QX80 First Drive: 2011 Infiniti QX56 overcomes the odds


The Infiniti QX80 (formerly called the Infiniti QX56 until 2013) is a full-size luxury SUV marketed by Nissan's luxury division Infiniti. The first-generation QX56 was built in the United States and is based on the first-generation Armada. The second-generation model was released in 2010 as a model produced in Japan, which used the sixth-generation Patrol (later also marketed as the second-generation Armada since 2016) as the base vehicle instead. Since the 2014 model year in 2013, the vehicle was renamed to the QX80 as Infiniti renamed their entire product line under a new nomenclature.

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Ask any braniac elementary school student what happened to the dinosaurs, and they'll tell you they turned into birds. While the mechanics are a bit more complicated than a momma T-Rex hatching a brood of yellow finches, modern science would seem to agree with the concept. When we were in school, the common perception was that those massive lizards parted ways with terra firma courtesy of a jumbo-sized meteor smack. Our Earth Science books called it a mass extinction, and they accompanied the definition with helpful illustrations that depicted contemplative Brontosaurus and Triceratops herds looking off into the distance as a chunk of orange sky plummeted toward the horizon.

So you can't really blame us for thinking that the SUV would follow a similar natural path. When fuel prices shot up, many rejoiced at the thought of global body-on-frame extinction. This was the event some had been patiently waiting for since the high-riding people movers first supplanted the minivan as the family cruiser of choice. And while we've certainly seen weaker species succumb to the heat of pressure from more efficient breeds, the strong continue to soldier on, slowly adapting to a world grown hostile to anything big and thirsty. If you believe Infiniti, that's exactly what the 2011 QX56 has done – evolved.

Ask Infiniti why they bothered to build a third generation QX at all, and they'll politely tell you that the average buyer is one of the youngest and most affluent luxury vehicle consumers out there. The average guy or gal with a QX56 fob in their pocket is 45 years old – a full seven years younger than the national average for all luxury owners – and the luxury arm from Nissan says that its SUV is a sort of brand gateway drug that will have buyers returning to showrooms for years to come.

Instead of abandoning the dwindling large SUV segment altogether, the company has given its flagship QX56 a whole new set of bones. The truck is now based on the globe-crushing Nissan Patrol instead of the Nissan Armada platform, and as such, the dimensions have stayed fairly uniform every which way but up. The new generation bears a nearly identical track compared to the 2010 model, though the truck is three inches shorter thanks to a revised roof rack system. Even so, headroom remains unimpeded.

This isn't a segment that embraces shrinkage, so it's safe to assume that jaws won't drop when consumers discover that this big-boy SUV retains the same waist size. What is surprising is that Infiniti has let the truck's styling evolve into something that fits alongside its G and M siblings. The hard lines of the Armada DNA have been replaced with a calmer aesthetic thanks to a host of gentle curves and arches. Up front, the old blingtastic grille has been swept into a familial "double arch" design that's more cohesive with the rest of the vehicle. The QX56 still holds onto its low-mounted headlights from the last generation, though they've morphed into a much sleeker, form-fitting shape. In photos, the SUV may resemble everyone's favorite white whale, but the look is surprisingly cohesive in the flesh.

From the side, your eye is immediately drawn to those fender vents. The pieces are one part wince, one part engineered awesome, but all Pep Boys. At least the driver's side inlet is actually functional and operates as the intake point for the engine, but the passenger-side chrome is there simply for symmetry's sake. We're not quite sure what we would have preferred to show up in their place, but the vents look like an afterthought borrowed from the Buick parts bin.

If you believe Infiniti, the interior in the QX56 was inspired by the inside of an executive jet. We'd love to be able say whether or not that's a fair comparison, but honestly, we've never gotten within whiffing distance of a private aircraft's leather chairs. We can say that should you ever find yourself fortunate enough to be skimming the skies in a multimillion-dollar airliner, we hope the cabin is as nice as what you find in the new Infiniti bruiser. The front seats are a kind of infinitely-adjustable guilty pleasure. Even at this price point, manufacturers like Cadillac have no problem supplying you with leather-dipped versions of the same thrones found in lesser trucks, but the buckets in the Infiniti are as comfortable as can be.

