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2008 Nissan Altima Coupe (06/12/2007)

2008 Nissan Altima Coupe

Entered CNET Catalog: 06/12/2007

SKU: 100874939

Manufacturer: Nissan USA

Product summary

The goodThe good: The 2008 Nissan Altima Coupe injects some sporty styling into an affordable model. For a front-wheel drive car, the four-cylinder Altima Coupe displays some respectable performance characteristics to go with its admirable fuel economy.

The badThe bad: Like other Altima models, the Coupe's option packages are expensive if not overpriced. Interior fit and fitment on our tester was disappointing.

The bottom lineThe bottom line: The 2008 Nissan Altima Coupe combines head-turning styling and gutsy performance with some advanced--albeit, pricey--cabin technology options, including GPS navigation and a great hands-free calling interface.

Average user rating: from 6 users
4.0 stars

Editors' review

  • Editors' Choice: No
  • Reviewed on: 09/14/2007

Photo gallery: 2008 Nissan Altima Coupe
Photo gallery:
2008 Nissan Altima Coupe

The Altima Coupe is the sportiest-looking model to come out of Nissan's factory since the iconic 350Z. Nissan promises that the two-door version of its midsize sedan will deliver "true performance, true technology, true coupe." The last of these claims is irrefutable: with its raked fastback roofline and flowing shoulders, the Altima Coupe marks a bold styling departure from the staid lines of the sedan. Aesthetes may disagree over the car's bulbous rear-end styling, which, depending on your school of thought, is either a dashing, Infiniti-inspired touch of style or a flabby appendage that looks like an aftermarket body kit.


The aesthetic merits of the Altima Coupe's rear end are in the eye of the beholder.

And Nissan has a case for pushing the performance and technology merits of the Altima Coupe. With a choice between a 2.5-liter in-line four and a 3.5-liter V-6, the coupe is not found wanting for power, and we are inclined to favor the smaller engine choice, which is less likely to overpower the front wheels. On the cabin tech front, the coupe has the same available arsenal of gadgets as that of its sedan sibling, including GPS navigation and Bluetooth hands-free calling, although most of the goodies come as part of pricey options packages.

Test the tech: Tunitas Creek Road
The Altima Coupe may look like a sports car, but we had our doubts about whether the front-wheel drive model would actually perform like one. To settle the matter decisively, we set out toward one of our favorite proving grounds south of San Francisco by the name of Tunitas Creek Road. It is difficult to overemphasize the demands that this forest trail high up in the Portola Valley puts on cars during spirited driving. With its corkscrew corners, blind bends, and hairpin turns, the serpentine Tunitas Creek Road is less of a race track than a rally course--the perfect place to test the mettle of the Altima Coupe.


Tunitas Creek Road is not for the faint of heart.

Our test car was equipped with the baseline 2.5-liter four-cylinder engine mated to the standard six-speed manual transmission for which we were eternally grateful: had our loaner come with the optional $500 continuously variable transmission (CVT), we suspect we could have kissed all hopes of a sporty ride goodbye. To get to our test track, we had to drive Skyline Boulevard, a windy, single-track road, but with wider sweeping turns rather than the chicanery of Tunitas Creek Road.

Driving Skyline at around 50 mph, we had a chance to see how the Altima Coupe responded to cornering at speed and short bursts of acceleration and braking. While were impressed with the ability of the punchy four-cylinder engine to get us up to speed quickly, and by the linear quality of the brakes when approaching a turn, we were underwhelmed with the Altima Coupe's handling ability on corner exits. The Altima demonstrated considerable understeer lunging into corners and requiring us to constantly overextend in steering to push the car through the bends.


The Altima Coupe stood up well to the heel-and-toe driving that the winding trail demanded.

Once on the Tunitas Creek Road, we were more impressed with the Altima Coupe's performance. At lower speeds, the car feels much lighter on its feet and steering feels more responsive, with plenty of feedback coming through the wheel. One of the most impressive things we noticed while heel-and-toeing our way down the grueling slalom was the car's solid feel courtesy of its sport-tuned suspension and its rigid chassis, which both stood up well to the road's uneven surface. After 20 minutes of threading our way through the tree-lined course, we emerged from the winding trail with a better impression of the Altima Coupe's performance prowess. This is one car that you can throw about with confidence, providing that you're not traveling too fast.

In the cabin
The interior of the 2008 Nissan Altima Coupe features a clean, sparse design with a neat arrangement of cabin amenities, including an as-standard Intelligent (remote) key with pushbutton start. Our car was optioned up with charcoal leather covering for the seats and door panels, which was offset by some stylish silvery trim for the door handles and storage compartment. On the downside, we were surprised at the lack of fit and finish for the car's spring-loaded center storage console, which when closed left a gaping gap between the plastic cover and the central console.

