
First
Drive Review: 2009 Nissan Frontier
By:
Sue Mead
Posted:
10-23-08 08:37 PT
© 2008 PickupTrucks.com
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The PRO-4X
off-road model is Nissan’s attempt at a brave new Frontier for
2009, just like
the version that Titan got for 2008. In reality, as
much as Nissan has tried to mix things up with official trim and name
changes, mechanically the Frontier PRO-4X is really just last year’s
Nismo Frontier.
Nissan is
dropping the Nismo designation for trucks, though, now using it only
for cars, like the Z. Good move; the name "PRO-4X" is
better for a truck, and the Frontier PRO-4X has stylin’ looks
and toughened mechanicals. Distinctive seat stitching and emblems in the
new PRO-4X are the only differences from the 2008 Nismo Frontier.
I drove
the rear-wheel-drive Frontier PRO-4X on a course that included paved
and dirt roads in the picturesque Columbia River Gorge region of Oregon.
What I really appreciated, though, was an offroad course where I tested
out the more robust four-wheel-drive model on an Enduro motorcycle
track in a broad valley. The track provided ample opportunity to check
out the PRO-4X’s suspension
and traction capabilities. The truck performed flawlessly, offering a compliant
and controlled ride throughout by soaking up bumps and easily managing steep
hill climbs comprised of loose and pebbled dirt.

Background
Let's get
one thing straight: I'm biased about the
Nissan Frontier. I have been since it came to market as a 1998 model
as a replacement for the outdated Nissan Hardbody, grafted from the tree
of Nissan Datsun Truck’s
line of pickup trucks.
I've
liked the Frontier from the beginning thanks to its ruggedness and
unabashed trucklike ride. It started life as a two-door compact, then
grew in cleverness and popularity in 2000, when Nissan’s Frontier
crew cab became the first four-door compact pickup in North America.
A year later, a face-lift gave it a bolder, more marketable look. Its
next big move was to grow larger: In 2005, it went through a complete
redesign that made it a midsize pickup, built on the full-size Nissan
Titan’s F-Alpha
platform and wearing the looks of its full-size sibling.
Along the
way, the Frontier also benefited from mechanical advances that gave
it more horsepower and torque, plus the Nismo performance version already
mentioned. Even with all those iterations and evolutionary upgrades,
whenever I climbed inside a Frontier the ride was still a little bit
trucklike, despite its development happening in a time when automakers
have been burning the midnight oil and performing magic tricks to make
their trucks ride like cars. The Frontier’s truckiness
makes me long to go on a lengthy drive across an open range, rounding
up cattle or dropping off hay, and I like that.
Offroad Driving
But, back
to the PRO-4X: We stopped mid-climb on one of the track’s hills to try out Nissan’s
Hill Start Assist, which is engineered for rugged, low-speed offroad
driving. The feature allows you to stop and release the brake without
rolling backward for up to two seconds. This allows you to move your
foot to the throttle and make a smooth, controlled start.

We also
tested Nissan’s Hill Descent Control, which is engaged via a switch
when the transfer case is in 4-High or 4-Low. It’s most handy — and
safer than straight braking – on steep downhills, but it’s
useful on any traction-compromised hill. This trick technology can be
activated at speeds up to 21 mph, and it slows the vehicle without the
use of the brake, working both in forward gears and in Reverse. It worked
well on the trail; the frequent, drawn-out sound of the antilock braking
system squeezing the rotors was the primary indication the system was
working.
The Frontier has great approach and departure angles, and the
underbody mechanicals and precious parts are tucked up into the frame
rails for a minimum of 8.9 inches (in the four-wheel-drive Frontier)
or 8.6 inches (rear-wheel drive) of running ground clearance on PRO-4X
models.
Crawl ratios are about average for the segment; 42.33 for
the six speed manual shifter and 33.86 for the five speed automatic transmission.
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