Reviews: 2016 Nissan Maxima, pick five trim levels will be on sale this summer
The Nissan Maxima has usually been the results of the Japanese company’s aspire to stuff an extremely large engine in an unusually large car. And the new 2016 Nissan Maxima isn’t very much different. The fact is, it’s improved over the older car in literally some ways. But it is certainly not enough for our tastes.
It’s been over two decades since the Nissan Maxima could really be called a “four-door sports car,” but Nissan insists on keeping up to use that appealing descriptor. Unveiled at the 2016 New York Auto Show, the 2016 Maxima is a large, front-wheel drive sedan, and that is far away from sports car territory, regardless of Nissan’s PR rhetoric.
The new 2016 Nissan Maxima comes on sale this summer with a selling price of $32,410 and a number of five trim levels.·The Japanese automaker's flagship has a 3.5-liter V6 engine that delivers 300 horsepower for a car with a lighter but better rigid chassis.
In a shift, Nissan will offer it it in five grades, or trim levels, as entire packages without options. You are looking for more features, buy a higher grade. They run from S at the base end, thru SV, SL, SR and at the top Platinum. Leather upholstery, a trendy feature, is provided on most versions. Base S model has cloth, but includes navigation, remote start and other features normally featured as extra-cost options, or limited to higher trim levels.
Driver support and active safety features including forward-collision alert, auto-braking, blind-spot detection, rear cross-traffic alert, and adaptive cruise control be displayed on SL models ($37,715) and above. This trim level in addition features a heated steering wheel, an 11-speaker Bose stereo with active noise cancellation, and a dual-panel sunroof.
It’s been over two decades since the Nissan Maxima could really be called a “four-door sports car,” but Nissan insists on keeping up to use that appealing descriptor. Unveiled at the 2016 New York Auto Show, the 2016 Maxima is a large, front-wheel drive sedan, and that is far away from sports car territory, regardless of Nissan’s PR rhetoric.
The new 2016 Nissan Maxima comes on sale this summer with a selling price of $32,410 and a number of five trim levels.·The Japanese automaker's flagship has a 3.5-liter V6 engine that delivers 300 horsepower for a car with a lighter but better rigid chassis.
In a shift, Nissan will offer it it in five grades, or trim levels, as entire packages without options. You are looking for more features, buy a higher grade. They run from S at the base end, thru SV, SL, SR and at the top Platinum. Leather upholstery, a trendy feature, is provided on most versions. Base S model has cloth, but includes navigation, remote start and other features normally featured as extra-cost options, or limited to higher trim levels.
Driver support and active safety features including forward-collision alert, auto-braking, blind-spot detection, rear cross-traffic alert, and adaptive cruise control be displayed on SL models ($37,715) and above. This trim level in addition features a heated steering wheel, an 11-speaker Bose stereo with active noise cancellation, and a dual-panel sunroof.

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