As part of our test car's heftily priced Premium package, it was optioned up with a number of impressive cabin tech features. For entertainment, we got an upgraded stereo with six-disc in-dash changer capable of handing MP3 discs and input from portable media players via its front-mounted line-in jack. We found the buttons and dials for the head unit to be intuitive and well-laid-out, and we particularly like the generic Display button that enables drivers to cycle through text information on album, artist, and song title names for MP3 discs, and XM station, category, artist, and track information for XM satellite radio.


We like the clean readout given by the Altima Coupe's stereo head unit display.

Also as part of the Premium package, the Altima Coupe gets a nine-speaker Bose-branded audio system, which concentrated its output toward the front seats (a good move, seeing as there is very little legroom for anyone other than small children in the backseats). We found sound quality to be adequate for listening to MP3 discs and XM satellite radio--also part of the Premium package--but that audio output suffered from muddy bass and a lack of acoustic separation at higher volumes.

For communication, the Premium package gives the Altima Coupe one of the most user-friendly Bluetooth hands-free calling interfaces on the market. After a straightforward pairing process during which car and phone find each other, all phone controls can be activated by voice using a command button mounted on the steering wheel. Throughout our time with the car, we were consistently impressed with the ability of the system to understand our spoken commands: as an added bonus, the Nissan's Bluetooth system allows drivers to cut in with a command without having to wait for the car to complete its list of options.


Nissan's Bluetooth hands-free calling interface is one of the best we've tested.

One curious thing that we noticed when using the steering-wheel-mounted controls was that the buttons on the wheel were connected to the car's horn, and that if we held a button down for an extended time or if we pushed a button particularly firmly, we ended up incurring death stares from other road users who thought that we were beeping at them.

Under the hood
As we found in our canyon carving adventure on the Tunitas Creek Road and elsewhere, the Altima Coupe's base-level 175-horsepower 2.5-liter in-line four cylinder engine provides plenty of zip for a car this size, but for those who feel like an extra 100 horsepower, the coupe is also available with Nissan's flagship 3.5-liter V-6. Based on our driving experience in the 2007 Nissan Maxima 3.5 SE , we're not sure of the utility of the bigger engine in the front-wheel drive coupe, particularly seeing as we regularly managed to inadvertently spin the wheels off the line with the smaller engine.


We're inclined to favor the smaller 2.5-liter engine option in the Altima Coupe, which has less likelihood of overpowering the front wheels.

Driving the Altima Coupe around town, it is clear that the car was tuned with sporty driving in mind as throttle engagement and brakes are both sharp to the point of being aggressive. On the other hand, the coupe's power-assisted steering feels far too overboosted at low speeds, which we found to be a little disconcerting (thankfully the steering tightens up considerably at higher speeds). As we noted in our mountain joyride, the Altima Coupe tracks well at lower speeds, but is prone to understeer when thrown into corners at higher speeds.

In spirited driving, the throttle tip-in is well-suited to quick upshifts with the long-throw stick. One of the most enjoyable elements of driving the Altima Coupe is its midrange and in-gear acceleration. While its red line is at 6,500rpm, peak horsepower is up at 5,600rpm, which is where the car feels happiest and most responsive. Handling is firm and rigid thanks to a sport-tuned coil-over-spring front-link and multilink independent rear suspension and front- and rear-stabilizer bars. As of this writing, official EPA fuel-economy figures for the Altima Coupe were not available; however, in our week with the car, we observed an impressive average gas-mileage figure of 27.9 over nearly 300 miles of mixed freeway, city, and slalom-course driving.

In sum
Our manual-transmission 2008 Nissan Altima Coupe came with a base price of $20,570, to which we added a hefty $5,100 for the Premium package, giving us a power moonroof; leather-trimmed, heated seats; Bluetooth hands-free calling; the upgraded Bose audio system with an MP3-compatible six-CD changer; XM satellite radio; and some other minor cabin niceties.

The Nissan Altima Coupe is a car that will appeal to commuters and weekend racers who want a sport-tuned ride without the rawness of the 350Z or the price tag of the new Infiniti G37. Its bold styling, broad range of interior tech, edgy driving dynamics, and impressive fuel economy make the Altima Coupe a formidable competitor when weighed against other cars in the segment such as the Pontiac G6 GT Coupe and the Honda Accord Coupe, which gets a major overhaul for 2008.

User opinions

Select a User Opinion to view: 1 2 3 4 5 6
User Rating:
5.0 stars

out of 6 user reviews

I'm in love!

Pros: Great commuter car

Cons: there are none

Review: I'm not an expert on vehicles, just an empty-nest female consumer. I recently purchased a "bare bones" automatic coupe, 4-cyl for commuting because I think it has an awesome appearance, good mpg and fantastic pricing. I've had several vehicles over the years (vw,chevy,toyota,mazda,audi,lexus) but this car I'm truly in love with. It is a pleasure to drive (smooth handling, responsive acceleration). I was afraid the 4 cyl would be a dog going up hills, but it does quite well. I adore this car so much, I'm even looking at aftermarket extras to "pimp my ride" (but careful not to void my warranty) and I'm a 55 year old female! I'm even going to purchase an iPod just so I can use the AUX port. I've gone crazy over this car!
User Rating:
4.5 stars

out of 6 user reviews

A luxury car!

