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Follow-Up Test: 2009 Nissan Maxima 3.5 SV

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  • 2009 Nissan Maxima Picture

    2009 Nissan Maxima Picture

    We liked the first 2009 Maxima we tested so much that we decided to test another one; this one's a Sport Package. | September 15, 2009

Road Test

Follow-Up Test: 2009 Nissan Maxima 3.5 SV

Pick Your Options Carefully

    0 Ratings
    Call us suckers for the word "sport." You could slap a "sport" badge on a pair of roller skates and our eyes would light up at the implied promise of higher cornering speeds around the Things Remembered kiosk at the local mall.

    No sooner had we completed a test of the 2009 Nissan Maxima 3.5 SV than we learned of another 2009 Nissan Maxima equipped with a Sport Package lurking in Nissan's garage.

    There was that word again. How could we not test it?

    Life Begins at SV
    To recap, the 2009 Nissan Maxima is available in two trim levels: S and SV. The S is, relatively speaking, a stripped-down model that exists so that Nissan can say that the Maxima starts at under $30K — $29,950 with destination, to be exact.

    Really, life begins with the uplevel Maxima SV, which starts at $32,650 and adds leather, a better sound system and a few doodads. The SV trim also grants you access to your choice of a Sport Package or a Premium Package, which share a slew of features and are separated by only a few key differences that are presumably intended to separate the sybarites from the enthusiasts.

    Opt for the Sport Package and you trade away several of the frills found in the Premium for a metallic interior trim, sport-tuned suspension, 19-inch wheels with 245/40R19 Goodyear RS-A all-season tires, and a spoiler on the deck lid.

    Oh, and by choosing the $2,300 Sport Package you save more than a grand compared to the Premium Package. More go for less dough is the kind of value proposition that's right up our alley.

    But does the Sport Package really provide more go? To find out, we fired up our RaceLogic VBOX logging equipment and took the Maxima to task.

    Our test car was equipped with the Sport and Technology Packages and assorted mats, bringing the total to $37,380 with destination. The first 2009 Nissan Maxima we tested had been equipped with the Premium Package among other items. (Hereafter, we'll simply refer to said first Maxima as "Premium" and the subject of this test as "Sport.")

    Get the Summer Tires
    Before we get into the numbers, let it be said that the Sport is communicative and eager when it comes to handling the road. The impression is now of robust confidence, and if it is not the quite the spry Four-Door Sports Car that it was 20 years ago, it is far more engaging than more recent iterations of the model. Midcorner bumps do little to skew the Maxima's path away from the ideal arc, while the friction-free steering provides a level of precision not typically found in powerful, heavy front-wheel-drive cars. This 3,609-pounder moves with Germanic authority.

    Unfortunately, we found that the Sport's all-season tires wave the white flag well before the fortified suspension underpinnings are ready to call it quits. Our first clue to this came at 128 feet, the braking distance from 60 mph, which is no better than the Premium. Tires are truly what deliver a short stop for a car (more so than brake hardware, really), and the ones on the Sport don't appear to stick to the pavement any better than the entry-level 18-inchers.

    The Sport didn't show any improvement in our slalom and in the skid pad tests, either. The Sport's best slalom attempt was 65.2 mph, which trails the Premium we tested by 1.2 mph. The Sport likewise generated 0.80g of grip on the skid pad compared to the Premium's 0.83g result. Neither of these are bad results, but hey — this is the Sport Package, right?

    Bridgestone Potenza RE050A summer-type performance tires are a no-cost option on Sport Package-equipped Maximae. We'll bet both of the dollars in our bank account that these are the tires for which the tauter Sport underpinnings have been tailored.

    Feel the Burn
    After the Maxima Sport's fifth run through our slalom testing, the transmission decided it couldn't take the heat and defaulted into failsafe mode. The car assumed command of the manual shift gate and refused to serve up revs higher than 4,100 rpm.

    All functions returned to normal once the Max had a time out and things cooled off. Given a cool transmission and a few more attempts, it's possible that the Sport's slalom speed might have edged closer to the Premium's result.

    With the same 290-horsepower 3.5-liter V6 under the hood of every Maxima, the acceleration runs promised to be interesting. The Sport found more traction than the Premium, hitting 60 mph in 6.3 seconds (6 seconds with 1 foot of rollout as at a drag strip) and clicking off the quarter-mile in 14.5 seconds at 95.9 mph. For those keeping score at home, these results better those the Premium turned out by a few tenths of a second. Torque steer is remarkably absent, even though the 261 pound-feet of torque from the V6 is substantial.

    Part of the Maxima's confident personality is due to its pairing of the powerful yet tractable V6 with a brilliant continuously variable transmission (CVT), with which Nissan has proven that it is possible to merge the benefits of both a manual and an automatic with only a few of the downsides of either. Whether you're snapping off "downshifts" for engine braking, plodding through traffic or making a quick getaway, the CVT makes everything so effortless that you wonder why other automakers bother with traditional automatics anymore.

    We love the multiple personalities a vehicle can adopt thanks to a CVT, though this particular one's tendency to wilt in the heat suggests that the boys in the lab coats need to whip up a tranny cooler, stat.

    4get About 4DSC
    The 2009 Nissan Maxima SV is a sports tourer par excellence. The cabin itself doesn't put a patch of leather wrong, and its seats are sinfully cosseting while still providing the reassuring "don't worry, I've got you" support required for enthusiastic driving. And though its list of features is staggeringly long, the Maxima remains user-friendly and honest.

    Some of the styling details are fussy, as if the designer's chair was kicked while they were being penned, though the sharp 19-inch wheels of the Sport Package give the 2009 Nissan Maxima a shot of presence.

