Jump to content
Server Move In Progress - Read More ×
Create New...
  • William Maley
    William Maley

    2012 Nissan cube 1.8S Indigo Special Edition


    William Maley

    Staff Writer - CheersandGears.com

    October 4, 2012

    “And Now For Something Completely Different.”

    Besides being the title for Monty Python’s first film, it was my first thought as a 2012 Nissan cube rolled up into my driveway. Unlike most of the vehicles I had in for testing, the cube was very different. It looked like it had made the leap from an anime cartoon into the real world. As I was signing the form and getting the key to the cube, I wondered if such a clearly Japanese market focused car belongs in North America, the land of V8s and where every other vehicle is an SUV.

    The cube’s design pretty much matches the name of the vehicle; it’s a cube. Well, two of them! The first cube is the front end which has a set of narrow headlights sitting between a small, grey grille. Underneath the grille lies an air-intake that looks like a mouth. The second cube is the passenger cell which features recessed door glass and a set of fifteen-inch alloy wheels which come as part of the Indigo Limited Edition package that sit underneath pronounced wheel wells. The back end shows a clever design trick Nissan used on the cube. On the passenger side, Nissan extended the glass from the tailgate around the d-pillar, giving the illusion of full glass. Nissan also mimicked the design of the headlights and grille in the taillights.

    gallery_10485_478_1005149.png

    Inside, the cube has two major design themes; space and waves. The cube’s shape leads the interior an impressive amount of space. Head and legroom are abundant for both front and back-seat passengers. Seats are comfortable for short trips, while long trips will have you wishing for a bit more support. Cargo space is also in abundance thanks in part to a recessed floor and the back seat able to move back and forth.

    gallery_10485_478_493147.png

    Waves are also used throughout in the interior with the headliner, speaker housings, and cup-holders employing a ripple wave effect. The dashboard has a unique wave shape that ‘crests’ where the radio and HVAC controls are. On paper, this sounds ludicrous. But somehow, the waves actually work and give the vehicle a certain pizzazz.

    There are two interior features that had me wondering ‘why?!’ The first is a twenty color interior accent lighting system that lights up the foot-wells and cup-holders. You can change the colors via a knob next to the cup holders. I found it really distracting when driving at night and just left it off. The other feature is “Shag Dash Topper” which is pretty much a piece of shag carpeting on your dash and really is there for decoration. Don’t even think of putting anything on that shag since there is a warning stating that items place on it will fly off.

    Materials used throughout the cube are mostly hard plastics, which is par for the class. Build quality is very good with no sign of gaps or pieces that are separating. Interior ergonomics are excellent, with all controls being within easy reach and feeling good to the hand.

    gallery_10485_478_359308.png

    Now as I mentioned earlier, this particular cube was equipped with the Indigo Limited Edition package. This package adds

    • Fifteen-inch alloy wheels
    • Unique black/indigo cloth seats
    • Keyless entry and start
    • Upgraded sound system with a Rockford Fosgate subwoofer
    • Five-inch touchscreen with navigation
    • XM Satellite Radio
    • USB Input
    • Rear-view Camera

    The package adds about $2,000 to the base price of the cube 1.8S. For what you get with the package, I think it’s very much worth it. The touchscreen that comes part of the package is on the small side, but is bright and very clear. The navigation system is quick to respond and provides excellent map detail. As for the sound system, it does a impressive job of filling the vehicle with sound, albeit it’s heavy on the bass.

    Next: Power, Ride, and Verdict


    Powering the cube is a 1.8L inline-four producing 122 HP (@ 5,200 RPM) and 127 lb-ft (@ 4,200 RPM). Transmissions include a six-speed manual or our car’s Xtronic CVT. The engine is well-suited to driving in the city as it’s very peppy and can get up to speed very quick. The same cannot be said for the 1.8L when driving out in the country and highway as the engine works hard to get you up to speed. The Nissan CVT is one of best and makes sure that you have the power when needed.

    gallery_10485_478_594516.png

    Fuel economy rating for the cube is 27 City/31 Highway/28 combined with the CVT. During our week with the cube, our average was 31.5 MPG on mostly suburban and rural roads.

    The cube uses an independent front strut with coils and a torsion-beam rear axle with integrated stabilizer bar. The ride is very much tuned for comfort with the cube doing a good job of minimizing the impacts of bumps and potholes. Steering comes in the form of an electric system. The steering is super-light and heavily assisted, which makes the cube a perfect vehicle to maneuver around the urban environment. Taking the cube outside of an urban area, the ride is still very smooth and I was wishing for a little more weight in the steering.

