A Svelte Redesign for Nissan's Compact Crossover
We were positive
the snazzy SUV coming up behind us on a rural road outside Nashville
was an expensive luxury SUV. The boomerang-shaped LED lights shimmering
off the front end looked striking, but it took us a beat to realize what
it was.
It wasn't some high-dollar sport-ute, but rather the
same vehicle we were driving: the redesigned, and now
built-in-Tennessee, 2014 Nissan Rogue. More than just a new face, this
new compact crossover has been upgraded from top to bottom.
With
an all-new body, clever interior packaging and some pretty superb fuel
mileage claims, the new Rogue will offer an honest challenge to the
segment-leading Honda CR-V and Toyota RAV4. The fact that the Rogue
looks so good on the outside is just another reason to take a second
look.
A French and Japanese Collaboration
Although this
second-gen Rogue is all-new, dimensionally it's very similar to the old
version. The 106.5-inch wheelbase is only 0.6 inch longer than the
outgoing model, while overall length is actually 1 inch shorter. Width
is up by 1.5 inches while height has increased slightly, too.
While
the original Rogue was based on a platform shared with Nissan's Sentra
sedan, the new Rogue uses a structure called the Common Module Family
(CMF), an architecture developed with its corporate partner Renault. "We
took the best of Nissan and Renault's C segments and melded them
together," said Carla Bailo, senior vice president of R&D at Nissan
Americas.
Besides shared efficiencies at play here, clever
interior packaging allowed Nissan to offer a third-row option for the
new Rogue, something its archrivals from Honda and Toyota don't have.
Taro
Ueda, vice president of Nissan Design America, said the key word for
the Rogue's new styling was "Biokinetic Synchronicity." That's two
words, but who's counting. Strange Japanese-isms aside, Ueda said they
needed to bring the Rogue more in line with Nissan's new brand identity,
so now it looks like a mini Pathfinder.
How It Gets 33 MPG on the Highway
But
while the 2014 Nissan Rogue has a fancy new Euro-esque architecture and
svelte body, the 2.5-liter four-cylinder engine under the hood produces
the same 170 horsepower and 175 pound-feet of torque as the previous
version. It still isn't direct-injected and it's still mated to a
continuously variable transmission (CVT).
Sounds familiar, but
there is some new stuff going on under the hood. The compression ratio
was raised from 9.6:1 to 10.0, while the engine now features both intake
and exhaust variable valve timing. The new-generation Xtronic CVT, just
as with the new Altima, was made considerably more efficient. Nissan
engineers also incorporated "direct-step" logic to simulate shifts at
higher rpm, per customer feedback.
Put it all together and Nissan
says the Rogue's fuel economy has been raised by 18 percent despite its
larger size and extra 100 pounds of weight. Official estimates for the
front-drive Rogue are 28 combined/26 city/33 highway, while the
all-wheel-drive version should deliver 25 city/32 highway. This puts the
new Rogue at the same level as the class-leading 2014 Mazda CX-5.
Does It Drive as Well As It Looks?
Driving
around the not-so-mean streets of Nashville, the Rogue's MacPherson
strut front and multilink rear suspension provided a quiet and
comfortable ride. Good sound-deadening and hum-free all-season tires on
17-inch alloy wheels kept road noise to perfectly acceptable levels
while smoothing bumps nicely (slightly less so with the standard 18s on
the top-level SL).
Point the heftily weighted electric steering
toward the open road, peg the right pedal and you're suddenly reminded
it has a CVT. At half throttle and above the transmission winds the
four-cylinder out incessantly, which only serves to highlight that the
engine can get slightly thrashy at high revs. Of course, the benefit to
this high-rpm running is that the Rogue is no slouch in acceleration.
For now all Nissan would tell us is that they expect it to be "a tick
quicker than the previous Rogue." We hit 60 mph in 8.6 seconds with the
last Rogue we tested.
But the CVT's preferred modus operandi is
to bring the revs as low as possible for fuel economy purposes. It lugs
the engine so much at lower speeds that some bad vibrations make their
way into the cabin. Pressing the Sport button raises the revs slightly,
but you'll forsake the mileage benefits.
New for 2014, all Rogues
come with what Nissan calls Active Trace Control and Active Ride
Control. The trace control (which can be turned off) automatically
applies brakes to various wheels in an effort to keep the Rogue on the
intended line you're taking. Basically the system attempts to curb
understeer both on corner entry and exit, which is especially helpful in
wet conditions. We fiddled with it on a wet skid pad and while it's not
dramatic, you notice the difference when it's not on.
The
purpose of the ride control system is to reduce the Rogue's body
motions. It adds throttle and/or brakes depending on the situation to
minimize bobbing over big bumps. It only comes into play at speeds above
25 mph and, as with the trace control, most owners will never know it's
there.
The Upgraded Interior Won't Go Unnoticed
It's hard
not to be impressed with the 2014 Nissan Rogue's fabulous new interior.
With a high degree of soft-touch materials, it has a notably upmarket
look and feel. We particularly appreciated the well-padded door and
center armrests, although the center console cupholders allow water
bottles to just flop around.
There are large, easy-to-read analog
gauges, straightforward climate controls and even the base S
front-drive model ($23,350 with $860 destination, $24,340 for the S AWD)
comes with a 5-inch display screen, a back-up camera and Bluetooth. In
the case of the Premium package-equipped SV AWD we spent most of our
time driving ($27,860), it had a 7-inch touchscreen with navigation,
power tailgate, blind spot and lane departure warning, moving object
detection and Nissan's Around View Monitor.
The NASA-inspired
"zero gravity" front seats are superb and the 40/20/40-split rear seats
have padding in all the right places. Even the middle seat is livable.
Other improvements include a folding center armrest, 9 inches of
fore/aft seat travel plus reclining seatbacks, though the
behind-the-shoulder lever position is awkward to reach when sitting. The
rear doors now open a whopping 77 degrees, which makes hopping in and
out a breeze.
Is the Third Row Worth It?
Only the S and SV
models have the option of a third row. It's called the Family package
($1,190 S, $940 SV) and it also adds run-flat tires since there's less
room for a spare. Why no third row for the top-level SL? Nissan says it
already has a $30,000-plus three-row crossover, called the Pathfinder.
Nissan
openly admits the cramped third row is just an "occasional seat" best
suited for children, but this describes most third-row accommodations in
vehicles of this size. Of course, cargo room suffers with that third
row in place as there's only 9.4 cubic feet available. Fold both rows
down and the Rogue opens up to offer 70 cubic feet of total space.
Stick
with the two-row Rogue and you get the benefit of Nissan's new
Divide-N-Hide cargo system. This rather ingenious two-piece cargo
compartmentalization offers 18 configurations. It allows you to separate
out wet and dirty boots and clothes, hold groceries in place and even
offers a three-tiered shelving system, if you include the underfloor
storage.
The Bottom Line
If you like the idea of a sporty compact SUV, the 2014 Nissan Rogue isn't for you. Try the 2014 Ford Escape instead.
The
Rogue is all about no-fuss transportation from A to B, and it delivers
on that promise as well as anything in the class. In the process it
offers flawless usability, competitive mileage numbers and a first-rate
interior. In other words, it does all the things a compact crossover
should. Oh, and it doesn't look half-bad either.
As read on: http://www.edmunds.com/nissan/rogue/2014/road-test.html