Infiniti has all but banished hard plastics from the cabin in favor of plenty of leather and other soft touch goodies. The center stack is trimmed in the same plush hide as the seats, complete with excellent stitching. A smoked burlwood of some exotic origin fills the spaces between the vehicle controls, and a handful of chrome accents crop up in all the right places. You won't find any design-shockers on the dash, but everything is easy to access and the controls don't require a computer science degree to navigate.

One of the most useful features onboard is the company's Around View Monitor, a bit of tech that's been popping up in Infiniti models for the past couple of years. The system uses a total of five cameras to help you figure out exactly where the QX56 is in relation to objects around it. If it sounds like a useless piece of kit, we suggest hopping on down to your closest Infiniti dealership for a demonstration. It makes short work of parking lots, detritus-laden garages and towing a trailer in tight spaces.

The QX56 is an eight-passenger craft thanks, in part, to a second row comprised of two buckets and a console instead of the standard bench. Infiniti managed to stretch the second-row leg room to a hefty 41 inches, besting its closest competitor, the Mercedes-Benz GL450, by a full inch and a half. Even with Kareem Abdul Jabar in the pilot's seat, there's plenty of room in the second row for the long-legged. For 2011, the SUV also boasts a slick new power folding seat on the passenger side. Push a button and the unit collapses to make ingress and egress a snap for passengers in the third row.

Speaking of the way-back seats, Infiniti has worked in a new power mechanism that can fold the third row flat to make room for additional cargo. The unit isn't exactly lightening quick, but it beats the pants off of fiddling with tethers, levers and locks. The third row also comes equipped with a power reclining feature that goes a long way toward making the seats more habitable for well-fed adults. We still wouldn't want to spend more than an hour back there, but the space should be more than enough for kids up to tween age.

All in all, the interior is well executed no matter where you're sitting. Though, we aren't entirely without gripe. We would've enjoyed more user-friendly steering wheel controls, as the cruise is operated by no less than five buttons and toggles, and the slew of switchgear is somewhat overwhelming as you're driving along at speed. Likewise, Infiniti has chosen to nestle the adjustments for the side-view mirrors near the driver's left knee instead of on the door panel. We found ourselves rocking back and forth like Dustin Hoffman in Rainman as we tried to find a visibility sweet-spot.

Get past the side-view mirror woes and into traffic, and it quickly becomes clear just how much work went into bringing the third-generation QX56 to life. By moving to the truck to the Nissan Patrol platform, the company managed to slim the curb weight by a healthy 161 pounds. Couple that to a 5.6-liter, direct-injection V8 with 400 horsepower and 413 pound-feet of torque, and the new SUV has no problem getting out of its own way.

Infiniti says that other than the displacement, the engine shares nothing with the lump in the 2010 QX. Despite the additional 80 horsepower and 20 lb-ft, the new powerplant serves up 14 percent better fuel economy, according to the EPA. That means drivers can expect close to 14 mpg city and 20 mpg highway – not entirely impressive, but you then again, you can't tow 8,500 pounds with a Toyota Prius.

Those fuel-economy numbers are partially due to the fact that Infiniti threw an extra three gears into the QX transmission, resulting in an all-new seven-speed unit that keeps the big V8 breathing easy at highway speeds. The 2011 model also boasts a revised four-wheel drive system. Under normal driving conditions, all of the engine's power is directed toward the rear wheels, though up to 50 percent of the grunt can be ushered to the front as necessary. The driver can still lock the system in a 50/50 split via a four-high button, and four-low will still pull you through the really nasty stuff should you ever venture off of your pea-gravel driveway.

Abandoning the Armada platform in favor of Patrol guts had another benefit for Infiniti engineers: stiffness. The company boasts that the new high-rider has less body roll than most luxury sedans thanks in part to a 26 percent increase in torsional rigidity in both the body and frame. Less flex is good, even if you never plan on shuffling the big QX56 through a slalom. Those buyers willing to lay down the extra $5,800 for the Deluxe Touring Package will also enjoy what Infiniti calls the Hydraulic Body Motion Control System – essentially two fluid reservoirs front and rear that send liquid from one side to another to reduce roll and vibration. Trust us when we say it makes a huge difference on how the SUV behaves on the road.

