The Weekly Advertiser Horsham

Sharper looks for facelifted Patrol

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Nissan has revealed a visual and technologi­cal overhaul of its Y62 Patrol upper-large SUV, featuring active safety and multimedia upgrades, modernised front and rear styling and improvemen­ts to cabin comfort.

Confirmed to hit Australian showrooms in time for Christmas, this is the first major Patrol update since the model arrived on the Australian market in early 2013, having made its global debut three years prior.

Nissan made no mention of mechanical changes to the refreshed Patrol’s 298kw-560nm 5.6-litre V8 petrol engine or seven-speed automatic transmissi­on with low-range transfer case that delivers drive to all four wheels.

Between redesigned LED headlights that each wrap around an extension of the front guards, is a deeper, more angular new interpreta­tion of Nissan’s V-motion grille, which plunges into a new bumper with large faux air intakes to create a chunkier-looking front end.

The horseshoe-shaped LED graphic is replicated on broader new tail-light clusters, this time enveloping Nissan’s first attempt at scrolling turn signals.

A light redesign of the rear bumper subtly echoes the aerodynami­c shapes added up front, with slimmer reflectors placed down low.

Apart from the sharper front and rear styling, the interior gains a dual-display multimedia system to replace the outgoing model’s clutter of buttons and introduces smartphone mirroring via Android Auto and Apple Carplay.

It also gains diamond-quilted leather upholstery similar to that of the related Infiniti QX80, hand-stitched leather on the steering wheel and extra insulation against noise and vibration.

Nissan also said the air-conditioni­ng system now flows better for quicker cabin cooling.

Safety also takes a step up with pedestrian detection added to the autonomous emergency braking and forward collision warning systems.

Not all these technologi­cal upgrades are guaranteed to filter through to the Australian market and Nissan Australia general manager of corporate communicat­ions Karla Leach said the company was still working through which of the equipment changes would be included.

Ms Leach also acknowledg­ed that prices could rise slightly with the arrival of the facelifted Patrol, which in current form is priced from $72,880 plus on-road costs for the Ti, rising to $89,880 for the TI-L.

Infiniti’s Patrol-based QX80, in runout since Nissan’s luxury brand announced its departure from the Australian market early this month, offers additional equipment and unique styling at $110,900.

Although there is scope for Nissan to add a third, more highly specified Patrol variant to replace the QX80 in Australia, Ms Leach said the two models appealed to different customers.

Patrol sales are up 47.1 percent to the end of August on 1356 units, already ahead of the 1259 sold in the full year of 2018, during which the model enjoyed 37.4 percent year-onyear growth.

 ??  ?? OVERHAUL: Nissan’s upgraded Y62 Patrol is set to touch down in Australia by the year’s end.
OVERHAUL: Nissan’s upgraded Y62 Patrol is set to touch down in Australia by the year’s end.

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