    One place the cube could some work is noise containment. Under 45 MPH, road and wind noise is not really noticeable. However, when you do reach 45 MPH or higher, wind and road noise is very noticeable. Most of the wind noise can be blamed on the shape of the cube. If you’re driving has a lot of freeway or driving above 45 MPH, you might want to consider something else.

    Ultimately as my week concluded with the Nissan cube, I realized this car could make it in the real world. The cube is one of those vehicles built with a specific need in mind; in this case it’s built with need of serving someone in an urban environment. Take the cube out of the urban environment and you’ll be facing some huge problems including seats that don’t provide enough comfort for long trips, engine doing its best impression of the little train that could, and an atrocious amount of road and wind noise.

    The Nissan cube might be bit cartoonish at first, but it’s very good vehicle in the city environment.

    gallery_10485_478_528757.png

    Disclaimer: Nissan provided the vehicle, insurance, and one tank of gasoline.

    Cheers

    Exterior Design

    Features from Indigo Special Edition Package

    Interior space

    Engine performance in the city

    Maneuverability and ride

    Jeers

    Road and Wind noise when going above 45 MPH

    Seats becoming uncomfortable after a long distance

    Limited performance of the engine above 45 MPH

    Year - 2012

    Make – Nissan

    Model – Cube

    Trim – 1.8S Indigo Special Edition

    Engine – 1.8L Inline-four

    Driveline – Front-Wheel Drive, CVT

    Horsepower @ RPM – 122 HP (@ 5,200 RPM)

    Torque @ RPM – 127 lb-ft (@ 4,200 RPM)

    Fuel Economy: City/Highway/Combined - 27/31/28

    Curb Weight – 2,768 lbs

    Location of Manufacture – Oppama, Japan

    Base Price - $17,420.00

    As Tested Price - $20,975.00 (Includes $780.00 Destination Charge)

    William Maley is a staff writer for Cheers & Gears. He can be reached at [email protected] or you can follow him on twitter at @realmudmonster.


    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments

    Interesting, in the city, it seems to be a perfect fit and option, but even then, I find the price very high compared to alternative auto's out there in this same market segment.

    • Agree 1
    • Disagree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Interesting, in the city, it seems to be a perfect fit and option, but even then, I find the price very high compared to alternative auto's out there in this same market segment.

    Could not agree more, test drove one of these and was really under whelmed.

    Thought that they were cancelling this pig....they must not have...

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Interesting, in the city, it seems to be a perfect fit and option, but even then, I find the price very high compared to alternative auto's out there in this same market segment.

    I disagree on the price since the Kia Soul and Scion xB would cost a little bit more when equipped like the cube.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Interesting, in the city, it seems to be a perfect fit and option, but even then, I find the price very high compared to alternative auto's out there in this same market segment.

    I disagree on the price since the Kia Soul and Scion xB would cost a little bit more when equipped like the cube.

    And while I am not a total GM humper like some here...let me point out....that the HHR was much better than any of the above and has already been discontinued as obsolete...

    Focus is a much better real world car than any of the above, IMHO>

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Interesting, in the city, it seems to be a perfect fit and option, but even then, I find the price very high compared to alternative auto's out there in this same market segment.

    I disagree on the price since the Kia Soul and Scion xB would cost a little bit more when equipped like the cube.

    Those are both over priced also for what you get. A cheap POS sold to keep people from having better auto's especially when you look at the price.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I would never consider trading my obsolete HHR for this.

    This is an example of the kind of quirky design that is so popular in Japan. While it filled a odd niche here it just lacked some of the styling that Kia Soul gives. While the Kia is also a box it tries to be a little more normal.

    You would be amazed at how popular Astro vans are in Japan. We deal with customers over there who are buying parts for them and the last gen of the Caprice wagon.

    I for the life of me would like to know what the hell they were thinking when they put that shag rug pizza on the dash.

    I have been in and around this thing and if you want usability it is fine but if you have any sense of conventional style you would hide behind tinted glass if you owned this.

    There are two types of polarizing design out there. On one side are vehicles like the Cube and IQ and on the other is the HHR, Soul and PT. There is a line that gets crossed to where the neat or cool factor of being different gets crossed and the Cube has crossed over.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Because even for me, the Asian car lover on the forum...there is a line you don't cross....ugh...

    And I wasn't saying the HHR was bad...far from it..just that GM had moved on to the Cruze and better things...Nissan seems stuck in the past in a bad way in some of their designs....