The numbers all talk a pretty good talk, and for the most part, their sum means that the QX56 drives more like a big sedan than a lumbering brute. Power from that reworked V8 is more than ample, and when you give the truck the spurs, it responds with capable speed and a flurry of seamless shifts. Thanks in part to its lower overall height, stability feels greatly improved over the old Armada-based QX, and you find yourself carrying more speed through tight corners than should be possible. We would have liked to have seen more communicative steering in a vehicle of this size, though – the steering wheel offers next to no feedback and was overly sensitive, resulting in lane wandering of the worst variety. Likewise, the brakes, while plenty powerful, are controlled by a less-than-confidence-inspiring pedal. We don't expect racecar characteristics here, but a little firmness never hurts.

For our money, if the luxury SUV genus is to survive for our posterity, it might as well look like the QX56. For 2011, the truck's engineers have managed to give the creation the camouflage it needs to survive in a world dominated by new breeds of crossover, all while keeping the base price identical to the 2010 model – the new Q starts at $56,700 for the two-wheel drive model. It's more comfortable, more controllable, more efficient and more powerful than its ancestors. There may come a day when the QX mutates from the body-on-frame beast we have come to know and love into a more svelte unibody design, but we hope we aren't around to see it.


- First Drive: 2011 Infiniti QX56 overcomes the odds — Autoblog
 
Interior design & style : liked it!
Exterior design & style : come on guys? are you graduated from '90s korean design school?
 
2011 Infiniti QX56 - First Drive Review (C&D)

The outgoing Infiniti QX56 was a vehicle that never made much sense to us. After all, you could get almost all of its equipment—save a few electronic trinkets—on the otherwise identical Nissan Armada, and you’d save thousands in the process. But the QX has been redesigned for 2011, migrating to a platform shared with the Nissan Patrol SUV, a Toyota Land Cruiser competitor in the rest of the world. The result is a machine more perfectly suited to its primary mission: ferrying well-off families to and from the vacation house, mall, and celebrity-chef restaurants that serve micro-hydrogenated candied aardvark liver.

The architecture remains body-on-frame, but you’d never know it from the smooth ride and refined personality of the new QX. Where the old Titan-based QX56 was a truckish brute with yesteryear interior tech and a rough-around-the-edges persona, the 2011 version is bristling with up-to-the-minute electronics and a suave character that matches its sleek new exterior.

Our drive route wended through the hollers and hills surrounding Louisville, Kentucky, and we sampled both rear-drive and four-wheel-drive models. Ride quality was equally good on either the standard 20-inch wheels or the step-up 22s, although it must be said that the roads in Kentucky were merely lumpy rather than broken and frost-heaved. Once a QX shows up in Michigan, we’ll see if our opinion of the ride holds. The 4WD QX we drove was equipped with a new hydraulic body control system. The system is similar to that offered in Audi’s RS5 coupe, in that it feeds hydraulic fluid from shock to shock via a valve system as a means of controlling body motions, and replaces the anti-roll bars of the base QX. In truth, however, we couldn’t feel much of a difference between the two suspension setups; head toss and body roll were handled equally well in each of the vehicles we drove.

One big difference did exist between the two models, however. In both rear-drive and 4WD QXs, the steering is feather light—all the better for freshly manicured desperate housewives—but the feedback is more positive in the two-wheel-drive QX, and on-center stability is better there, too. The 2011 QX’s steering pales in comparison to the rack of the model it replaces, which was pretty lively and talkative for being installed in something the size of Rush Limbaugh’s ego. Of course, steering feel matters to buyers in this segment about as much as whether or not their SUV can turn into a sweet robot with fists made of lasers. We care about both of those things, but really the new QX’s steering is as good as it needs to be.

