Executive Editor Michael Jordan says:
Maybe I've just lost my taste for German sedans. Now they've all become the same generic sausage, only cut into different lengths. Their differences in character and style seem like the result of battles fought long ago and far, far away. The Mercedes-Benz E550 sums up everything about these cars that has become irrelevant, from the unpleasant roundup of styling themes from the past to the overly processed driving experience. As always, I'm looking for the Real Thing, and this is not it.
So it's no wonder that I'm willing to sign up for the Infiniti M56S. Of these two cars, the Infiniti seems to be the one that really embraces modernity, something you can see in the way it has at last turned the styling themes and ergonomic layout of its cabin into a place that is unique to this car company, an identifiable style that Infiniti has been searching for since the original Q45 was introduced in 1990. The undulating exterior sheet metal isn't quite up to the same standard, but it tries to make a relatively new statement at least.
The M56S also drives much like I'd imagine a Q45 to drive. It has a useful amount of poise on the road, which makes it more alive than the somewhat soggy non-S example that I've also spent time in. It's a little too heavy on its feet, though, and it throws its weight from side to side and feels bogged down in wheels that are just too heavy besides. Even so, this car has a kind of toughness when it comes to fast driving that I like a lot. Like every Nissan, the M56S is dominated by its engine, and I particularly like the way this V8 seems to come on the cam and rip at high rpm, something that makes the engine far more dynamic than the industrial (although powerful) motor under the hood of the E-Class.
The German cars in this category have become downsize clones of their larger, luxury siblings, and the forthcoming 2011 BMW 5 Series shows that even BMW has given in to this influence. The Infiniti M56S tries harder to be right size, much like the BMW 5 Series has been up until now, and that's the kind of car that I want to drive into the future.