Car Review: 2019 Nissan Micra S

2019 Nissan Micra SPeter Bleakney / Driving OVERVIEW Base Micra a charming throwback to basic transportation PROSgood ride quality, zippy engine and handling, roomy, great visibility, price CONScan you live without A/C? VALUE FOR MONEYvery good WHAT TO CHANGE?It’s perfectly austere HOW TO SPEC IT?I’d pass on the metallic paint and save $135 Ive had the good fortune of driving some pretty hot and rare-ish cars lately the Dodge Challenger Hellcat Redeye, Mercedes-AMG’s GT 63 S 4-Door, and the Range Rover Sport SVR but none have been as hot or rare as this base, five-speed manual, $10,488 Nissan Micra S. Hot because it has no air conditioning, and rare because, well, who in their right mind is going to buy a new car with no A/C these days? And since Millenials look at manual transmissions as anti-theft devices, there goes that demographic, too.Nonetheless, this little tinder box exists if for nothing else for its low-low price, and this is the spec youll be buying if you want to partake in the Nissan Micra Cup race series. After a week of sweating behind the wheel of this Micra, I totally get why Nissan started the Micra Cup this little four door hatch with a stick-shift is a hoot to drive.Power comes from a DOHC 1.6L four making a modest 109 horsepower at 6,000 rpm and 107 lb.-ft. of torque at 4,400, and while this doesnt sound like much, its all about the power-to-weight ratio. Its a smooth, linear, and eager unit that has little mass working against it, so the Micra never feels flat-footed. Put you foot into it, and this diminutive hatchback turns into a snarling little puppy, all frisky and eager to please. The steering is sharp and direct, too, and while the chassis exhibits a fair bit of body roll, the Micra is an agile little thing that loves to be thrown into the corners, hanging on with, err, dogged persistence while carving an accurate path. Good ride quality, too. In this age of overweight, overpowered, and overly complicated vehicles, the base Micra S is a breath of fresh air literally as youll probably have the windows rolled down most of the time. Yes, I said rolled: For you youngsters, the strange cranking devices sprouting from the door cards will be as unrecognizable as milk in a bottle. But for us more seasoned types, crank windows is a throwback to simpler times. And with the Micra, the cabin is so small you can reach over and drop the passenger window from the drivers seat.Additionally, this stripper model has no central power door locks another convenience we are totally used to. As a result, one has to ensure each of the five doors is manually locked before turning in something I totally missed out on for the first few nights. New for 2019 is a standard back up camera, and Nissan has also recently added a USB port.Two questions loomed large as I prepared to drive to a gig at a country music festival in Shelburne, Ontario, about a two hour drive from my house: Would the Micra accommodate my upright bass, and could I endure the trip with no A/C on a hot summer day? The answers are yes, and barely. Surprisingly, with the 60/40 split rear seat folded and the front passenger chair pushed fully forward, the bass slid in no problem. I also fitted in a small amp, bass guitar, music stand, and a few other items. Nice.The drive started out swimmingly, with the windows open and the swirling breeze keeping me cool and feeling pretty smug. Look at all those poor wretches sealed away from this beautiful summer, in their air-conditioned cocoons. The world would be a better place if we all had to crank our own windows, lock our own doors, and listen to FM radio on a crappy two-speaker radio! Look at me, this little four banger is sipping regular fuel as daintily as Miss Scarlett sipped a mint julep, while your fancy fuel sucking rigs have to power, and carry around, such unnecessary posh trappings as air conditioning systems, automatic transmissions, power door locks, and motors to work the windows, mirrors, and seats. When I was your age yada, yada, yada. Then things got considerably more swimmingly. Dark clouds loomed up ahead, and before long my wee ovoid car-lette and I were caught in a deluge of biblical proportions. I soon found my smug self presented with two options, neither of which were particularly excellent: Roll up the windows and perish in this $10,000 mobile sauna, or keep em down and get soaked. Turned out, I didnt have much choice as the de-frost didnt actually work in these conditions. So, I got soaked.Now, if youre worried about the Micra, it did get a bit damp, but the whole interior is basically one big piece of hose-out plastic, so no harm done. Given this is the base Micra, there is a deficiency of electronic gubbins in here to get damaged, and since seat heaters are off the Micras menu, I wasnt afraid of getting electrocuted either.Damn, I love this little
Origin: Car Review: 2019 Nissan Micra S

