Nissan rolled out the newest generation of its Maxima sport sedan just two years ago, and now it returns for 2018 with just a few enhancements.
Those include standard Android Auto connectivity (in addition to Apple CarPlay, added last year) and a new exterior colour, Carnelian Red, which was included on our test vehicle.
Prices for 2018 start at $36,990 for the base SV model. Other trim levels include the SL ($39,690); SR ($41,890); and the top-of-the-line Platinum ($44,150), which I tested for this report.
With the most-recent redesign, the Maxima moved into its eighth generation as Nissan鈥檚 flagship sedan. With all of the changes and its stunning good looks, this is the best Maxima ever.
Nissan bills the Maxima as the 鈥渇our-door sports car,鈥 and it鈥檚 powered by the latest VQ-series 3.5-litre V-6 engine, cranking out 300 horsepower and 261 foot-pounds of torque.
The engine directs power to the front wheels through a continuously variable automatic transmission. With front-wheel drive, however, the Maxima might not qualify as a true sports car to some purists.
Nevertheless, the Maxima is fun to drive, with sporty roadhandling and precise, predictable steering and braking. With the redesign, the Maxima now rides on a lighter, more-rigid chassis, which gives it that sporty handling.
It has decent fuel economy, as well. EPA ratings for 2018 are 21 mpg city/30 highway/25 combined.
This year鈥檚 Maxima also comes with the safety technology added late in the 2017 model year, including Intelligent Forward Collision Warning and Automatic Emergency Braking 2, standard on all models. Automatic emergency braking takes over when the system detects the possibility of rear-ending vehicles the Maxima is following.
My Platinum model鈥檚 seats were covered with premium cashmere Ascot leather, and the dash, upper door panels, armrests, centre console and steering wheel were Ascot leather, with diamond-quilted Alcantara inserts. The front seats were heated and cooled, and we had LED interior accent lighting, an eight-way power driver鈥檚 seat and a four-way power front passenger seat.
Also featured 鈥 borrowed from the Altima 鈥 are Nissan鈥檚 Zero Gravity front seats with sport bolstering. The seats are softer and more comfortable than before, thanks to a new three-layer foam design. There is power lumbar support for the driver鈥檚 seat, and a manual thigh-support extension for the driver as well.
The heated sport steering wheel has a flat bottom like you鈥檇 find on many sports cars, wrapped in the same Ascot leather as the seats, with an Alcantara insert.
There is a 60/40 split fold-down design for the rear seat to allow for extension of the trunk鈥檚 capacity. The trunk has 14.3 cubic feet of cargo space.
The Platinum鈥檚 standard Nissan91原创 audio system with navigation has an eight-inch colour display with touch control and voice recognition. The system also includes satellite radio and SiriusXM Travel Link, streaming audio via Bluetooth, hands-free text messaging, and two front illuminated USB connection ports for compatible devices.
Those ports are under a small door at the front of the centre console for easy access 鈥 they鈥檙e not hidden in the storage bin like they are on a lot of other vehicles.
The transmission shifted smoothly throughout the power band, and there was quite impressive acceleration from this drivetrain. It even came with steering-wheel-mounted paddle shifters to pace the car through a range of gears.
The CVT has a wider gear-ratio range for stronger acceleration from a standing start, and D-Step shifting logic that allows for rapid shifts at high throttle openings, Nissan says.
A Drive Mode Selector has Sport and Normal settings, which automatically adjust the throttle, transmission, steering and Active Sound Enhancement tuning.
In Sport mode, throttle response increases, the transmission alters its program for more aggressive shifting and more steering effort is required. The Active Sound Enhancement system sends more of the engine noise into the cabin.
When the new generation Maxima arrived, it came with the reworked VQ-series engine, which has more than 60 per cent new parts compared with the previous generation. It also features some technology adapted from the Nissan GT-R supercar, such as sodium-filled valves.
The car also features the new 鈥渟wipe to meter鈥 feature, which allows the driver to swipe the navigation map from the centre display to bring it up in the standard seven-inch driver-assist display in front of the driver in the middle of the instrument cluster.
Besides the cashmere, interior colour choices include charcoal and camel.
The Maxima is a full-size sedan that competes against such stalwarts as the Toyota Avalon, Chevrolet Impala, Chrysler 300 and Dodge Charger.
The cabin has been crafted to rival those of luxury vehicles. With the redesign, the Maxima was made lower and longer than the previous generation, which arrived for 2009.
We had plenty of room for our knees and legs both in the front and the rear, and three medium-size adults could sit fairly comfortably together on the rear bench seat. There is a pull-down armrest with dual cupholders for use when you鈥檙e carrying just two people in the back seat.
Among other standard Maxima features are four-wheel power/vented antilock disc brakes with electronic brake-force distribution and brake assist, rearview monitor, active noise cancellation, dual-zone automatic climate control and a HomeLink universal gate/garage opener.
A dual-panel panoramic moon roof is standard on SL and Platinum models, and there are also large dual chrome tailpipe finishers.
Other safety features on my tester included adaptive cruise control, blind-spot warning with rear cross-traffic alert, stability and traction control, tire-pressure monitoring with Nissan鈥檚 Easy-Fill alert system, and a security system with vehicle immobilizer..