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2015 Nissan Murano: What's New

Vehicle Overview

Nissan has redone its five-passenger Murano crossover/SUV for 2015 and it takes its styling cues from the Nissan Resonance concept car.
ExteriorThe new Murano most obviously resembles the concept outside, where Nissan didn’t tone down the Resonance’s wild looks all that much. There’s a whole lot of styling going on, such as the “floating” roof element that looks like it’s a separate piece from the rest of the body and the boomerang-style headlights that incorporate LED daytime running lights. LED headlights are optional. The slipperier overall shape has resulted in a 16 percent improvement in aerodynamics, and the new Murano comes in longer, lower and wider than the previous version. In the back, the standard LED taillights are wild, giving the Murano an avant-garde look that is sure to be polarizing.
InteriorNissan carries the futuristic theme inside with an “upscale social lounge” design that is much more premium looking than the Pathfinder’s interior. The cabin’s dashboard and center console are lower than they were in the previous Murano to improve outward visibility and a sense of spaciousness, with a new 8-inch color touch-screen in the center stack (a 7-inch screen now resides in the gauge cluster). The number of buttons and switches for the multimedia system has been dramatically reduced as well, from 25 to 10, to provide a less cluttered and user-friendlier experience.

Nissan’s “Zero-Gravity” seats are standard for both front and rear occupants, with the rear seats employing a three-cushion design; heated and cooled seats are available for the front row. Heated seats are an option for the backseat. While you’re in them, gaze up and enjoy the new panoramic sunroof that’s 29 percent larger and opens wider with a 40 percent increase in sliding length. The Murano does better as a cargo-hauling SUV as well, with a reconfigured cargo area that can now accommodate four large suitcases; the rear seats now fold flat.
Under the HoodThe Murano’s powertrain carries over from the last version, sporting Nissan’s 3.5-liter V-6 rated at 260 horsepower and mated to a standard continuously variable automatic transmission. Along with a weight loss of 130 pounds and aerodynamic improvements, the powertrain has been retuned to provide an estimated fuel-economy bump of about 20 percent, according to Nissan’s estimates. Front-wheel drive is again standard, with all-wheel drive optional.
SafetyNissan is offering something new for the Murano with a suite of four on-board cameras (front, rear and two side) and three radar systems to provide a variety of safety systems including blind spot warning, forward collision warning, forward emergency braking, adaptive cruise control, rear cross-traffic alert and an advanced parking assist system that can detect moving objects in the vehicle’s path.

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