New models - Nissan - X-TrailEfficient diesel completes Nissan X-Trail rangeChoice of auto or AWD – but not both – on diesel Nissan X-Trail SUV, from $35,38016 Oct 2014 NISSAN has added a comparatively small 1.6-litre turbo-diesel engine option to its X-Trail medium SUV range, delivering a lower official combined fuel consumption figure than the segment’s top-sellers, while being only slightly off the pace on performance. Producing 96kW of power and 320Nm of torque, the X-Trail’s four-cylinder includes idle-stop technology and is rated to consume 5.3 litres of diesel per 100 kilometres on the combined cycle in both front-drive and all-wheel drive configurations. With a starting price of $35,380 plus on-road costs for the front-drive TS variant, Nissan has also positioned the diesel X-Trail as more affordable than the cheapest oil-burners offered on its top-five selling medium SUV contemporaries. The entry-level diesel X-Trail’s standard automatic continuously variable transmission (CVT) is arguably the more desirable feature at this end of the market, compared with closest price rivals, the Toyota RAV4 ($35,690) and Subaru Forester ($35,490), that trade an auto ’box for all-wheel drive. Nissan charges a $300 premium for AWD on the diesel X-Trail, but this comes at the expense of automatic transmission availability – and Nissan Australia confirmed to GoAuto that the chances of releasing an automatic AWD X-Trail in future are remote. Larger engines in both the Toyota (2.2-litre, 110kW/340Nm) and Subaru (2.0-litre, 108kW/350Nm) outgun the X-Trail on engine performance but at the expense of higher official fuel figures (5.6L/100km and 5.9L/100km respectively). Diesel X-Trails are offered in five-seat configuration only, with the TS sharing equipment levels with the petrol ST and including a 5.0-inch colour dash display with reversing camera multiple audio inputs, and Bluetooth smartphone connectivity, keyless entry and start, cruise control, 17-inch alloy wheels and a roof spoiler. The upmarket TL diesel is equivalent to the petrol Ti, is priced at $46,280 for the 2WD and packs advanced safety technologies such as lane departure warning, blind spot monitoring, moving object detection, LED headlights and rain-sensing wipers. Other luxuries include leather upholstery, electric front seat adjustment and heating, dual-zone climate control, a 7.0-inch hi-res screen with digital radio, sat-nav and 360-degree around-view camera display, a powered tailgate with hands-free sensor opening, a self-dimming interior mirror, a sunroof, 18-inch alloys, roof rails and privacy glass. Manual diesel X-Trails are rated to tow braked trailers of up to 2000kg, while all other variants can tow 1500kg unbraked. According to VFACTS, Nissan sold 8991 X-Trails in Australia to the end of September this year, making it fourth most popular medium SUV after the Mazda CX-5 (16,643 units), Toyota RAV4 (13,335 units) and Subaru Forester (9667 units).
Read more4th of April 2014 Driven: Nissan X-Trail hits the road from $27,990Third-generation X-Trail to restore Nissan’s standing in the medium SUV sales race24th of February 2014 Nissan prices new-gen X-Trail from $27,990Third-gen Nissan X-Trail is cheaper than before and can be had with seven seatsAll new modelsAlfa Romeo Abarth Alpine Alpina Audi Aston Martin BMW Bentley Chery Brabham Chrysler Chevrolet Cupra Citroen DS Dodge Fiat Ferrari Foton Ford Great Wall FPV Haval GWM Honda Holden Hyundai HSV Isuzu Infiniti Jeep Jaguar Lamborghini Kia LDV Land Rover Lotus Lexus Maserati Mahindra McLaren Mazda Mercedes-Benz Mercedes-AMG Mini MG Nissan Mitsubishi Pagani Opel Porsche Peugeot Ram Proton Rolls-Royce Renault Saab Rover Smart Skoda Subaru SsangYong Tesla Suzuki Volkswagen Toyota Volvo X-Trail pricing
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