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Rating 1 star



Summary

Recommended. Versatile, affordable, robust and spacious - the Note is unlikely to win any design awards, but it's a family car ideally suited to real families.

Review

Don't be put off by its whimsical name - the Nissan Note is a straightforward and hugely effective family car aimed squarely at parents who want something big enough to swallow their children and all the lifestyle paraphernalia that goes with them.

The unexceptional design means that it's no head-turner, which is a shame given the company's recent styling direction as exemplified by the 350Z and Murano. There are some nice details, though, including boomerang rear lights. The interior sticks to the same script, dull but functional with solid construction and excellent standard safety equipment. Passenger space is brilliant, with more than enough room for four six-footers and a rear bench seat that slides backwards and forwards to boost leg or luggage room. The boot offers decent size and there are plenty of oddments stowage spaces, plus an aircon-cooled glovebox.

It drives well, too. The Note is a neat, tidy handler with less roll in corners than you would anticipate for such a tall car. The steering is light and direct and, on twisting roads, the chassis feels amusingly agile. It even rides well, too - the long wheelbase giving it a well-damped compliance over rough roads, although it can feel a bit clumpy over bumps tackled at lower speeds in town.

Two petrol engines are available, both offering decent performance - although the brawnier 1.6 litre motor has a useful edge, even if it does sound loud higher up the rev range. The diesel is a disappointment, though - sounding clattery and lacking the punch we expect from a modern turbodiesel. Both engines have gearboxes that feel remote and baggy.

Breakdown

Styling 1 star

Hardly a head-turner, but functional design means plenty of usable room on board - ideal for growing families.

Handling 1 star

It's no hot hatch but the Note feels athletic and agile with light, direct steering and alert chassis responses.

Comfort 1 star

The Note's suspension was tuned specifically for European roads - the result is a firm but compliant ride motorway ride.

Quality & reliability 1 star

Too many cabin plastics are hard, but the Note feels solidly built and robust enough to handle the rough and tumble of family life.

Performance 1 star

Although the 1.6 litre petrol engine is zesty and keen, it's also noisy at higher revs, while the diesel feels sluggish and dull.

Roominess 1 star

This is where the Note excels - the cabin is lounge-like in size and crammed with intelligently configured stowage spaces.

Running costs 1 star

Both petrol and diesel engines are fruga, insurance and maintenance costs will be low.

Value for money 1 star

Another bullseye - Note buyers get plenty of safety and luxury gear on even the base model, and certainly won't feel short-changed.

Stereo / Sat nav 1 star

All models come with a decent-sounding CD player, while the top-spec Note gets a six-speaker stereo that swallows six CDs. There's no satnav available.

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