared mascara
headlights look idiotic in press photos. They become samurai-helmet material
in the flesh. The dual exhausts and [optional] rear
spoiler signal sporting intent with similar subtlety.
With 19" rims, doors the size
of stainless-steel refrigerators, and a new wider track and shorter length,
the Maxima offers pure,
broad-shouldered aggression. Overall, the new, downsized– yes, downsized–
Maxima looks like some antediluvian antecedent
to the G37 coupe just got dredged up from the Marianas trench. And then
ate four people.
Nissan may be eating Subaru's
lunch when it comes to performance, but the two brands are in a race to the
bottom when it
comes to interior quality. Even the mighty Nissan GT-R suffers from a cheapish-feeling
interior. The Maxima's cabin is as
rubbery as Chrysler's plastics are hard. If Nissan wants people to think
their cars are built to last, they're going to have
understand that first impressions last.
Still, the four-door's fat three-spoke
steering wheel approaches perfection, and the ergonomics are beyond reproach.
Nissan allows you to choose between "piano black" trim or eucalyptus wood.
Choose the wood, at least it's real; the piano
trim wouldn't look out of place on a Farfisa synthesizer.
The new Maxima offers an Infiniti
amount of optional toys, from thermal butt management to premium mood lighting
(want to drive my etchings?) to the industry's biggest heat sink- I mean dual
panel sunroof.
But the view forward is the killer app, as your eyes stare down that fantastic
hood with its stingray arches and central
power bulge.
Fire-up the not-so-uber-anymore
Nissan and it's clear the brand's engineers have a hotline to a dodgy Mexican
pharmacy.
The good ole' 3.5-litre VQ-series V6 tells you in no uncertain terms that
it's chock-full of Vegas-grade Viagra; power is
up from 255hp to 290hp. Fuel economy has also been maximized, with a single
mpg added to the highway economy.
On premium fuel. Oops. Anyway, it's enough thrust to power the Maxima from
rest to sixty in about six seconds.
The new Maxima comes with Nissan's
Continuously Vacuous Transmission (a.k.a. CVT). Sorry pistonheads, there's
no
stick-shifting your expectations here. Saying that, perhaps it's time to
cut the transmission slack some slack. The previous
rubbery isolation that interfered with driver involvement now feels merely
latex-based, particularly in the sportier DS mode.
Theoretical cogs swapped via the steering-column-mounted paddles aren't quite
as crisp as some of the other manually-shifted
autoboxes out there, but the responses are gratifyingly rapid.
The best bit: the new Maxima's
rolling acceleration. With 261 lb-ft. of torque lingering underfoot, the Tennessee
tornado is no
real world slouch. Highway or two-lane overtaking is as easy as it is aurally
satisfying. You'll be able to pass most anything
at its price point except, perhaps, a mirrored window.
Usually, turning-up the sporty
knob on a family sedan creates the sort of discomfort Herr Mosley [allegedly]
enjoys.
In the new Maxima, aluminium suspension bits borrowed from the Infiniti M45
and a six-point engine mount (for reduced vibrations)
deliver a ride that manages to hit a high note of communicative firmness
without ever resorting to cruelty.
It could housebreak a golden retriever puppy. But if you prefer a more sedate
Maxima, a softer Premium trim is offered
next to the Sport model.
OK, we're here now. Is this the
"world's best-handling 290hp front-wheel-drive-car?"
Surely the concept is as ridiculous
as the "world's best one-armed boxer." Yes, the traction control steps-in
when mashing
the gas from a stop. But otherwise, torque steer is blessedly absent. Even
better, the new Maxima corners so evenly you'd
think it had outriggers. Even betterer, Nissan's quick but unfortunately-named
twin-orifice power-steering rack provides a
direct connection to the front tires.
There's a feeling of slippery nimbleness that even an Altima coupe would be hard-pressed to match.
Despite sharing platforms with
the Altima and Murano, the Nissan Maxima is not a super-sized something.
Their new flagship- I mean,
four-door flagship won't look out of place slotted next to a GT-R on the
showroom floor.
Brutal styling, a snarling V6 and a sorted chassis: welcome to the Circus
Maxima.