David Booth: Who hasnt cribbed a note? Glanced at someone elses test answers? Or copied a little of their math homework when the intricacies of Laplace transforms werent quite gelling in time for that 9:00 a.m. Monday assignment deadline? Maybe even a little plagiarism really, it was only one line from a 20-year-old Jeremy Clarkson review when words didnt appear magically on your screen. The point I am making is that pretty much all of us have cheated just a tad. Indeed, when it comes to a little, uhh, appropriation let he without sin cast the first stone.Nonetheless, youve got to give the designers at Honda and Nissan props for their chutzpah, the companies Accord and (the new) Altima seemingly separated at birth. Silhouettes are similar, the rear taillights almost identical and if you just ignore the various chrome garnishes seriously, you thought that wed be put off by one twin wearing a bowtie and the other a cravat? the front fascias are remarkably similar. Hell, their versions of burgundy Radiant Red metallic in Honda-speak, and Scarlet Ember for Nissan are all but cloned. If imitation be the sincerest form of flattery, then these two are positively fawning over each other. Clayton Seams: Indeed, it seems we have two identical sedans in front of us, the differences looming only once you peer under their (oddly similar) sheet metal. The Accord uses a downsized 1.5L turbo-four to send 192 horsepower and 192 pound-feet to the front wheels. The Altima, meanwhile, uses a larger naturally-aspirated 2.0L unit making 182 horsepower and 178 lb.-ft. of torque. But unlike the Accord, the Nissan has all-wheel-drive. But beyond the oily bits, both are very, very close. The Accord costs a hair more at $37,976 as-tested versus the Altimas $35,298 sticker.DB: Though there numbers be fairly similar, theres a world of difference OK, at least compared with their visual similarities in how these engines perform. Though it is the smaller unit, the Honda fairly leaps off the line, all that turbocharged torque rendering fairly instant throttle response. The Nissan, in contrast, is just a tad sluggish at the outset, but gathers steam as speeds increase, eventually proving more satisfying on the highway than the Honda. The numerical differences in performance measurement arent vast, but the motors do feel significantly different. Ditto for the transmissions; though theyre both CVTs, they prove markedly dissimilar on the road. CS: Ill be honest I had to double check the Altima was actually a CVT. It was that good, fooling me into thinking there was a conventional torque converter behind the engine. The revs shift up and down through imaginary gears and the operation is seamless. Nissan seems to have found a way to make CVT shift and feel like a regular automatic but with the fuel economy benefits of the continuously variable ratios.Honda has not been nearly so crafty. The Accord surges and drones as only a CVT can. Not only does it feel odd, it also feels sluggish. Every stab of the gas pedal is followed by a sizeable wait for the transmission to gear down and do its thing. The Nissan has a clear advantage in this area. Ditto the fact that said CVT is connected to an all-wheel-drive system, a rarity in the segment.DB: Thats the real differentiator in this compare. We can talk about similarities in body styles and differences in throttle response all we like, but the big news is that the Altimas 2.5L four drives all four wheels and the Honda only powers the fronts. Now, most consumers think AWD is only a benefit in the snow, but I can tell you I could feel the difference between the two cars even in summer. A quick thundershower drenched suburban Toronto, rendering roads wet and less than grippy during our time with the Altima; it barely noticed, but goose the Honda away from a stop and all that torque remember how we were bragging that the little 1.5T makes 192 lb.-ft.? spins the tires for a second or two before being reigned in by the traction control system. Thats not a big deal, but anyone thinking AWD is of winter only benefit isnt paying attention.On the other hand, when we start looking around the cabins, those similarities pop up again, dont they, my little wannabe rapper? CS: Youre right oh, fossilized one. Their cabins are about the same size and their ergonomics eerily similar. That said, there are a few more differentiators inside than outside. The Nissan, for instance, has seats so soft they remind me of a Oldsmobile Brougham. And thats a good thing! I blame BMW for convincing people that every single sedan needed to be firm and angry. The Accords seats are hard like a German sports sedan, and have serious side bolsters. This is a bit out of place on a car that doesnt even have paddle shifters. But Nissan takes a more honest approach. They know youre not taking their CVT sedan to a track day and the seats are closer to couches than race buckets. For back comfort alone, I would prefer the
Origin: Car Comparison: 2019 Honda Accord vs. 2019 Nissan Altima
Altima
