2016 Nissan Sentra First Drive Review
Making Sentra of Nissan’s Refreshed CompactHas the GT-R and 370Z of compact sedans arrived with the newly refreshed 2016 Nissan Sentra? The seventh-generation Sentra arrives for 2016 with a color also offered on the GT-R (Deep Blue Pearl) and a three-spoke steering wheel inspired by the Z . . . but that's where the similarities end between the Sentra and Nissan's sports cars. Although we'd love to report the updated Sentra has the soul of a Juke, Nissan's compact, like the Corolla, has its sights set on commuters, consumers who think "sporty" means a body kit, alloy wheels, and a spoiler. Nissan sold 203,509 Sentras in 2015, and we recently drove the 2016 Sentra to see how well it can compete this year in a segment full of activity.
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The new Sentra enters 2016 quietly, with an acoustic windshield and other changes that allow for a more hushed cabin than before. That interior is still just as big as it was before the refresh, with enough rear-seat legroom to surprise folks who haven't shopped for a compact car in a while. The Sentra is not the only compact to delight buyers with midsize-like interior space for four or with a cavernous 15.1 cubic-foot trunk. The refreshed Sentra now offers active safety tech, sports changes to the steering and suspension, and wears revised styling, though that cool swoopy character line down the side of the car remains.
What hasn't changed is the engine, which still produces 130 hp and 128 lb-ft of torque from a naturally aspirated 1.8-liter I-4. A six-speed manual is available on the base S model, allowing Nissan—and other automakers in this segment—to advertise an impressively low base price, even if most buyers will opt for the retuned CVT. WhenMotor Trendtested a 2013 Sentra with the same engine and a CVT, the Nissan hit 60 mph in 9.6-9.7 seconds, not much different from four 2014 Corollas with CVTs we've tested that made the run in 9.2-9.7 seconds. And like the Toyota Corolla's CVT, the Nissan Sentra's transmission is designed to mimic a conventional, stepped automatic. Even that approach can't disguise how slow the Sentra feels, and the engine does moan a little. Keeping in mind this is a mainstream compact, we experienced no issues with the CVT's tuning. Among the neat standard features on all CVT-equipped Sentras are the Eco and Sport modes, which tweak the responsiveness of the CVT and throttle mapping.
Speaking of mapping, navigation on a 5.8-inch touchscreen is available as inexpensively as $20,405 on the 2016 Sentra SV, including destination and the cost of a $1,020 package. The package also adds blind-spot monitoring and a rear cross-traffic alert system I found useful onMotor Trend's long-term 2013 Altima when backing out of a parking spot with limited visibility. That 5.8-inch screen is as big as it gets in the Sentra (instead of competitors' 7-inch screens), and the CD player slot's placement above the screen instead of below or behind it makes the center stack look a bit dated. The Sentra wins back a few points with Apple Siri Eyes Free that can, among other functions, send text messages with voice commands and can read them aloud and display them, too. Then there's the well-designed instrument cluster's central 5-inch color info display that's standard on all but the base S trim and can show lots of useful information.







