Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Nissan Micra

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taken its power steering from the company’s top selling Qashqai and along with a reconfigur­ed chassis the new Micra is far better and more enjoyable on the road.

The ride on the firm side but that’s not a bad omen and with the new engine and improved suspension it soaks up the bumps and small potholes with ease while body control remains good even when cornering briskly.

The five-speed manual gearbox Nissan say a new CVT automatic box will be added to the Micra range in 2018 - is light and easy to use and with this new engine under the bonnet it extremely manoeuvrab­le and really pleasant to drive.

This version of the Micra is clearly aimed at those drivers who want the best of both worlds. The cabin has all the new-look features with more comfortabl­e seats and the better layout of controls and switches but it’s more economical to run.

The official combined fuel consumptio­n is 61.4mpg, which was slightly bettered on our first drive stint moving it into the mid 60s, and it slots into the lowest insurance group rating - one - with a CO2 figure of 103g/km.

For company car drivers it has a BiK tax banding of only 19 per cent and sits on 15-inch wheels.

Like all the new Micra models the 1.0-litre also comes with a camerabase­d lane-keeping system that will nudge the car back into the right path if the driver strays and also they have a 360-degree parking camera.

Entry-level models from many car makers are often short of some of the basic features but credit to Nissan the new 70bhp Micra Visia may be the cheapest in the range but it’s decently well equipped with equipment such as a five-inch colour computer screen surrounded by some soft-touch plastic mouldings and one or two little chrome finishes here and there.

Entry-level models too are about being cost effective and this Micra is certainly ahead of the game with the Visia very competitiv­ely priced while the slightly better equipped Visia+ costs from £12,945. The midgrade Acenta with the new engine is priced from £16,145.

One big treat in any one of these new models is a premium audio system specially developed by Bose for the Micra that offers quality sound with even two speakers in the driver’s head restraint.

The cost is £500 and for those drivers who genuinely enjoy hearing quality sound whilst driving it’s a bargain.

Overall the new 70bhp Micra will definitely appeal to the more budget-conscious motorists who will not be losing out much in terms of furnishing and fittings to the dearer trim levels on offer.

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