Nissan Micra discontinued in Canada for 2020

2019 Nissan Micra SPeter Bleakney / Driving Nissans budget-minded hatchback and Canadian racing series star, the Micra, will be discontinued after 2019.The subcompact car has served the entry-level market well since 2014, and delivered on what we intended Micra to do in its life cycle in Canada, which was expand the segment and bring new customers to the Nissan brand, Nissan spokesperson Claudianne Godin confirmed to autoTRADER.ca.Production of the Canadian vehicle will end in Mexico in December of 2019, apparently so Nissan can focus on other lower-priced models in its lineup like the Kicks and Sentra.Nissan says it has enough stock to hold the company over until the end of 2020, however, so if you still want to get your hands on the small hatch, you have time. The small vehicles biggest selling point was a price tag just over $10,000, a measure the next-generation Micra will not be able to match, says Godin. Thats why the fifth-generation vehicle simply wont be sold in Canada instead.Powered by a 1.6-litre four-cylinder engine with 109 horsepower, the small vehicle was more than adequate as cheap transportation for the masses. With a five-speed manual transmission, it was fun, too.As for the Canada-only Nissan Cup racing series, Godin says the 2020 season will be completely consistent with previous years Micra Cup in terms of execution and engagement with fans and
Origin: Nissan Micra discontinued in Canada for 2020

Marco Signoretti wins 2019 Nissan Micra Cup championship

2019 Nissan Micra Cup champion Macro Signoretti, right, with Nissan Canada president Steve Milette following the title-deciding race last Saturday in Quebec.Nissan Canada CIRCUIT MONT-TREMBLANT, Quebec Rookie Marco Signoretti took a bit of the drama out of the 2019 Nissan Micra Cup championship by securing the title on the first day of the season-ending double-header last weekend here in the Laurentian Mountains.The Toronto driver became the first Ontario-based driver and the first rookie to win the title in the five years the Micra Cup has been contested, a series in which drivers compete in identically speced Micra Ss.In Saturdays race in wet conditions, Signoretti started from pole but drove a conservative race, his goal to finish ahead of his sole title challenger, Kevin King, rather than win the race. The PayPal/Motorsports In Action Team driver placed fifth to Kings eight-place result, giving him enough points to seal the drivers championship. I thought back at my 12 years of experience in karting and the errors I sometimes made, Signoretti said following Saturdays race. I then managed my race the best I could knowing that the ultimate goal was to claim the title. Im very ecstatic to have won the Nissan Micra Cup in my rookie season.With Signoretti trying to keep his nose clean while navigating the slippery Circuit Mont-Tremblant, a great battle at the front saw Valrie Limoges (H.Grgoire Nissan), Jake Exton (Clarington Nissan) and Gavin Sanders vie for victory.At the checkered flag, Limoges won by less than six-tenths of a second ahead of Sanders, with Exton third. It was Limoges third win in the series.Sundays season-ending race was run under sunny skies, and with the pressure of the title fight off, Signoretti put an exclamation mark on his remarkable rookie season by winning the race, followed by Exton and Austin Riley, the young autistic driver whose third place finish rounded out an exceptional season.A notable footnote to the race was pole-sitter Ben Cooper, a triple world karting champion originally from Great Britain and currently residing in Mont-Tremblant. During the first few laps six drivers were going wheel-to-wheel for the lead, which resulted in Cooper, whose first-ever Micra Cup race was a day earlier, ending his day early following contact with Sanders and King.Sylvain Ouellets sixth place, combined with Frdric Berniers retirement after a contact with Limoges, gave Ouellet the Senior Class title. Both drivers were tied with the number of points but Ouellet was the holder of seven victories against Berniers three. In the final overall standings, Signoretti is the champion ahead of King, Limoges, Exton, Taylor Near, Riley, Ouellet, Bernier, Nicolas Barrette, and ric Chaput. At least 37 drivers took part in the 2019 Nissan Micra Cup season. The weekends two races can be watched on the series Facebook page and on Micra Cup TV on YouTube.The sixth season of the Nissan Micra Cup will begin in May
Origin: Marco Signoretti wins 2019 Nissan Micra Cup championship

