The interior of the Nissan 350Z is a cockpit designed
for driving, helping the driver quickly become one with
the car. The carbon-fiber colored cloth seats are form-fitting,
supportive and comfortable, made of a soft material that
grips the body in the corners. The driver's seat bottom
features a mound in the center at the front to
restrain the driver from sliding forward under deceleration.
Aggressive side bolsters grip the waist to hold the driver
in place. The leather seats in the Touring model feel a
little firmer than the cloth, and are available in charcoal,
burnt orange, or frost. Either cloth or leather is a good
choice in this case. The supportive seats and a driver's
dead pedal mean you never feel like you have to hang on
to the car.
The seating position should be good for drivers with long
legs, though the steering wheel felt a little close when
the seat was adjusted for the legs of a six-footer. It's
worth noting, however, that this feeling went away the moment
the key was turned in the ignition. The Roadster boasts
an inch more headroom than the hatchback, thanks to the
articulation of the top's various mechanicals.
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Tilt the steering column and the main pod of gauges
moves with it, ensuring a clear view of the instruments
for drivers of all sizes. The instruments consist of a big
tachometer and flanking speedometer, fuel and temperature
gauges. Reminiscent of the original Z, nestled in three
pods on top of the dash are a voltmeter, an oil pressure
gauge and a digital trip computer. They look retro-cool,
but reading them requires more than a glance.
Two toggles to the right of the steering wheel operate
the trip computer, used to check outside air temperature,
distance to empty, speed, average mileage, and average speed.
It has a stopwatch function (to check out those 0-60 times),
and a tire-pressure monitor for 18-inch wheels. With the
Trip Computer, the driver can program a shift light to come
on at a certain rpm. The small red indicator on the tachometer
begins flashing about 500 rpm before the preset engine speed
is reached, whereupon it comes on solid. You can program
it for the ideal shift
points for acceleration or fuel economy, then let your peripheral
vision pick up the indicator. If you don't like this feature
you can turn it off.
The interior of the Nissan 350Z seems to suggest a carbon-fiber
racecar tub. The material surrounding the shifter and forming
the center dash looks like carbon-fiber. Likewise, the large
expanse of gray material lining the door panels suggests
carbon-fiber in appearance. The quality of the materials
is okay, though some of the pieces would never be allowed
in an Audi. It looked austere at first, but quickly grew
on us. Stylish interior touches, such as the inside door
handles integrated into aerodynamic pods for the side vents,
give the Nissan 350Z a racy, modern look; with the AC at
work on hot days, the handles chill to fit their frosty
look. Passengers often grope for the door release the first
time they try to get out, distracted by the big grab handles
adorned with genuine aluminum and relieved by the Z's dot
motif.
Stylish audio controls include a big volume knob, clearly
marked buttons for channel seeking, and six station buttons
that can be preset simply by holding them down. We confess
we were too focused on entertaining ourselves with the car
to turn it on, and we've driven various models of the Nissan
350Z on both coasts. Below the radio are three large knobs
for the automatic climate control system, which comes standard.
Nicely designed wiper and headlamp controls are mounted
on short stalks. The leather-wrapped steering wheel looks
and feels great, and comes with cruise controls. Overhead
are well-designed map lights and a bin for sunglasses. Power
window switches are auto-up/auto-down. Two power points
are available, one in the center console, the other in the
bulkhead between and behind the seats, but
neither is conveniently located for radar detectors.
The Z is not the best place to drink things. There's
a pair of cup holders in the center console, but they're
mounted too far rearward for use by the driver, and passengers
will find them awkward. It might be best to ditch the cup
holders and use the center console for storage. Another
cup holder is mounted on the passenger-side dash. It pops
out with the press of a button, feels flimsy, but works
well and isn't too much of a stretch for the driver, just
past the audio controls. The firm suspension makes drinking
hot coffee from an open cup while underway a risky proposition
on all but the smoothest highways.
At first it doesn't seem like the Nissan 350Z offers
much in the way of storage. For starters, there's no glovebox.
Cars without the navigation system get a nice lined storage
pocket above the radio, but it's saddled with a lid that
registers high on the bogusity scale: Pressing a button
opens it, but closing it requires grasping it between thumb
and finger, pulling it out and carefully pressing it closed.
Owners will adjust to it, but it's not our favorite feature.
There's a small, lined ashtray-size compartment (not recommended
for ashes) on the center tunnel and there's a spot on the
outside of each seat for a pen or pencil. Turn around and
the picture brightens considerably where a thoughtfully
designed system of storage compartments provides handy places
to stick stuff.
From the driver's seat, you can access a large lockable
box, bigger than a shoebox but smaller than a breadbox,
built into the bulkhead behind the passenger seatback. When
stopped, but without getting out of the car or opening a
door, it's easy to flip the passenger seatback forward via
a handle in the center of the seatback. Then, it's a simple
matter to open a lid that reveals a storage bin. The lockable
lid has a quality feel to it and the bin is lined to keep
things from rattling about. But as the only lockable storage
inside the car, this bin becomes a
critical feature in the Z Roadster, and it falls short of
expectations. Unlike with the hatchback, the passenger seatback
in the Z Roadster has no mechanical release for tipping
it forward. Instead, you press a rocker switch situated
ungainly on the back side of the seatback; conveniently,
it's an automatic, press-and-release process for tilting
the seatback forward, but re-reclining the seatback requires
holding the button during the entire process, often leaving
you with a somewhat cramped arm. Also, in the admittedly
unlikely event the car's battery dies or becomes disconnected,
you're stuck with whatever you locked up securely out of
your reach, too. A smaller bin is mounted higher and somewhat
more awkwardly toward the center in the hatchback that could
hold a map, checkbook, PDA or cellphone. Identical bins
on the driver's side in the hatchback are accessed when
standing outside the car by flipping the driver's seatback
forward.
Cargo in the hatchback rides in an hourglass-shaped
well, squeezed in the middle by the shock towers and the
big strut-tower brace that ties them together. (That cross
brace is functional: hatchbacks flex and the Z's chassis
engineers wanted to ensure a rigid monocoque.) The Nissan
350Z offers more cargo capacity than a
Mazda Miata, but less than a
Porsche 911 or
Boxster or a
Mitsubishi
Eclipse, more than an
Audi TT, but less than a TT with quattro. We're comparing small
boxes here. An avid golfer at Nissan swears two golf bags
will fit in the cargo compartment, if you pull the big woods
out of the bag. Nissan says fitted luggage will be available
for the 350Z. And coming up with your own system to
compartmentalize the cargo area might make it better for
carrying stuff. The same holds for the Z Roadster's trunk,
which at 4.1 cubic feet is the smallest of the lot. Even
the Porsche Boxster has more cargo space. Still, Nissan
promises accommodations for a golf bag, posting a diagram
on the underside of the trunk lid depicting which end of
the bag to insert first.
The Z Roadster's power top operates similarly to that
of the Boxster. Prepping for windblown hair is a simple
matter of pressing the foot brake and working a flat, toggle-type
switch in the lower dash to the right of the steering column.
Manual manipulation of a latch mounted in the center of
the top's front bow is required to latch or unlatch it.
The top stows in a recess occupying the upper part of the
trunk and is covered by a cleanly sculpted body panel that
opens and closes as needed, avoiding the hassle of dealing
with one of those detachable covers that many people throw
into some dark corner of the garage.