USA TODAY US Edition

Hybrid SUV choices grow

Nissan gives Toyota a run for its money,

- Chris Woodyard @ChrisWoody­ard USA TODAY

Toyota and Honda have been leaders when it comes to introducin­g hybrid cars over the years, those wonder vehicles that switch back and forth between a gas engine and battery power and have collective­ly saved millions of gallons of gas along the way.

The third big Japanese automaker, Nissan, has largely sat it out. It offered an Altima Hybrid sedan in 2011, Pathfinder Hybrid SUV in 2014 and Murano Hybrid SUV in the past year but hasn’t shown a lot of commitment to the technology.

Nissan now is fighting back. Along comes the hybrid version of the 2017 Nissan Rogue, a nice compact crossover SUV hybrid designed to give Toyota’s RAV4 Hybrid a run for the money.

Just how much money is yet to be seen. Nissan hasn’t disclosed Rogue hybrid’s prices. The convention­al Rogue starts at $23,820, plus $940 in delivery charges. Rogue’s hybrid version clearly will be more, but it will have to be competitiv­e with RAV4 Hybrid, which was listed at $28,370, plus $900 in shipping, when we tested it earlier this year. There, the hybrid option was only a $700 premium over the convention­al version.

Another sign that Nissan is committed: It estimates hybrid sales will make up a respectabl­e 10% of the sales mix on Rogue, spokesman Dan Passe says. “This is a very serious effort,” he says.

Nissan Hybrid is expected to be rated at 33 miles per gallon in city driving, 35 mpg on the highway and 34 combined in the front-wheel drive version. That compares with 26 mpg city, 33 mpg highway and 29 combined for the convention­al version.

Yet the 2-liter 4-cylinder engine backed up by an electric motor puts out an adequate, though not overwhelmi­ng, amount of power — 141 horsepower that, when combined with the electric motor, amounts to 176 horsepower overall.

Rogue can stay in electric-only mode at speeds up to 75 miles per hour. And perhaps the best thing about it, you’re never really cognizant it’s a hybrid. The switches between the gas engine and batteries are smooth.

Besides a likely higher price, the tradeoff for being a hybrid is the hybrid battery in the cargo compartmen­t. It extends about an inch or two above the normal cargo area.

Here’s what we liked about it:

It has a classy, bright, upscale interior, one of the best in class.

There are handy pockets in the backs of the front seats and heating controls for the rear seats.

The around-view camera makes the Rogue Hybrid easier to park in tight spaces than other SUVs.

Rogue Hybrid has an impressive array of safety gear, including lane-departure warnings and forward emergency braking. Our favorite feature is decidedly low tech: It has a warning beep when backing in electric mode.

The real question becomes whether the Rogue Hybrid is better than the RAV4 Hybrid. That’s tough. RAV4 Hybrid has plenty of oomph and its own impressive gas mileage — 194 horsepower and 32 mpg combined in its allwheel-drive version — and both are solid, nicely crafted vehicles.

 ?? BY JOHN MURPHY PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? NISSAN ROGUE HYBRID
BY JOHN MURPHY PHOTOGRAPH­Y NISSAN ROGUE HYBRID
 ?? NISSAN ?? WHAT STANDS OUT uHybrid: Nissan looks serious this time. uSize: The two-row compact is a handy size, yet carries plenty. uInterior: Upscale.
NISSAN WHAT STANDS OUT uHybrid: Nissan looks serious this time. uSize: The two-row compact is a handy size, yet carries plenty. uInterior: Upscale.
 ?? JOHN MURPHY PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? The 2017 Rogue offers updated interior styling.
JOHN MURPHY PHOTOGRAPH­Y The 2017 Rogue offers updated interior styling.

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