Road Trip: Ontario to New Hampshire in a 2019 Nissan Altima
2019 Nissan AltimaDerek McNaughton / Driving Franconia, N.H. Robert Frost, the great American poet who died in 1963, was famous for taking the road less travelled, perhaps even coining the phrase with his line, Two roads diverged in a wood, and I — I took the one less traveled by, and that has made all the difference.”That difference lured him to Franconia, New Hampshire, where Frost and his family lived full-time from 1915 to 1920, and spending 19 summers at his picturesque farmstead. One look at Frosts view from his farmhouse in Franconia explains why: the green expanse of the White Mountains is as alluring as it is captivating, the mountains beauty a force that pulls as strongly as a rivers current. Its partly why we venture here every year to explore these forests, despite the pathetic U.S. and Canadian Dollar exchange rate. This year, a 2019 Nissan Altima was our horse for the journey.And what a frugal beast she turned out to be. Averaging 6.7 L/100 kilometres at a constant speed of 120 km/h, the Altimas 2.5-litre four cylinder engine consumed roughly $100 in fuel to travel just over 1,400 kilometres. At the U.S. gas station in Littleton where I stopped to fill up, the clerk asked how much I wanted pre-charged to my credit card. Eighty dollars? I ventured. Puzzled, then glancing outside at the Altima, he said the Altima wont take more than $40. Oh right, cheap U.S. gas!Indeed, US$39 later, the Altimas 61-litre tank was full, though the cost per gallon was only US$2.59 (about 90 cents a litre), and having travelled 760 kilometres on one tank, with another 39 to spare. By lowering our average highway speed to 100 km/h, and with some simple hypermiling, 1,000 highway kilometres on one tank should be possible. Who needs a diesel with gasoline fuel economy like this?That economy is especially good, considering all Altimas in Canada are AWD. The system works invisibly at all times, normally sending 100 per cent of power to the front wheels, but able to send 50 per cent to the rears if theres any slip up front. It will even divide the split 70 front, 30 rear when cornering to help with dynamics and feel in a car that tracks quite well around corners. I mostly forgot we had AWD.While the Altimas longer-term average of urban and highway driving showed 7.3 L/100 kilometres on the trip computer, the downside of such frugality, of course, is a paucity of power, the Altimas 185 horsepower and 178 lb.-ft of torque adequate for most normal driving situations but lacking real hustle anytime real speed is required. Passing on two lane highways requires prudence. Engine refinement is good but not stellar, although the continuously variable transmission makes itself endearing by mosty remaining out of sight and sound, beavering away quietly in the background. Perhaps a sport mode would help. In fact, most of the cabin is the same way: noise is well controlled, other than a bit of growl from the engine now and then. The cabin is remarkably simple too, a clean and uncluttered estate with everything easy to find, see and operate, a proper volume knob for the half-decent Bose stereo. An eight-inch touchscreen on the Platinum delivers good graphics with excellent haptic feedback. Instrumentation is equally clear, legible and bright. Its an excellent interior that wont frustrate its users. The zero gravity front seats are indeed supportive and comfortable, but they wont stop all the cramping that comes with old age on a long drive with few stops. Excellent seat heat to the back certainly helps, however.Rear seat legroom is massive about 88 centimetres of legroom and the 60/40 rear folding bench opens to an equally large trunk that happily consumed all our luggage, hiking gear and multitude of coats for the ever-varying weather. For a midsize sedan that starts at $28,000 $35,000 as-tested the trunk is bigger than plenty of more expensive full-size sedans.Nissans ProPilot Assist was interesting on this trip, too. Its supposed to reduce stress through adaptive cruise control and lane centering. But the lane centering wasnt always able to keep up and wanders off line now and then, acting overly busy at other times. The adaptive cruise would sometimes brake a little harshly if the system felt we were getting a little too close too quickly to a car ahead. The two technologies can be used separately or together, but it was simpler to leave the task of driving to myself. What I did appreciate, though, was the Altimas parking and safety aids especially rear intelligent safety braking, which detects objects while backing up and will apply the brakes before hitting it.After a week of hiking the White Mountains with the Altima getting us to and from the trails, we came away with an appreciation for its incredible fuel economy and quiet purpose. The 2019 Altima may not have the spirit or poetry of a more expensive luxury saloon, but it sure gets the job done efficiently and without much fuss a
Origin: Road Trip: Ontario to New Hampshire in a 2019 Nissan Altima