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I did not take it that you said the HHR was bad. I just was pointing out that the HHR came near the line but did not cross it for many buyers where the Cube did.

    why you gotta be so icy toward the cube

    I sit in a Cubical every day every day at work. The last thing I would want to do is drive it home.

    I think sales have told the story on this one and the one thing that hurt it was the styling. Even people tired of the element and the Scion is not selling like it used to.

    Lets just hope they do not move to triangles. That would mean three wheelers and we have already had enough Robin Reliant jokes already.

    Edited by hyperv6
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I did not take it that you said the HHR was bad. I just was pointing out that the HHR came near the line but did not cross it for many buyers where the Cube did.

    why you gotta be so icy toward the cube

    I sit in a Cubical every day every day at work. The last thing I would want to do is drive it home.

    I think sales have told the story on this one and the one thing that hurt it was the styling. Even people tired of the element and the Scion is not selling like it used to.

    Lets just hope they do not move to triangles. That would mean three wheelers and we have already had enough Robin Reliant jokes already.

    On the copntrary, a British Morgan three weheeler would be awesome....Funky can be cool lioke the Morgan, or just plain bad like the Cube...shag carpet on the dash...really...?

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I did not take it that you said the HHR was bad. I just was pointing out that the HHR came near the line but did not cross it for many buyers where the Cube did.

    why you gotta be so icy toward the cube

    I sit in a Cubical every day every day at work. The last thing I would want to do is drive it home.

    I think sales have told the story on this one and the one thing that hurt it was the styling. Even people tired of the element and the Scion is not selling like it used to.

    Lets just hope they do not move to triangles. That would mean three wheelers and we have already had enough Robin Reliant jokes already.

    On the copntrary, a British Morgan three weheeler would be awesome....Funky can be cool lioke the Morgan, or just plain bad like the Cube...shag carpet on the dash...really...?

    A Morgan is a cool unto its own. I just saw a new one the other day in the RAF trim. I wish they were not so cheap. Besides with the two wheels in the front they are not a tippy.

    As for the shag rug pizza on the dash....just look at it in the Cube. Or is it where the pizza delivery boy puts the pizza on the way to your house? I assume it is some kind of speaker?

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Is there any mystery use for this Shag Pizza other than to attract attention to a odd styling idea?

    Ori is it one of those things you just have to be from Japan to understand.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites



    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
    Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

    Guest
    Add a comment...

    ×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

      Only 75 emoji are allowed.

    ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

    ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

    ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • google-news-icon.png



  • Community Hive Community Hive

    Community Hive allows you to follow your favorite communities all in one place.

    Follow on Community Hive
  • google-news-icon.png

  • Subscribe to Cheers & Gears

    Cheers and Gears Logo

    Since 2001 we've brought you real content and honest opinions, not AI-generated stuff with no feeling or opinions influenced by the manufacturers.

    Please consider subscribing. Subscriptions can be as little as $1.75 a month, and a paid subscription drops most ads.*
     

    You can view subscription options here.

    *a very limited number of ads contain special coupon deals for our members and will show