    Maybe that's the reason to tick the box for the Sport Package, then.

    The manufacturer provided Edmunds this vehicle for the purposes of evaluation.

    sotolux says:

    06:35 PM, 10/12/2009

    I drove both types of tires on the sport model and indeed found the the Bridgestone tires to transform the handling and feel of the car.  I find it strange you decided to drive a Sport model and not choose the summer rubber.  

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    Speed Read

    Featured Specs

    • 290-hp 3.5-liter V6
    • Sport-tuned suspension
    • 19-inch wheels
    • Continuously variable transmission

    What Works

    Stellar seats; confident chassis; transmission reads your mind.

    What Needs Work

    All-season tires don't do the chassis justice; transmission gets hot easily.

    Tags

    Specs & Performance

    Vehicle
    MakeNissan
    ModelMaxima
    Model year2009
    Style3.5 SV 4dr Sedan (3.5L 6cyl CVT)
    Base MSRP$32,650
    As-tested MSRP$37,380
    Options on test vehicleSport Package, Tech Package (Sport), Floor Mats and Trunk Mats
    Drive typeFront-wheel drive
    Transmission typeContinuously variable
    Transmission and axle ratios (x:1)Forward = 2.371 - 0.439; FD = 5.173
    Engine typeV6
    Displacement (cc/cu-in)3,498/213
    Block/head materialAluminum/Aluminum
    ValvetrainDOHC, 4 valves per cylinder, variable intake/exhaust-valve timing
    Compression ratio (x:1)10.6:1
    Redline (rpm)6,600
    Horsepower (hp @ rpm)290 @ 6,400
    Torque (lb-ft @ rpm)261 @ 4,400
    Brakes, front12.6-inch ventilated disc
    Brakes, rear12.1-inch ventilated disc
    Steering typeSpeed-sensitive hydraulic-assist rack-and-pinion power steering
    Steering ratio (x:1)15.2:1
    Suspension, frontIndependent, MacPherson struts, coil springs and stabilizer bar
    Suspension, rearIndependent, multilink, coil springs and stabilizer bar
    Tire size, frontP245/40R19 94V
    Tire size, rearP245/40R19 94V
    Tire brandGoodyear
    Tire modelEagle RS-A
    Tire typeAll-season
    Wheel size19-by-8.0 inches front and rear
    Wheel materialAluminum alloy
    Curb weight, mfr. claim (lbs.)3,579
    Curb weight, as-tested (lbs.)3,609
    Weight distribution, F/R (%)61.2/38.8
    Fuel typePremium
    Fuel tank capacity (gal)20.0
    EPA fuel economy (mpg)19 city/26 highway
    Edmunds observed (mpg)18.8
    Conditions for Testing
    Temperature (°F)78.8
    Elevation (ft.)1,121
    Wind (mph, direction)2.8 mph SW
    Performance
    0 - 30 (sec.)2.8
    0 - 45 (sec.)4.4
    0 - 60 (sec.)6.3
    0 - 75 (sec.)8.9
    1/4 mile (sec. @ mph)14.5 @ 95.9
    0-60 with 1-ft rollout (sec.)6.0
    30 - 0 (ft.)31
    60 - 0 (ft.)128
    Braking ratingAverage
    Slalom, 6 x 100 ft (mph)65.2
    Skid pad, 200 ft diameter (lateral g)0.80
    Handling ratingGood
    Sound level @ idle (db)40.6
    Sound level @ full throttle (db)76.4
    Sound level @ 70 mph cruise (db)66.7
    Acceleration commentsRemarkably easy to launch, the Maxima has little wheelspin regardless of launch technique. Quickest run was with transmission in "D", not "D Sport". Simulated shifts in "Manual" mode do not provide better acceleration.
    Braking commentsSolid pedal feel throughout, but unimpressive stopping distance. Fade apparent as well.
    Handling commentsSkid Pad: Despite sporty and well-controlled suspension, the Maxima's tires ultimately let it down despite an otherwise excellent chassis. Slalom: Excellent feel, response and sense of control for a car this big and heavy. Body motions are well-controlled and chassis is stable even over midcorner bumps.
    Specifications
    Length (in.)190.6
    Width (in.)73.2
    Height (in.)57.8
    Wheelbase (in.)109.3
    Front Track (in.)62.4
    Rear Track (in.)62.4
    Turning circle (ft)37.4
    Legroom, front (in.)43.8
    Legroom, rear (in.)34.6
    Headroom, front (in.)38.5
    Headroom, rear (in.)36.4
    Shoulder room, front (in.)56.3
    Shoulder room, rear (in.)55.1
    Seating capacity5
    Cargo volume (cu-ft)14.2
    Warranty Information
    Bumper-to-bumper3 years/36,000 miles
    Powertrain5 years/60,000 miles
    Corrosion5 years/Unlimited miles
    Roadside assistance3 years/36,000 miles
    Scheduled maintenanceNot Available
    Safety Information
    Front airbagsStandard
    Side airbagsStandard dual front
    Head airbagsStandard front and rear
    Knee airbagsNot Available
    Antilock brakes4-wheel ABS
    Electronic brake enhancementsBrake assist, electronic brakeforce distribution
    Traction controlStandard
    Stability controlStandard
    Rollover protectionNot Available
    Tire-pressure monitoring systemTire pressure monitoring
    Emergency assistance systemNot Available
    NHTSA crash test, driverBeing Researched
    NHTSA crash test, passengerBeing Researched
    NHTSA crash test, side frontBeing Researched
    NHTSA crash test, side rearBeing Researched
    NHTSA rollover resistanceBeing Researched
    CollapseSpecs and Performance Expand Collapse

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