Thursday, April 2, 2015

Reviews: 2016 Nissan Maxima, selection five trim levels will go on sale this summer

Reviews: 2016 Nissan Maxima, selection five trim levels will go on sale this summer


The Nissan Maxima has widely been the response to the Japanese company’s desire to stuff an extremely large engine in an unusually large car. And the new 2016 Nissan Maxima isn’t far different. In truth, it’s improved over the older car in definitely some ways. But it may not be enough for our tastes.

It’s been over two decades since the Nissan Maxima could really be labeled a “four-door sports car,” but Nissan insists on moving forward to use that flattering descriptor. Unveiled at the 2016 New York Auto Show, the 2016 Maxima is a large, front-wheel drive sedan, that is definitely not sports car territory, regardless of Nissan’s PR rhetoric.


The new 2016 Nissan Maxima will go on sale this summer with a setting price of $32,410 and a number of five trim levels.·The Japanese automaker's flagship has a 3.5-liter V6 engine that generates 300 horsepower for a car with a lighter but more rigid chassis.

In a shift, Nissan offer it it in five grades, or trim levels, as entire packages without options. You prefer a lot more features, buy a higher grade. They run from S at the base end, via SV, SL, SR and at the top Platinum. Leather upholstery, a popular feature, comes along on most versions. Base S model has cloth, but includes navigation, remote start and other features commonly available as extra-cost options, or available only in 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 display on SL models ($37,715) and above. This trim level further features a heated steering wheel, an 11-speaker Bose stereo with active noise cancellation, and a dual-panel sunroof.

No comments:

Post a Comment