Ah, relief from the demands of visual distinction. Comfort,
convenience, function and ergonomics are the priorities
of a car's interior, and the M45 fares much
better on these counts. The M45 uses the full-size
Q45 chassis, but its overall length is three inches less. Legroom
is still decent in front, but five inches have been lost
in the rear. Wide rear doors make entering relatively easy,
however.
The exterior dimensions of the car are a bit unusual; it's
relatively long, tall and narrow; a
2003 Honda Accord, for example, is a couple inches lower and wider. So the
M45 has good headroom front and rear (although our rear-seat
passenger said the roofline made him feel claustrophobic),
but it's squeezed on shoulder room. We first encountered
this when we reached down to adjust the standard 10-way
power seat; our left wrist nearly got wedged between the
seat and the door.
The front seats are on the firm side: not uncomfortable,
but not especially relaxing, though power lumbar support
is always nice to have. We might call them sporty if there
were more bolstering. Heat in the front seats is
standard. An
optional cooling system for the seats blows cool air through
the pores in the leather. It sometimes feels like you have
a hole in your pants. It should be the hot ticket in humid
climates, especially during that period before the interior
cools down.
The M45 offers voice recognition, but we had trouble
getting it to understand us. We also did not care for the
leaf on the LCD screen of the Vehicle Information Center
that indicates instantaneous fuel mileage; when you're coasting
it's green, and when you get on the throttle the leaf progressively
turns a smoggy gray, evidently to remind you that your 340-horsepower
automobile is polluting the environment. The actual mileage
numbers are there, but they're so small you can't read them.
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The driver's space is tidy and sporty. There's a great
four-spoke steering wheel with a nice thick rim, fairly
small diameter, and controls for audio and cruise control.
Four gauges, a big speedo and tach, smaller gas and temp,
are laid out
as cleanly as they come, and are backlit at all times. On
the floor there's a solid dead pedal, and on the door there's
an armrest that fits perfectly. The dashboard slopes pleasantly
toward the windshield, with reasonable dials and buttons
including a control for the information center, and the
Infiniti trademark clock is small and discreet. There's
a modest amount of smoky maple trim, most of it on the console.
In addition to the two-stage airbags, important standard
safety features include side thorax airbags in front, curtain
airbags front and rear, and active front headrests.