Huge, Roomy, and Powerful

The new QX is wider and longer than the outgoing model, but it’s also shorter in height by three inches and has a wheelbase that’s been trimmed by 2.1 inches. Infiniti says weight is down by 160 pounds in comparable 4WD models. Still, this thing is huge, paralleling the immensity of its primary competitors, stuff like the Mercedes-Benz GL-class and the Cadillac Escalade. Being gigantic, the QX56 can accommodate up to eight passengers in its three rows; the second row comes standard with two captain’s chairs and a cavernous center console, but a 60/40-split folding bench is available. The three-person third row is tight versus those of the class leaders, but, truthfully, are you ever going to sit in it? No, you’ll shove the kids back there, and they’ll fit fine; Infiniti also has thoughtfully added a power recline function to the final row, and it really helps the livability.

Even though the QX56 badge carries over, denoting a 5.6-liter engine underhood, the powerplant is new and direct injected. First appearing in the 2011 M56 sedan, this 5.6-liter V-8 makes a highly competitive 400 hp at 5800 rpm and 413 lb-ft at 4000 rpm, up from the old 5.6’s 320 hp and 393 lb-ft. The previous QX used a five-speed automatic, but the 2011 iteration has two more forward ratios. Between the slight weight loss, direct fuel injection, and the extra gears, fuel economy is up a couple of mpg to 14 city and 20 highway. The all-wheel-drive system is an evolution of the current truck’s, and it still features an Auto setting, which can funnel all torque to the rear wheels depending on available traction; a 4 High setting, which locks the torque at 50 percent front and 50 percent rear; and a 4 Low setting. There no longer is a setting to lock in rear-wheel drive. Maximum towing has decreased from 9000 pounds to 8500, still plenty for towing a boat or a couple of snowmobiles.

Infiniti says the new QX is quicker than its forebear to 60 mph, but you can’t tell much of a difference by the seat of your pants. Still, this is not a slow truck. We tested the last QX to 60 in 7.1 seconds, and it’s shocking how something pushing three tons can get moving that quickly. The exhaust note is as glorious as before, too. The biggest improvement is in overall refinement. The old powertrain was pulled from the Titan pickup truck, and while it was quick and fun, there was a hairiness that’s been ironed out of the new setup, which must now pull double duty in a luxury sports sedan. The power delivery and gearswaps are silky smooth, and the overall feel is befitting of a luxury vehicle; it suffers from none of the touchy throttle woes of its Infiniti FX stablemate.

A Real Luxury Truck This Time

Refinement is a key word for the interior, too, which is no longer a lowly, plasticky Nissan cabin playing dress-up. This is a true luxury barge now, quiet and stylish inside, with handsome wood (stained with an attractive dark-to-light gradient) trimming the dash and doors, along with stitched leather smeared across the center console, door panels, and center armrest. The gauges are highly legible, and they feature some pretty cool Spirograph-style background graphics. The front seats are very comfortable and there’s lots of legroom for second-row riders. Acres of glass make everything feel bright and airy, and we like that the dashboard is low. Forward visibility is very good, although the entry-assist handle on the A-pillar is a little too close for comfort.

Standard equipment includes heated front seats, a power liftgate, three-zone climate control, Bluetooth and USB connectivity, an eight-inch touch-screen display, navigation, Infiniti’s Around View multi-camera monitor, XM satellite radio with NavTraffic and NavWeather, and a Zagat restaurant guide that ties into the nav system. A Theater package can be ordered to get two seven-inch screens mounted in the back of the front-seat headrests; they can handle two different inputs, and a third source can be viewed on the nav screen when the vehicle’s in park. Infiniti also has included something it calls a tire-pressure inflation indicator, which piggybacks onto the tire-pressure monitoring system. When owners go to add air to the tire, the inflation indicator flashes the hazard lights all around, including on the side mirrors, as the pressure nears the specified 35 psi, finally beeping the horn when the proper pressure is reached. If you overinflate, you hear an extra honk, and the system then flashes the lights and so on as you let air out.

