Check the lower right-hand side of the homepage. It's at the bottom.Corin said:Um.... where exactly on the site? Still seem to be listing the 2007 for me.
Ah, very cool. Thanks for providing the link as well!njjoe said:
Check the lower right-hand side of the homepage. It's at the bottom.
-njjoe
The 2009 Murano will be available in January 2008, so it will be a early released 2009. Manufacturers often release next year models in the Spring so it is only a little early. How can the release date get you so upset ??Corin said:This really irritates me. They're bringing a 2009 model out in 2007????? .
The release date doesn't have me upset, the model year number does. It has always bugged me. If you buy the model year that matches the current calendar year, you're actually a year behind. That just doesn't make sense. Why have model years assigned if they have nothing to do with the actual year?HuskyFan said:
The 2009 Murano will be available in January 2008, so it will be a early released 2009. Manufacturers often release next year models in the Spring so it is only a little early. How can the release date get you so upset ??
Yeah it uses the same principle as that employed in the Rogue - a yaw-moment sensor is integrated into the wheel speed sensors to more quickly adapt to slippage.teonek said:Look at the site about AWD. I think it is major change. 100:0 at normal driving and even 30:70 when cornering and slippage. Super fast response for slippage only one tenth of second. I love this car.
The CVT is a "generation 2" CVT similar to the one in the Altima with sportier programming. In the pictures, Ds is now a button on the shifter, instead of a detent in the shift gate. Manual mode appears to be gone, and no shift paddles either.ekaxel said:Does that make it (CVT) more robust, or just something else to break?