2000 Nissan Quest Minivan Reviews & Ratings

  Read this 2000 Nissan Quest review at UsedCarsChannel.com. These professional and consumer 2000 Nissan Quest reviews include car comparisons, road tests, interior and exterior options and features, safety information, specs, and more.
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2000 Nissan Quest Reviews

 

Welcome to the car reviews section of UsedCarsChannel.com, where you can search for consumer 2000 Nissan Quest car reviews for all trims! How does this car handle? What kind of 2000 Nissan Quest ratings did the car receive? How large is in the interior? Is it comfortable to drive? Learn all of this and more in each of the consumer 2000 Nissan Quest reviews at UsedCarsChannel.com.

 
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Nissan Quest Interior Review

Minivan owners are a picky bunch. Their vehicles have to carry the load of children, friends, groceries and hardware, and still provide an enjoyable driving experience. The Quest satisfies those needs with a sleek body that neatly encases a flexible interior package.

The driving position is typical of minivans and sport-utility vehicles. The driver sits upright in a comfortable, if slightly narrow, seat. The view outside is commanding: The front fenders fall away for maximum visibility. The rest of the cabin is tall and glassy, which makes backing up a snap.

Quest GXE comes with a second-row bench seat with optional integrated child safety seats. The SE and GLE come with second-row captain's chairs. Either way, the Quest's seating system wins high marks from owners. It's easy to see why. The second-row bucket seats in the SE and GLE tip forward for easy access to the third bench. The middle bench in the GXE tilts, flips forward, even comes out altogether to create a limousine-style space for important passengers or a large cargo area. Best of all, the third-row bench can be moved forward into one of six positions on a track that permits nearly five feet of movement front to back, allowing it to accommodate every possible variation of passengers with limousine-quality room.

Behind the third-row bench, an adjustable shelf offers three vertical positions, and holds 30 pounds. The two-tier capability adds some usefulness to the area, which is about half as deep as the cargo hold on a standard-issue Dodge Caravan.

The Quest's instrumentation is complete and well-designed, although some of the plastics and vinyls are less than rich-looking. The dash is arranged well, and the flurry of little buttons normally found with a vehicle this well-equipped is absent. Most of the Quest's buttons are square, flat plastic, functional and clean.



Nissan Quest Road Test

Many minivans seem to take pride in lulling their owners to sleep with sluggish handling and slushy ride quality. The Quest reacts to the road more like a sports sedan, with sharp steering and well-damped ride motions that might make you forget you're in a vehicle as large as a Manhattan powder room.

The Quest simply acts smaller than it is. With a fair amount of weight to throw around, but with less body roll than the larger minivans, the Quest felt planted on the winding roads of north Georgia. It responds to small changes in steering with a sense of connection that long-wheelbase minivans with big tires aren't able to match. Combined with a firm, controlled ride, the Quest's handling is among the most satisfying in its class.

The downside to the Quest's amiable personality is its 170-horsepower 3.3-liter V6 engine. The addition of 19 horsepower to the bottom line has improved acceleration performance, but the Quest won't match the truly quick acceleration of Ford's 200-horsepower Windstar. Weighing nearly 4,000 pounds, the Quest could use some more power. More torque would help the Quest launch quickly from stoplights. More top-end power would allow it to pass other cars with authority on uphill highway stretches. Yet it could also stand some constraint; its 17/24 fuel-mileage rating is a bit thirsty.



Nissan Quest Lineup

The Quest is offered in four different flavors - GXE, GLE, SE Cloth and SE Leather. Now standard this year on all Quests are power steering and chrome door handles. And Nissan's video entertainment system, with a larger screen for 2000, is included with every Quest at no cost. Other standard features include air conditioning, power windows, mirrors and locks, cruise control, remote keyless entry, a vehicle security system, a luggage rack, and a rear window wiper/washer.

The Quest GXE's base price is $22,259.

The two Quest SE models have been upgraded as well. Both SE models gets Super Sound and a rear anti-roll bar, as well as auto on-off headlamps. Standard equipment includes larger 16-inch wheels, a suspension tuned for improved handling response, black-on-white gauges, second-row captain's chairs and rear heating and air conditioning controls. The SE Leather model also gets perforations in its leather trim. The SE Cloth goes for $24,399, the SE Leather $26,699.

The luxuriant $26,399 Quest GLE adds a rear stabilizer bar and Super Sound, along with faux wood trim, for the year 2000. The new features complement its standard leather interior trim, power driver and front passenger seats, automatic climate control and a six-disc console-mounted CD changer.

Several option packages are available. The GXE Comfort Plus Package ($899) adds rear air conditioning and controls, leather steering wheel, 15-inch alloy wheels. An SE Convenience Package ($799) offers a power driver seat, a unique adjustable rear parcel shelf and garage door opener. The GLE Popular Package ($500) adds the parcel shelf, rear lift glass, and a CD changer. For the finishing touches, there's an SE Audio Upgrade Package with CD player ($349), and a Sunroof Package ($899).



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