Buyers first choose rear- or four-wheel drive and then climb the options ladder. The $2450 Theater package is the first rung, and it must be ordered to get the second-row bench (a no-cost substitution at that point) and the $5800 Deluxe Touring package. The DT package includes some pretty handsome 22-inch wheels, the hydraulic body-control system, nicer seat leather, a ventilation function for the front seats, heated outboard second-row seats, and an upgraded climate-control system with odor filtration. Frankly, we’d stop there if it were our money. That’s because the top-rung Technology pack, which requires the DT package, includes all of the incessantly beeping nanny items we came to loathe on our long-term FX50S—laser-based cruise control, lane-departure prevention, Distance Control Assist, Intelligent Brake Assist—and only one we like, blind-spot monitoring. It also adds adaptive front headlamps. Infiniti allows you to turn off all of the overlord-ish tech via a couple buttons, but we figure the $2850 would be better spent on a driving school where QX owners would learn how to stay in their lane, properly use the braking system of their vehicle, and watch the road ahead of them for things they might, you know, hit. Is this really too much to ask?

Hey, while we’re asking for stuff, we’d like to request an explanation for the fender vents. To call them tacky would be an insult to boy-racer wings, LED washer nozzles, and Liberace. It’s a shame, too, since the exterior styling is otherwise pretty rockin’. (To be fair, some here aren’t so keen.) Gone is the funky geometry of the Armada-based QX, replaced by taut, athletic styling, and the swept-back headlamps, clean rear end, and sculpted hood connect this new model to the rest of the Infiniti lineup. The tall greenhouse and low window sills that cheer up the cabin help the exterior styling, too, combining with door bottoms that curve under the rockers to cut down the visual height of the body sides. Save for the huge disjoint of the fender vents, this is a handsome truck. At least one of the vents is functional; the driver’s-side vent feeds additional air to the intake box, while the other vent is merely open to the fender well.

Cargo volume behind the first row is down by a couple of cubic feet to 95.1, but the space is so cavernous you won’t miss them. The load floor is high, though, and much of the new QX’s lengthening comes from the long rear bumper cover designed to hide away the hitch receiver. It creates a huge shelf aft of the hatch frame just begging for stuff to be dragged across it, gouging and scratching the paint. If a clear vinyl covering or bumper plate are on the list of dealer-installed accessories, we’d suggest you order one of them.

Same Pricing, Better Focus

The entry-level 2WD QX56 costs $57,650, and a 4WD model starts at $60,750, a smidge higher than last year owing to an $85 hike on the destination charge. The QX is a deal compared to the Escalade, the GL550, and the Lexus GX460, and you’re getting more truck for your money than before. Yeah, the old one was a little friskier, a little more fun to drive, and a little more capable. But this new one is more powerful, much more luxurious, and much more likely to cause a splash at the country club. While huge, V-8–powered, body-on-frame luxury SUVs aren’t exactly in step with the times, the 2011 QX56 is much more in step with its mission. Of course, we just wish that also included turning into a sweet robot with fists made of lasers—maybe for the third generation?


- 2011 Infiniti QX56 - First Drive Review - Auto Reviews - Car and Driver
 
I think they tried to make it to look funky, but funky design doesn't work in a big SUV.

Does it offer the option of a diesel engine, at least?
 
That is one of the saddest things I have ever seen. I hope to never have to see one, other than in information material containing words of warning...
 
It's not like I have a prejudice against the different, I like the Mercedes CLS for example. But this is just plain hideous.
 
^Exactly! I think it looks great. Has a very powerful stance and doesn't look like a common SUV. Infiniti went very bold with this one and it actually has some of the Infiniti M in the design as well. The interior is fantastic and looks very sophisticated.
 
Different can be good but ugly is always ugly :D

Like Kowalski says, the CLS is a great example of different, bold and good. This is in the same leauge as the Aztek.

Well-put, guys. Different can work, but there's alot in this design that could of been resolved but wasn't. The overall side is fine, except for those unforgivable fender vents, which are the definition of tacky. The rear is a bit amateurish. But the most unresolved part is when you see the front....the grill seems horribly integrated. There's too much upright sheetmetal above the headlamps. The interior is nice except there's too much black plastic on the middle console. I think the idea or concept is good, but the execution is lacking.
 
