Nissan Altima: 2019 Motor Trend Car of the Year Contender

Looks edgy. Isn't.

Photographer

WE LIKEProPilot Assist system, good equipment levels on base car

WE DON'T LIKELifeless chassis, noisy engine and suspension, dull CVT

The Altima's exterior design walks a fine line between edgy and parody. It mostly carries it off, though Chris Theodore dubbed it "a watered-down version of the concept car." That said, the grille execution is the most emphatic take yet on the Nissan bucktooth graphic and gives the Altima a stronger road presence than its predecessor.

The interior is relatively generic 21st century Japanese, but some of the materials choices, notably the fabric on the rear of the front seats, betray obvious cost-cutting.

This is the first Altima available with all-wheel drive, but the system can only be ordered with the base 2.5-liter four-cylinder engine, so it doesn't make the car any more entertaining to drive. In the Altima, AWD is more about all-weather traction than performance—which feels more leaden than the test numbers suggest. Nissan's revolutionary VC-T variable-compression engine seems more at home in the Altima than it does in the Infiniti QX50; it delivers decent thrust and drivability, but the CVT transmission sucks the life out of it.

The chassis is lifeless and slow to respond to driver inputs, and it doesn't even deliver decent ride quality and refinement by way of compensation. The Honda Accord leaves the Altima in its wake, but value-seeking buyers (and rental fleets) will love the Nissan's standard equipment levels. But beware, pricing climbs rapidly.

"I was really hoping for some newfound sophistication in this generation of Altima," Chris Walton said. "It looks better and has the new variable-compression engine, and the ProPilot Assist system is highly effective. But the doors still sound hollow, the suspension's impact harshness is deplorable, and the price isn't competitive."

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2019 Nissan Altima

SV AWD

Platinum VC-Turbo Edition One

Base Price/As tested

$30,175/$30,315

$36,645/$36,645

Power (SAE net)

188 hp @ 6,000 rpm

248 hp @ 5,600 rpm

Torque (SAE net)

180 lb-ft @ 3,600 rpm

280 lb-ft @ 1,600 rpm

Accel, 0-60 mph

7.4 sec

6.1 sec

Quarter-mile

15.7 sec @ 90.2 mph

14.6 sec @ 97.4 mph

Braking, 60-0 mph

119 ft

118 ft

Lateral Acceleration

0.84 g (avg)

0.86 g (avg)

MT Figure Eight

27.7 sec @ 0.61 g (avg)

26.3 sec @ 0.68 g (avg)

EPA City/Hwy/Comb

26/36/30 mpg

25/34/29 mpg

Vehicle Layout

Front-engine, AWD, 5-pass, 4-door sedan

Front-engine, FWD, 5-pass, 4-door sedan

Engine/Transmission

2.5L DOHC 16-valve I-4/Cont variable auto

2.0L turbo DOHC 16-valve I-4/Cont variable auto

Curb Weight (F/R Dist)

3,412 lb (59/41%)

3,441 lb (61/39%)

Wheelbase

111.2 in

111.2 in

Length x Width x Height

192.9 x 72.9 x 57.3 in

192.9 x 72.9 x 56.9 in

Energy Cons, City/Hwy

130/94 kW-hrs/100 miles

135/99 kW-hrs/100 miles

CO2 Emissions, Comb

0.65 lb/mile

0.68 lb/mile

I can’t remember a time when I wasn’t fascinated by cars. My father was a mechanic, and some of my earliest memories are of handing him wrenches as he worked to turn a succession of down-at-heel secondhand cars into reliable family transportation. Later, when I was about 12, I’d be allowed to back the Valiant station wagon out onto the street and drive it around to the front of the house to wash it. We had the cleanest Valiant in the world.

I got my driver’s license exactly three months after my 16th birthday in a Series II Land Rover, ex-Australian Army with no synchro on first or second and about a million miles on the clock. “Pass your test in that,” said Dad, “and you’ll be able to drive anything.” He was right. Nearly four decades later I’ve driven everything from a Bugatti Veyron to a Volvo 18-wheeler, on roads and tracks all over the world. Very few people get the opportunity to parlay their passion into a career. I’m one of those fortunate few.

I started editing my local car club magazine, partly because no-one else would do it, and partly because I’d sold my rally car to get the deposit for my first house, and wanted to stay involved in the sport. Then one day someone handed me a free local sports paper and said they might want car stuff in it. I rang the editor and to my surprise she said yes. There was no pay, but I did get press passes, which meant I got into the races for free. And meet real automotive journalists in the pressroom. And watch and learn.

It’s been a helluva ride ever since. I’ve written about everything from Formula 1 to Sprint Car racing; from new cars and trucks to wild street machines and multi-million dollar classics; from global industry trends to secondhand car dealers. I’ve done automotive TV shows and radio shows, and helped create automotive websites, iMags and mobile apps. I’ve been the editor-in-chief of leading automotive media brands in Australia, Great Britain, and the United States. And I’ve enjoyed every minute of it. The longer I’m in this business the more astonished I am these fiendishly complicated devices we call automobiles get made at all, and how accomplished they have become at doing what they’re designed to do. I believe all new cars should be great, and I’m disappointed when they’re not. Over the years I’ve come to realize cars are the result of a complex interaction of people, politics and process, which is why they’re all different. And why they continue to fascinate me.

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