Car Review: 2019 Nissan Altima Platinum AWD
2019 Nissan Altima 2.5 Platinum AWDJil McIntosh OVERVIEW A great reason to consider a sedan PROSA great driver, plus AWD on every trim CONSOut-there front end looks vulnerable to dings VALUE FOR MONEYExcellent for all that you get WHAT TO CHANGE?Add an easy-to-find door lock override; they only pop open when the ignition’s turned off HOW TO SPEC IT?The $31,498 SV would do it for me Car sales are down, sport-ute sales are up. That’s the new auto market reality, as Canadians increasingly move out of sedans and into crossovers and SUVs. But the sedan market isn’t dead yet, and several automakers have a recently sent all-new models into it. Nissan’s entry is its all-new 2019 Altima, and what a lifeline it’s thrown into the segment. This is the best sedan, and possibly the best vehicle overall, that I’ve driven in a long time. This sixth-generation version rides on an all-new platform that’s equipped for all-wheel drive. American buyers can buy a front-wheel version, but with AWD so popular up here – one of the reasons why sport-utes and crossovers do so well – all-wheel is standard equipment on every Altima trim level in Canada. Pricing starts at $27,998 for the base S model, with the SV at $31,498 and my tester, the Platinum, topping out at $34,998. For an extra $1,000, you can turn the Platinum into the Edition One, a trim package that adds unique wheels and exterior lighting, rear spoiler, illuminated kick plates, and embroidered floor mats. The engine is a 2.5-litre four-cylinder as before, but it’s new and with a very slight bump in power, making 182 horses and 178 lb.-ft. of torque. American buyers can also select a turbocharged 2.0L that delivers 248 horsepower, but so far, there are no plans for Canadians to see it. It would make for a sportier model, but then again, I think this sedan’s main market is one where fuel economy and comfortable commuting outweigh go-fast – and I’m also a fan of non-turbo engines, especially if you plan to keep your vehicle for a long time, simply because they’re less complicated and have fewer moving parts. The automatic continuously variable transmission (CVT) is equally new, and it’s impressive. These can sometimes be noisy and feel rubbery on acceleration, but this one’s a great fit to the engine, and acceleration is quick and smooth. The Altima feels light and nimble, and it’s very pleasant to drive; the steering response is quick, and it takes curves and corners with precision. The all-wheel system sends all of its power to the front wheels under most driving conditions, but diverts 50 per cent to the rear wheels when you’re taking off from a stop, for better acceleration. On curves, a split of 70 per cent to the front and 30 per cent to the rear improves the car’s cornering ability. It’s a little different from the Subaru Legacy, which maintains a 60/40 split, but the Altima racks up slightly better fuel consumption numbers. The Altima’s sharp-crease styling gives it a handsome profile, and the rear is smartly-styled with sleek taillights, and a trunk that has a reasonable lift-over so it’s easy to pack in groceries and cargo. I’m still not stuck on that front end, though. Not only do I like to see a bit of bumper (or at least bumper-like) space under the grille, but beyond that, all that chromed plastic and honeycomb so far in front seems like it would be rather vulnerable in parking lot encounters. I have no complaints about the interior, which is equally sleek and handsome, save for the tablet-style infotainment screen that’s stuck to the dash. That’s common practice these days, and I suppose the benefits outweigh the tacked-on look – your eyes are up toward the road when you’re looking at the screen, and the dash itself can be lower, which improves visibility. I also really like the simplicity of the climate control buttons and dials, and hard buttons for the heated seats and steering wheel. Nissan’s “zero-gravity” seats are the ticket here, and they’re as comfortable and as supportive as they sound. There’s lots of legroom in both the front and rear seats, and while they don’t fold entirely flat, you can drop the rear seatbacks for some extra cargo capacity. All trim levels come with automatic headlamps, emergency front braking, eight-way power driver’s seat, satellite radio, and Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, while the SV and up include blind spot monitoring, LED headlamps, sunroof, dual-zone climate control, auto-dimming mirror, and ProPilot Assist. At the Platinum level, you also get a 360-degree camera, leather upholstery, navigation, and premium audio. ProPilot is the company’s name for a collection of high-tech safety aids, including adaptive cruise control and lane centering, which you can use separately, or hit a button on the steering wheel to activate them together. When you do, they’ll keep a preset distance from the vehicle in front and stay in the lane. It’s not meant for
Origin: Car Review: 2019 Nissan Altima Platinum AWD