2011 Infiniti QX56 First Drive (Edmunds)

Our 2011 Infiniti QX56 takes us to the Louisville Slugger factory. We order up 34 inches of Northern White Ash with a blacksmith finish and our name burned into the wood, just like Jeter's. It's the same size as the bat Babe Ruth used to hit his 714 home runs, but this isn't some modern reproduction of a historical artifact. Big-leaguers still swing wooden bats and the Hillerich & Bradsby Company still carves them from blanks in Louisville, Kentucky.

People still drive full-size SUVs, too. Of course, we talk about them like they're woolly mammoths — oversize, inefficient vehicles on the fast track to extinction. But tell that to your neighbor with three kids and the horse trailer.

He's one reason Infiniti is keeping the QX56 around for another generation. The fact that the QX has consistently pulled in 10 percent of Infiniti's sales since its 2004 introduction is another.


However, unlike our new Slugger or the QX56 Infiniti has been selling for six years, the 2011 Infiniti QX56 won't be built in the United States, but in Kyushu, Japan. It's based on the latest Nissan Patrol, a body-on-frame SUV the Kyushu plant has been building in one form or another since 1951.

You might think the change of venue would result in a vastly different vehicle. Yet, the 2011 Infiniti QX56 ends up remarkably similar in size, personality and even appearance. The automaker has even managed to price it within $650 of the 2010 model.

Still Has a V8
Under the hood is a 400-horsepower direct-injected version of Nissan's 5.6-liter V8 with variable valve timing and lift, which provides this old-fashioned stuff known as torque — 413 pound-feet at 4,000 rpm. It's enough to easily get our nearly 3-ton QX up to pace with the interstate herd.

Infiniti officials tell us the 2011 QX56 will be "slightly quicker" to get to 60 mph than last year's QX56, which had the non-D.I. 5.6-liter rated at 320 hp and 393 lb-ft. That translates to about 7 seconds flat, which is a few tenths quicker than the Cadillac Escalade (the QX's chief rival, according to Infiniti) but a few tenths slower than the Toyota Sequoia (its No. 2 rival).

The QX56's V8 has the most character of the three, though. You can feel the power build as engine speed climbs (peak horsepower occurs at 5,800 rpm), and the soundtrack grows in intensity without getting too loud. It's a lot like driving the 420-hp M56 sedan, in spite of the QX's lower horsepower rating and 1,800 extra pounds.

Infiniti's seven-speed automatic transmission replaces the old five-speed automatic this year. It's a major contributor to the 2011 Infiniti QX56's improved fuel economy. Infiniti expects both two-wheel-drive and four-wheel-drive QX56s to earn a 14 city/20 highway mpg rating from the EPA, versus 12/18 and 12/17 for last year's trucks.

The transmission has a manual-shift mode and the familiar downshift rev-matching feature (barely detectable in the QX), and picks up a tow-haul mode. The claimed 8,500-pound tow rating dips slightly from last year's 8,900-pound limit, which probably won't faze your neighbor. He'll be fixated on the newly standard Around View Monitor perimeter camera system, which makes it easy to hook up his trailer and evade begonias through tight turns.

Off-roading is not popular among the 60 percent of Infiniti QX56 owners who choose 4WD, but the new truck still has low-range gearing in case you need it. However, don't look for the rear locking differential and deluxe multi-terrain system found on the Patrol.

Handles Like a Very Nice Truck
The proliferation of crossovers has suckered us into thinking that every 3-ton vehicle can handle like a Camry if only the chassis engineers are clever enough. But the 2011 Infiniti QX56 is very much a truck and doesn't try to hide it.

It's more refined than the original QX56, though. The steering is light and precise, with no fidgeting required to keep the 2011 QX straight and stable on the highway. It's also quiet in the cabin, thanks to all sorts of sound-deadening measures, including thicker windshield glass. This is quite a feat given the 22-inch wheels and tires that come with the Deluxe Touring package ($5,800) on our QX.

