The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Altima gains more curb appeal

- GRAEME FLETCHER

At one time, the Altima was Nissan’s best-selling model.

That was until it was ousted by the Rogue when the crossover craze started.

Heading into 2022, the Altima adds the SR Midnight Edition to the sixth-generation model that was introduced in 2019.

The package adds, among other things, a gloss black grille, rear spoiler and door mirrors complete with turn signal repeaters, blacked-out badging, LED fog lights and attractive 19-inch wheels.

The touches are subtle, but do serve to give this family sedan some needed curb appeal.

CABIN APPEAL

The cabin is equally well conceived and comes with the desirable amenities. First, there are the heated front seats and the long-distance comfort that provide — few pews are as cosseting on a boring stretch of highway! Equally appreciate­d is the heated steering wheel, which is part of the SR package. On a cold day, it gets toasty in a hurry.

Ahead of the driver is a seven-inch instrument­ation screen with the eight-inch infotainme­nt sitting to the right. The latter is on the small side by today’s standards, but it’s a snap to connect the Apple Carplay and Android Auto apps. It also has a decent navigation system, but a barely-passable sound system — the Bose system found in the top-line Platinum is way better!

The biggest nit is the door lock strategy. In order to get out of the car, it has to be switched off, put in park or manually unlocked. I used the latter because the other two options proved to be just too much hassle, especially when dropping someone off. Why not give the driver the ability to deactivate auto locking?

The rear seat is generous in its accommodat­ions — two six-foot-plus riders will find plenty of head- and legroom in the outboard positions. The middle seat is a bust because the seat base is domed, the backrest is formed by the folding armrest and the central tunnel intrudes into the rider’s foot space. Behind that the trunk measures a useful 437 litres and it has split/folding seat backs. The downside is the car’s support bracing means the pass-through is about half the size of many competitor­s.

SAFETY FEATURES

While the SR Midnight Edition does not get Nissan’s fullzoot Propilot Assist, it does get what’s needed, including forward collision warning with auto braking, blind spot monitoring, rear cross-traffic alert with auto braking and lane departure warning with keep assist. The latter is pervasive, so it will be switched off by many (me included), in spite of its benefits.

CVT DOES THE JOB

Altima is powered by a single engine — a 2.5-litre, four-cylinder that makes 182 horsepower and 178 pound-feet of torque. It drives all four wheels through a continuous­ly variable transmissi­on (CVT).

In this case, the CVT delivers a surprising­ly palatable driving experience. Under normal to moderately aggressive accelerati­on, it runs up through eight gears in much the same way as a regular automatic meaning the engine does not scream at the driver to lift. Only under wideopen-throttle accelerati­on does it begin to drone.

All in all, it is one of the better CVT examples.

Hidden on the back of the shifter lever is a small button that activates sport mode. When engaged, it stretches the shift points, delivers more engine braking and makes the throttle sharper without being overly aggressive — for the bulk of the test, it was engaged because it does good things without any real penalty.

Sadly, it has to be turned on every time!

AWD ASSURANCE

Altima’s Intelligen­t all-wheeldrive (AWD) system is smart. To conserve fuel, it powers the front wheels whenever possible. However, during cornering or under accelerati­on it begins to send up to 50 per cent of the power rearward.

It also helps to control oversteer and understeer. Should oversteer arise, it limits the power flowing rearward; when understeer crops up, it sends more power rearward to allow the front tires to focus on cornering.

The inputs themselves may be small, but on a spirited drive it helps the overall balance and the manner in which the Altima points into a corner.

The other plus is the allwheel-drive system extracts very little penalty in terms of fuel economy. Officially, it is rated at 9.1 L/100 km and 6.7 L/100 km — the test yielded an average economy of 7.9 L/100 km.

The AWD system works in conjunctio­n with Intelligen­t Trace Control, an extension of the stability control system. It looks at steering input and compares it to the vehicle’s path. When the two differ, the system dabs a brake(s) to bring the vehicle back into line. The combinatio­n works to give the Altima better than average cornering stability and mainly because understeer only surfaces when real liberties are taken.

SUSPENSION CONTROL

While the suspension is fairly basic in design, it walks the right line — it controls body roll while remaining comfortabl­e despite the low-profile P235-40R19 tires. Working in the background is Intelligen­t Ride Control. This system makes tiny changes to engine output to limit the unwanted pitching motion caused by a series of road ripples.

From a practical perspectiv­e, the porpoising evident in many family sedans in not an issue in the Altima. This fore/aft pitching is so named because it resembles a porpoise cresting as it swims. The cause of this unsettling motion is a softer suspension that’s upset when it hits a series of road bumps or undulating pavement.

Ironically, this problem has become an unexpected issue with the new breed of Formula One cars. True it is for very different reasons and it rises to a significan­tly more serious level, but the pitching motion is disconcert­ing nonetheles­s.

FINAL WORD

The 2022 Nissan Altima SR Midnight Edition has a distinctiv­e style and a pleasing cabin. It also has a solid allwheel-drive system that puts the available grip to the best use.

Altima’s ace, however, is the manner in which it handles. It blends comfort with agility as well, if not better, as anything in the segment.

 ?? GRAEME FLETCHER ■ POSTMEDIA ?? The 2022 Altima SR Midnight Edition’s cabin is well conceived and comes with the desirable amenities.
GRAEME FLETCHER ■ POSTMEDIA The 2022 Altima SR Midnight Edition’s cabin is well conceived and comes with the desirable amenities.
 ?? ?? The trunk of the 2022 Altima SR Midnight Edition measures a useful 437 litres and it has split/folding seat backs. GRAEME FLETCHER ■ POSTMEDIA
The trunk of the 2022 Altima SR Midnight Edition measures a useful 437 litres and it has split/folding seat backs. GRAEME FLETCHER ■ POSTMEDIA
 ?? GRAEME FLETCHER ■ POSTMEDIA ?? The additional touches featured on the 2022 Altima SR Midnight Edition are subtle, but effective.
GRAEME FLETCHER ■ POSTMEDIA The additional touches featured on the 2022 Altima SR Midnight Edition are subtle, but effective.

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