  • Posts

    • I don't plan on gardening anytime soon. We need to finish other things before I'd have a permanent spot for a garden, but I would like a small garden in the future. We consume enough various peppers, onions, and zucchinis that I think it would be pretty cool to grow them myself. 
    • If you do tomatoes or any water hungry container veggies, Pittmoss is the GOAT and will save you a ton of headache with watering.
    • Thanks! Yeah, from what I've read it needs a lot of water but also media that drains well so the roots can dry out between waterings. I've now looked into this Pittmoss stuff, and it sounds pretty dang good. I think I'll order some and mix it with planter soil, as well. 
    • All done with the detail inside and out of the SS for the spring/summer season.
    • I had never driven an Infiniti Q50 before, let alone ever really looked at them.  I also didn’t know much about these cars. I was supposed to be assigned a medium sized SUV, but remarked I wanted the luggage area to be hidden.  The rental agent told me they could not guarantee the presence of a retractable cover. (Why would they order a car without one or why would someone take one?  eBay?)  They didn’t have any SUVs anyway, and I got put into an Infiniti Q50.  I checked my phone to verify the cost would be covered by my insurance and the credit card parameters.  It came in at around $43,000.  That’s if new.  That said: “no worries.”  However, this unit would be a much-depreciated 3+ year model with 57,000 miles.  I relaxed.  At any rate, I put less than 500 miles on it over a week.  As one walks up to it, you can tell its heritage … and rather quickly.  You can instantly see similarities to the Nissan Altima in the instrument panel’s main cluster and in the switches much the same way that a CT6 by Cadillac and a Cruze by Chevrolet share dials and such.  However, the assembly and detailing are nicer in the Q50.  It had leather seating, which I don’t care for in a warm weather location, that was comfortably contoured and nicely finished.  The same could be said for the doors and other trim and fittings.  Inside, I liked the way that the dash, center stack, and console flowed together.  The scalloped tops of the dash hearken to those of the very last Impala, which had an attractive dashboard on various levels. The center stack is slightly like that of an Olds Aurora.  These comments go along with the often-cited commentary that this car is traditional and old school in a lot of ways, thus not breaking any new ground. The least favorable aspect of the interior is operating the various touch screen and stalk functions.  Some are redundant and confusing.  However, for one, it is possible to pull up a clock that resembles old school chronometer and have it sitting at the top of the center stack. On the interior's plus side, there are perfectly contoured and angled slots to store water bottles at the base of the front doors.  On the minus side, there is a remote latch release for the trunk, but not one for the fuel cap door.  (The fuel cap door remains closed if the car is locked.) I figured that this Infiniti would have a V6.  It was no ordinary V6, but 3.7 liters worth of V6 with twin turbochargers.  Rarely does one need this much power and, in one week, I got aggressive with the throttle in one merging situation and one passing situation.  It is up to the task and kicks out a little torque steer.  Its hum is a rather muted purr.  As would be expected in what is supposed to be a premium car, the automatic transmission is a geared unit.  It has 7 speeds.  The first 2 shifts can be felt while the remaining shifts are not.  However, if in stop and go traffic, and alternating speed, those early shifts can be a little less smooth as the transmission seems to hunt.  (It could also be how many miles were on the unit.) Why 7 speeds?  How about 6 … or 8?  I’m talking even numbers! With the powertrain comes the requirement for premium fuel.  Also, compared to many full-size Japanese cars working with 4 cylinders and turning in commendable gas mileage, this car with its V6 is a little thirsty. Ride, handling, and noise are related, but different enough.  The ride was supple and controlled, but not much more so than that of an uplevel 4-cylinder sedan.  Handling was better and this Infiniti tracked accurately and nimbly.  Also, the Q50 was fairly hushed, but I might have expected a little more isolation and a higher premium "feel" for the price jump from a Nissan to an Infiniti. Its exterior features that extra chrome and trim to make it uplevel within the Nissan family tree, yet the greenhouse is an almost familiar one.  This car delivered on one greenhouse dimension I’m fussy about - rearward vision from the driver’s vantage point is very good. I don’t know how the order sheet was configured when this car was purchased. There was an indicator for forward alerts, but I never got to experience it in action.  Also, whether on the rearview mirrors or inside of the front pillars, there was nothing to warn of side traffic and there weren’t parking assists that kicked in.  Perhaps they were there, but the car was not put in a situation where they’d engage.  On another rental car of a lower price point, those were always at work and perhaps a little too eager.  I almost prefer the latter. I didn’t read any reviews about this car before beginning the rental or during the rental.  I echo what they have to say.  For its niche, it doesn’t drum up much enthusiasm.  The best point is its more premium handling while the negatives are some difficulties in setting it up when first getting in and its slight thirstiness. If something about this overall package is appealing and a person connects with the Q50, then the consumer will probably go for it.  I don’t know how it will hold up and how much it will cost to service over the long haul.  While there are no Toyota and Nissan dealerships in Beverly Hills, California, as an example, there is a Lexus agency there while the Infiniti dealership seems to have closed.  Infiniti seems to want to ride the same wave that Lexus is riding, though I’d think piggybacking onto Toyota might be a more lauded genealogy. This is very much a personal decision and you’re on your own.  I was going to turn in the Q50 after a day to see if I could get something more familiar to me but decided to keep it.  Exchanging cars is a hassle.  Once past the learning curve and adjustments, it’s fairly easy to live with, but it’s neither a remarkable nor compelling vehicle. - - - - - PHOTOS FORTHCOMING
  • Who's Online (See full list)

    • There are no registered users currently online
  • My Clubs

×
×
  • Create New...

Hey there, we noticed you're using an ad-blocker. We're a small site that is supported by ads or subscriptions. We rely on these to pay for server costs and vehicle reviews.  Please consider whitelisting us in your ad-blocker, or if you really like what you see, you can pick up one of our subscriptions for just $1.75 a month or $15 a year. It may not seem like a lot, but it goes a long way to help support real, honest content, that isn't generated by an AI bot.

See you out there.

Drew
Editor-in-Chief

Write what you are looking for and press enter or click the search icon to begin your search

Change privacy settings