Micra Cup: The little race series that could

The masterminds behind the Micra Cup: series founder/promoter Jacques Deshaies and Nissan Canadas Didier Marsaud.Andrew McCredie BOWMANVILLE, Ontario In 2014, Nissan Canada had the daunting task of reintroducing the Micra after a two decade-plus absence. That fourth-generation model was already four years old when it arrived here that year, and its most notable feature was its price: with a base model under $10,000 it was the least expensive new vehicle in Canada. Viewed another way, the cheapest.Needless to say, positioning the Mexican-built, 1.6-litre four-door sedan would be a challenge for Nissan Canada execs like Didier Marsaud. That is until Quebec journalist Jacques Deshaies came calling with a crazy idea.Five years later at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park and on the eve of the 62nd race in the Nissan Micra Cup, the two men reflected on the wild ride of establishing a racing series that has become part of the Canadian racing ladder system.We created the Micra Cup because we were bringing back a model to Canada that had not been here for 23 years with a name that most people did not know or remember, explained Marsaud, Nissan Canadas director of corporate communications. And as it was the least expensive car in the Canadian market, we wanted to demonstrate that this car is fun, reliable and works. The exclusive-to-Canada series features six race weekends in Ontario and Quebec between May and September, with drivers competing in 109-horsepower Nissan Micra base model S cars that are equipped identically. The appeal to drivers is two-fold: as a true spec style series what separates winners from losers is the driver, not the car; and for about $30,000 you can compete in the entire series. Plus, unlike so many feeder series, the Micra Cup gets exposure on TV and social media. For the first time at Circuit Mont-Tremblant, the two races this weekend will be aired live on the series Facebook page (Coupe Nissan Micra Cup) and on its YouTube channel, Micra Cup TV.Goals set, and achievedFor Deshaieswho has owned a race team, driven race cars and served as president of the 2004 Trois-Rivieres Grand Prixhis goal when he pitched the idea to Marsaud, and eventually then-Nissan Canada president Christian Meunier, was at the five-year mark to try and convince the young drivers in karting that their next step up the racing ladder is Micra Cup.Looking at the current grid, and noting that he signed up two young karters for next season just a day earlier, the affable Quebecer said he has achieved that goal. In fact, this weekends season finale double-header at Circuit Mont-Tremblant sees rookie Marco Signoretti, a former karting, battling series veteran Kevin King, a karting instructor, for the overall drivers championship.Likewise, Marsaud said he and Nissan had achieved their goal. And that was to raise awareness about the Micra.I love motorsport and a lot of people in Nissan Canada love motorsport, but our job is not to do motorsport, he said. Our job is to sell cars.Canadian-made grassrootsThe success of the Micra Cup hasnt gone unnoticed by others in the company, notably Nissan Global Motorsport Director Michael Carcamo.When Didier brought us the concept, we were over the moon, he told me in the Nissan pits at the Brooklyn Formula E race in August. It was really going back to the grassroots, an opportunity to give people something that we dont think is very common today. And thats an accessible racing platform. And making it a one-series highlights on one side the fact that we can produce a reliable and great racecar at a low cost. And at the same time the drivers get to be the stars of winning the race.And as Deshaies notes, when a manufacturer invests in a race series with one or two cars, sometimes they win, but most likely they dont. In the Micra Cup, each race the podium is three Nissans.Drivers’ thumbs upRacer Kevin King missed the opening race of the first season, but has competed in every race since, and he said that what has impressed him the most about the Micra Cupapart from the intense on-track competitionis how Nissan has supported the series.When the program started there was lots of talk about a lot of PR, and that Nissan (Canada) was going all in, the Trois-Rivieres native said. Throughout the years you have seen they are putting in a lot of effort, and I know all the drivers really appreciate that. Valrie Limoges has also been driving in the series since that first season, and she echoes Kings sentiment about the quality of the competition, adding she loves the fact that its a driver-focused series.There are some things drivers and crews can do on the set up of the cartire pressures and suchbut its mostly the driver, she said. I have learned that I am really, really competitive in my mind and that I really love racing. I have more expectations that will hopefully lead to something good in the future.Western alienationAs to any regrets, Deshaies said his only one is not being
Origin: Micra Cup: The little race series that could

Micra Cup excitement runneth over

The final race weekend on the Micra Cup 2019 calendar will see 25 Micra Ss take to the scenic Circuit Mont-Tremblant in the Laurentians.Nissan Canada Formula 1 can only dream about being so lucky. This weekends season-ending Micra Cup double-header at Circuit Mont-Tremblant will decide two driver championship titles.Series veteran Kevin King and rookie sensation Marco Signoretti are the last two standing for the overall championship title, with Signoretti holding a 42-point lead (a first-place finish counts for 40 points). The Toronto rookie won both races at Mosport at the end of the summer, clinching the Novice title in the process and setting up this weekends battle with Trois-Rivires King.And in the Senior class, Frdric Bernier holds a slight 16-point lead over Sylvain Ouellet, setting up an exciting dual between the two during the Saturday and Sunday races.In addition to these two title battles, the 2019 seasons final race weekend will see a number of series drivers look to build on successful seasons, including Valrie Limoges, winner at the last Grand Prix de Trois-Rivires, Taylor Near (Signorettis PayPal/Motorsports In Action teammate), Jake Exton and Austin Riley, a young driver with autism.In total, there will be 25 Micras on the grid this weekend, including a number of first-timers. These include: Sacha Gagnon, co-owner of SH Karting and a well-known figure in Qubec karting; British driver Ben Cooper, a three-time karting World Champion who is currently living in Mont-Tremblant where he runs the Jim Russell Karting Academy; and Quebec-based journalist Amyot Bachand, who normally competes in historic car races. Micra Cup rookie Marco Signoretti, left, and veteran Kevin King will decide the overall driver’s championship this weekend at Circuit Mont-Tremblant. Nissan Canada In addition to the races, Nissan Micra and Nissan Z owners are invited to complete a parade lap of Circuit Mont-Tremblant on Saturday and Sunday at noon. To participate, register at micracup.com/eventregistration (closes Sept. 25).Micra Cup drivers will be on the track at least six times throughout the weekend, including two practice sessions on Friday, qualifications and a race on Saturday (2 p.m. EST) in addition to another qualification session and race on Sunday (2 p.m. EST).For the first time at Circuit Mont-Tremblant, the two races will be aired live on the series Facebook page (Coupe Nissan Micra Cup) and on its YouTube channel, Micra Cup
Origin: Micra Cup excitement runneth over