Ride quality, though, is only fair by luxury-SUV standards. Some blame has to go to those 22s, and even the standard 20-inch wheel-tire package doesn't offer much payoff in compliance. But we're also feeling the inevitable symptoms of truck-based construction every time the frame flexes and vibrates over expansion joints and potholes. A driver-adjustable adaptive damping system like the one on the Sequoia might help.


That's not to say the QX56's chassis is without sophistication, as it has an independent double-wishbone rear, load-leveling Nivomat shocks to keep it from dragging its butt under load and an optional system called Hydraulic Body Motion Control.

This passive system replaces the standard front and rear stabilizer bars with an arrangement of special hydraulic dampers and fluid accumulators. When you turn into a corner and weight transfers to the outside wheels, fluid is forced over to the outside to counteract body roll. A big antiroll bar would do the same thing, but this hydraulic system has an off-road advantage, in that it allows for extended wheel travel when you need it. If there's a sudden, sharp spike in hydraulic pressure caused by a single wheel dropping down into a rut on a 4x4 trail, the system will back off so that the wheel articulates properly over the obstacle. It's the same idea as Toyota's KDSS system, just with a different execution.

Of course, that's not on our minds as we explore Kentucky hill country in the 2011 Infiniti QX56. The big lug is pretty easy to gather up on narrow, two-lane roads, though, and the almost-firm brake pedal has a more linear response than we'd expected.

Quality Interior, but a Bit Less Room
By far, the most significant improvement in the 2011 Infiniti QX56 comes in the quality of the furnishings. The leather, vinyl and wood inlays in this SUV are as nice as anything Lexus or Mercedes-Benz is doing in this price range. Apart from a few chintzy buttons here and there, no apologies are needed on the luxury-ambience front.

However, the Infiniti QX56 has lost a couple inches in the transition to the Patrol platform architecture. Its 121.1-inch wheelbase is 2 inches shorter than before. We don't feel the difference up front, where the chairs are wide, well-shaped and supportive enough for days of driving and fast-food consumption.

But there's a bit less legroom in the second row; and the third row, once ample for adults, is now best-sized for children (though a new power-recline feature makes it bearable for 6-footers on short trips). Shoulder room has decreased, too, even though the 2011 QX56 has the same track and overall width as before.


In spite of these caveats, packing the QX56 full of kids is still a reasonable proposition in both the standard seven- and optional eight-passenger configuration. Infiniti has done its part to lure them by carving out a storage box for their Nintendo Wii in the second row. It turns out the take rate on the rear DVD package ($2,450), which has two screens in the 2011 QX, is 80 percent.

With all those kids jumping around, you won't be able to concentrate as well behind the wheel, leading you to check off the $2,850 Technology package, which has laser-based, all-speed adaptive cruise control, a blind-spot warning system and a lane-departure warning system, plus adaptive bi-xenon headlights.

Line-Drive Single
A fully equipped 4WD 2011 Infiniti QX56 will land you at $71,850, which is an awful lot of money, but a bit less than what you'd pay for an Escalade or a Mercedes-Benz GL450 (the QX's No. 3 rival).

It's also true that the 2011 QX56 doesn't do anything particularly exceptional. It's just a useful, luxurious, seven-passenger SUV that's tough enough to pull your trailer, powerful enough to get you down the freeway and refined enough to not annoy you with the body-on-frame stuff most of the time.

We don't all need this combination of utility, but Infiniti isn't swinging for the fences with 2011 Infiniti QX56 sales. A line-drive single will be enough. Even as he resists putting a number on annual volume, Ben Poore, vice president of Infiniti for North America, says, "We will have months when we sell 800 to 900."


- 2011 Infiniti QX56 First Drive
 
Its a shame because the interior is really nice. We need a comparison between this and the LX570 and the GL550.


M
 

Nissan

Nissan Motor Co. Ltd. is a Japanese multinational automobile manufacturer headquartered in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan. Founded in 1933, the company sells its vehicles under the Nissan and Infiniti brands, and formerly the Datsun brand, with in-house performance tuning products (including cars) under the Nismo and Autech brands. Infiniti, its luxury vehicle division, officially started selling vehicles on November 8, 1989, in North America.
Official websites: Nissan, Infiniti

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