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2017 Infiniti Q60 2.0t Coupe review

Infiniti year of consolidation has culminated with the release of its BMW 4 Series Coupe-rivalling Infiniti Q60.

Infiniti Q60
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Infiniti year of consolidation has culminated with the release of its BMW 4 Series Coupe-rivalling Q60.

WHAT IS IT?
Essentially the Q60 is the two-door coupe version of the Infiniti Q50 – think Audi A5 to the A4 sedan – so it’s nothing we’ve not seen before thematically from Infiniti. We’re talking premium medium, then, with lots of gear and a fresh design direction to stamp some authority on the sports/luxury coupe map.

WHY WE'RE TESTING IT
The old Infiniti V36-series G37 Coupe (renamed Q60 in 2013) was one of the more understated and undervalued medium sports/luxury two-door contenders, lurking in the long shadows cast by the more glamorous Audi A5, BMW 4 Series, and Mercedes C-Class coupes. That’s all changing now, thanks to the completely redesigned and re-engineered V37 Q60, bringing some much-needed visual pizzazz. Whether it’s enough to really put Infiniti on buyers’ shortlists remains to be seen.

Infiniti -Q60-side -rearMAIN RIVALS
Audi A5 Coupe, BMW 4 Series Coupe, Lexus RC, Mercedes-Benz C-Class Coupe

THE WHEELS VERDICT
IF you know your Japanese car history, then it’s impossible not to admire and respect the impact of the Prince Motor Company’s Skyline – an enduring sports sedan/coupe range that has – in its ultimate state – morphed into the giant-slaying GT-R. The less extreme but more mainstream Q50 (sedan) and Q60 (coupe) models, then, are true bluebloods. In the case of the latest Q60 in lower-spec 2.0t guise, Infiniti’s quest to make it look more contemporary inside and out is laudable, but it may have come at the cost of dynamics, since its predecessors’ sound performance, steering and ride qualities just aren’t in the same league as before – never mind fierce foes like the Audi A5, BMW 4 Series, and Mercedes C-Class coupes. Great for posing and feeling rich, not so good if driving is your thing.

PLUS: Quality, design, mid-range performance, seats, equipment, safety, warranty
MINUS: Jarring ride, turbo lag, sluggish auto, dead steering, dated dash, tight rear headroom

Infiniti -Q60-driving -side -rearTHE WHEELS REVIEW
EVERY brand has its icons. Volkswagen’s is Golf. Mazda has the Mazda MX-5. Even SsangYong has the… umm Tivoli? (that’s our prediction anyway). And Infiniti? Well, clearly it’s six decades of front-engined, rear-drive, high-performance sports/luxury coupes, right?

Since (re) launching in Australia in 2012 with the G37, that’s what Japan’s BMW has been all about, bridging an important line (that included earlier Nissan GT-Rs) dating back to the 1962 Prince Skyline Sports Coupe.

Hence our big expectations. And in many ways, the V37-series Q60 – released initially in 155kW/350Nm 2.0-litre turbo guise from $62,900, with a rip-snorting 298kW/475Nm 3.0-litre twin-turbo V6 from $88,900 following in March – delivers. For starters, the design – which is both lower and wider than the preceding 2007-vintage V36 G37/Q60 – is dramatically distinctive, like every good coupe should be.

Additionally, Infiniti has put thought into the interior, which manages to effortlessly convey class. Generous room up front, pleasing quality, an excellent driving position, cosseting seats, ample geek-pleasing multimedia, stacks of kit, a decently-sized boot (now up a handy 100 litres) and a sense of isolation underline the brand’s half-century experience building personal grand tourers.

Infiniti -Q60-interiorHowever, some switchgear placement is messy, rear-seat headroom is limited, and we fear the audacious dash designs in the latest Audi A5 and Mercedes C-Class competitors make the Q60’s look like the outgoing Hyundai i30.

Frustratingly, the Infiniti’s status remains complicated on the move too. The sweet 2.0t might spin out a healthy 155kW, but a hefty 1700kg mass, combined with interminable off-the-line lag, seems to blunt whatever sparkle it might possess. And that’s in Sport mode.

Only past 3000rpm does the four-pot turbo find its stride. That said, on the move, the seven-speed torque-converter auto stops behaving like an indecisive dual-clutcher, at last delivering decent mid-range urge. We miss the old atmo VQ37VHR V6 sledgehammer.

More power can’t help the oddly slow and remote steering, though, which, along with the lumpy ride on 255/45R19 rubber, is probably the most profound disappointment. While the weighting is right, the helm feels artificial except on the straight ahead, and reluctant to change direction. Again, even in Sport. There is none of the handling litheness or finesse of the Infiniti’s German rivals. Are the Americans responsible for the dreary dynamic tuning? A rethink is in order, and pronto.

There’s plenty that’s right in the Q60 2.0t, but the driver-focused attributes that made its Nissan, Datsun, and Prince ancestors sports coupe icons appear to have been forsaken at the alter of style.

Despite the lineage, this is no Skyline.

SPECS
Model: Infiniti Q60 2.0t GT with Enhancement Pack
Engine: 1991cc 4-cyl, dohc, 16v turbo
Max power: 155kW @ 5500rpm
Max torque: 350Nm @ 1250-3500rpm
Transmission: 7-speed auto
Weight: 1698kg
0-100km/h: 7.3sec
Fuel economy: 7.7L/100km
Price: $65,900
On sale: Now

Byron Mathioudakis

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