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*Invoice prices are made available by Cars.com and are not dealer advertising. All prices are subject to regional variations. Prices last updated 11/18/09.
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2009 Nissan Cube

Side-by-Side Comparison
Starting MSRP $13,990 – $19,370 Change Vehicle

By Jim Mateja

Chicago Tribune
August 23, 2009

Move over, Aztek. You've lost the ugly crown to the Cube.

Nissan says its Cube, a compact crossover, looks like a "bulldog in sunglasses."

Maybe -- after misplacing your eyeglasses.

A young woman paid the ultimate compliment: She smiled and gave it a big thumbs up, after putting down her doll as she surveyed Cube out the back window of dad's car. A young man piloting a sports coupe, however, made decidedly the opposite gesture.

A motorcycle rider stopped to ask, "How do you like that little bus?"

Regardless of the reaction, Cube always gets one.

Cube is Nissan's answer to the Scion xB, Kia Soul and Honda Element, weird-looking boxes aimed at those 18 to 25 who want their wheels to say something about them.

Cube is offered in base, S, SL and Krom versions, with a 6-speed manual or continuously variable automatic with infinite gear ratios. Prices start from $13,990 for the base to $19,370 for Krom with its sound and decor upgrade.

We tested the S with a supersmooth manual. Cube's mileage with that manual is 24 city/29 highway, yet rises to 28/30 with optional ($1,000 -- ouch!) automatic.

It comes with a 1.8-liter, 122-horsepower 4-cylinder. And you don't need to note that the 4 in Soul achieves 142 h.p., xB 158 h.p. and Element 166 h.p. to show Cube could use more kick. Just expend time and exhaust patience getting to cruising speed.

But the ride is surprisingly well cushioned: Two railroad crossings within half a block didn't send ripples into seat, steering wheel or teeth.

With its boxy profile, Cube tends to lean rather than dart into or out of corners. This is no Z car. But standard stability and traction control ensure you don't wander, slip or slide when starting out on slick pavement. Larger, 16-inch radials, standard on the higher-trim levels, would offer better road grip, and larger wheel-well openings would make Cube look bolder.

With a base of $14,690, the Cube S is more into cheap frills than high fashion. While a VW Beetle sports a bud vase, Cube offers a swatch of shag carpet on the dash, perhaps for your cat to snooze on while motoring.

There's also a trio of cupholders in the center console, a pair in the dash left of the steering wheel, one in front and rear doors, one in back of the center console and two inside the pull-down center armrest in the back seat. That ensures each of the five passengers it holds at least two beverages.

The cabin is blessed front and rear with abundant room, especially for the melon. Seats are soft and ideal for long-distance comfort. Rear seats slide fore or aft for room where you need it and recline to let occupants stretch.

Seat backs also fold to provide more cargo space for gear, though the cargo hold is roomy enough for a couple small suitcases or duffel bags. The test car came with an optional cargo organizer: two large, plastic compartments (one lockable) in the floor to store items or cool pop. The rear door swings out, not up, so leave ample room when parking.

Slots in the dash and rear doors contain removable plastic holders for bags, the dash has a cell phone holder/power plug, and front-door slits can accommodate mini bungee cords to keep assorted junque in place.

The test car had a $490 illumination package with mood lighting in 20 colors for cabin and cupholder, and soft and soothing blue background lighting for the word Cube in the door sills.

AM/FM/CD player, power windows and locks (manual seats) and air conditioning are standard. Though they seem out of character and price point for the car, push-button start, fog lights, Bluetooth phone connectivity, satellite radio and sonar rear-backup sensors add $1,600. No navi.

You may suffer a few snickers for its styling, but with a decent price, great mileage and so many novel features, you'll get the last laugh.

Read Jim Mateja Sunday in Rides. Contact him at transportation@tribune.com.

Tribune Media Services



Additional Reviews for the 2009 Nissan Cube

Jim Mateja Chicago Tribune August 23, 2009
Kelsey Mays Cars.com August 24, 2009
Kelsey Mays Cars.com February 26, 2009
Warren Brown The Washington Post and WashingtonPost.com July 12, 2009
Tom Strongman KansasCity.com June 25, 2009
Scott Burgess Detroit Newspapers June 11, 2009
G. Chambers Williams III Star-Telegram.com May 14, 2009
Dan Neil LATimes.com March 6, 2009

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