Pros: Fits into small parking spaces

Cons: The trunk is small

Review: The 2008 Nissan Altima Coupe is probably one of the fastest and smallest cars Nissan made. This car can fit into small parking space and it is very luxurious. Even though the Altima Coupe is small and fast the trunk maybe a little small for storage.
User Rating:
4.5 stars

out of 6 user reviews

Just test drove the altima coupe v6.

Pros: Torque, nice power, hids.

Cons: overpriced, other then that none

Review: I must say I was very impressed. The styling on the honda is better in some aspects. But the altima has sooo much more to offer. Bluetooth without having to get navi, HIDS, i mean come on honda ugly sedan headlights and projectors on the coupe but no option of hids? I am also dissapointed in hondas crap navi system they transfered from acura, the idrive wannabe navi. I just prefer touch screen, because it is easier and less time consuming to enter an address. Both engines are nice. Nissan being the torqier of the 2 at a lower rpm range also. Both are overpriced. loaded accord v6 ex-l is $30k + taxes, the altima coupe fully loaded is $31k + taxes. juts think its awfully close to the acura tl and g35/g37 price range.
User Rating:
4.5 stars

out of 6 user reviews

amazing vehicle

Pros: all the great coupe aspects at a great price

Cons: very few - had rattle at first but now fixed

Review: I'm a sophomore in college now and when I went looking for a new vehicle I was obviously on a budget. However, I wanted a coupe since I don't have to haul any other folks around usually. I found the Altima Coupe to be priced amazingly low for such great styling (has similarities to the 350z and the inifinity g35) and decided on it 3 days after it came out (May 28th).

3 months in and I couldn't be happier. The only problem I have encountered is somewhat audible rattle that occurred from the exhaust manifold. Luckily, the Nissan dealership was able to fix the problem and it's as good as new.

Overall great car for a great price ( mine did not have many options added,,,but hey what do I need them for, it has all I need already)
User Rating:
3.5 stars

out of 6 user reviews

Good car but!!!!

Pros: 2 doors sporty

Cons: cheap interior .

Review: This is a pretty good car looks nice, until I seen the 2008 Accord Coupe and it made it look cheap. Seen one at the local dealer they only had one since the coupe come out in 2 weeks. But when i seen that thing i forgot all about the Altima. Here a link.http://www.edmunds.com/apps/vdpcontainers/do/MediaNav/articleId=103650/firstNav=Gallery/photoId=43622
User Rating:
4.5 stars

out of 6 user reviews

The 3.5SE is the real sports car

Pros: Perfect styling, Goergous back, awesome performance!

Cons: None! I love it! great 2+2!

Review: Well they basically killed all sportiness in the altima for anyone who trusts cnet...

It's funny how Nissan decided to give them a 2.5s instead of the sportier 3.5SE to review...Cnet's people were pretty hyped about the sporty appearance of the car and they reviewed it like it was the 3.5SE... which is a sure way of being disappointed:

"Our test car was equipped with the baseline 2.5-liter four-cylinder engine mated to the standard six-speed manual transmission for which we were eternally grateful: had our loaner come with the optional $500 continuously variable transmission (CVT), we suspect we could have kissed all hopes of a sporty ride goodbye."

...and later in the review they just assumed the 3.5SE was the same car with just more horsepower:

" [...] but for those who feel like an extra 100 horsepower, the coupe is also available with Nissan's flagship 3.5-liter V-6. Based on our driving experience in the 2007 Nissan Maxima 3.5 SE , we're not sure of the utility of the bigger engine in the front-wheel drive coupe, particularly seeing as we regularly managed to inadvertently spin the wheels off the line with the smaller engine."

Hello?! Nissan only gave the 3.5SE the Traction Control System (TCS), 17" Aluminum-alloy wheels, Sport-tuned suspension with retuned front stuts and thicker front (24.2 mm) stabilizer bar and the optional Vehicle Dynamic Control (VDC). The Altima coupe 3.5SE's new D platform almost completely negates torque steer and the 2007 Nissan Maxima 3.5 SE doesn't even has the same platform.

All in all, it's a pretty disappointing review, since a lot of people are going the think that the Altima coupe is an all show and no substance car... get a 3.5SE for Christs sake if you want to review the "sport" side of it.
Updated
"Well Cnet basically killed all sportiness in the altima for anyone who trusts them..."
Updated
"Well Cnet basically killed all sportiness in the Altima coupe for anyone who trusts them..."

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2008 Nissan Altima Coupe specifications

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