Infiniti is sort of a quiet warrior in the luxury/sports category, and I think in some ways that adds to the marque’s appeal. The rather fun M35x is a bit of sleeper but is really quick (I honestly think the M45, which has a V8 instead of the 35’s V6, is overkill), and loaded out the wazoo with high-tech juju. Some of it, like Infiniti’s Intelligent All Wheel Drive System, is great. But some of the other goodies and I didn’t get on that well. The Lane Departure Warning System I found to be a bit of a pain on country roads. This system “watches” the road and beeps to tell you if you wander out of your lane, and the incorporated Lane Department Prevention software supposedly uses selective braking to help keep you on the straight and narrow.
The problem I have with this is too many false alarms (when I’m moving around in my lane to pick the best line on curvaceous blacktop) and while cancelable the switch is less than convenient to get to and the default “on” position apparently resets every time you restart the car (although I’ll wager it’s possible to cancel it altogether, but I didn’t encounter this option). Another bit of e-wizardry I was not simpatico with was the Intelligent Cruise Control, which also watches the road (using freakin’ laser beams attached to the car) and regulates the following distance behind the vehicle in front of you. In this case, the system has trouble seeing from time to time and brakes rather abruptly, often when you’ve already moved into another lane to pass a slower vehicle in front of you. When it does see open road ahead of you and accelerates to your preselected speed, many times the transition (including downshifting the 5-speed automatic transmission) is a bit rough.
Other than these criticisms, I really enjoyed the car. Wonderfully quiet, comfortable, responsive and refined, it’s a very pleasant ride especially if you have to spend a lot of time on the road as I did. Very solid construction and a feeling of quality, which you should expect in the $50K plus price class. The All Wheel Drive was totally superb in the winter weather, too.
Monthly Archives: January 2010
Signs of Life
Like any industry these days, the motorcycle game really has really taken it on the chin the last couple of years in terms of sales of new two-wheelers. There have been some exceptions of course (Triumph did well in the 4th quarter while Harley screwed the pooch), but one good sign in my view was the attendance last Friday at the New York International Motorcycle Show which seemed pretty good. Lots of enthusiastic riders, and lots of new machines that garnered a lot of interest. I had a good feel about the atmosphere in general, and with some pretty cool new 2010 iron out there this might not be a bad year at all for the industry, or at least not as bad as the last one was. One thing: somewhere out there is some bro or sis that sat on more bikes at the show than anybody else. Good for them.
The Tall Accord
It never ceases to amaze me. There, I’ve said it. Oh, what never ceases to amaze me? Good Question. What never ceases to amaze me is how critical those in the motoring press (which now thanks to the InterWebTubes can be just about any schmo or schmoette) can be regarding the appearance of a new vehicle before they’ve actually experienced it in the flesh. When Honda announced their new Accord CrossTour, one website in particular that is very popular but regularly full of poopish prose (I shan’t mention them by name as they are backed by dangerous money), attacked the appearance of this sport wagon like it was the second coming of the Pontiac Aztek.
It isn’t. Oh, and let us all be thankful that Pontiac’s tribute to Bad Origami has vanished, but lament the fact that it may have helped pull the rest of the division into the whirlpool with it. I miss the G8 GXP already. Aussie Art and Muscle, baby.
It Ain’t Right
Wednesday, our 9-year-old Friesian died suddenly. Very weird. He literally dropped in his tracks, and the best we can figure is that it was either a heart attack, or more likely according to our vet, an aneurysm.
He was a fine horse. I gave him grief as he had quite an ego, and if ever there was a horse destined to play Gaston in Beauty and the Beast in real life, it was Cappy. Danielle is handling this well, but is inside deeply distraught. With all the horror in Haiti (and I deeply recommend supporting Doctors w/o Borders, but naturally do as you think best), it’s easy for many people to say this was just a horse; just a dumb animal. This is rot. He trod lightly on this earth, and did more than most know to entertain a lot of people and regularly paid tribute to the war fallen in our local Memorial Day parade.
You can never fathom why loved ones are taken from us, especially years before it seems even remotely fair. But we’re stuck with it. The nice part about the spirits that touch us is the happiness and soul remains with us, where the flesh has passed and goes back to the earth. Thanks Cappy, for your contribution to our lives.
It’s all in the Packaging
I do love it when you can pack a lot of kit in a reasonably small vehicle. The Mazda5 is basically a mini-minivan, complete with sliding side doors and a third row seat. You can get six people in the thing (as long as your third row residents are smallish in stature) and it’s a comfortable, flexible hauler. It’s little four-banger is no powerhouse, but the 5-speed automatic does a great job at finding the best gear to optimize acceleration. Lot’s of useful features and a sub-$18K base price make this a sharp little unit. I see it being used effectively on the Circus circuit, for you really could cram a mess o’ clowns in it.






