2 diesel [E, S, SE, SVE, SXE, Flare, Pulse, Sport, Sport+, Activ])
BY ANDY ENRIGHT
When Nissan developed the second generation Almera, it had to not only counter the threat from increasingly sophisticated European hatches, it also had to prove itself attractive in the face of competition from the burgeoning mini-MPV sector. Whilst the Almera Tino mini-MPV mopped up buyers unconvinced of the standard Almeras versatility, it certainly scored on the first criterion making a late used Almera far more in demand than the first generation car ever was. An affordable Nissan with inbuilt desirability? Youd better believe it.
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Prices for a 2000 V registered Almera 1.5E kick off at £2,375, rising to £3,625 for an 02 plate edition. The upspec SE version with the same engine starts at £2,700 and rises to £4,900 for a 52-plate. Keen drivers will revel in the extra urge provided by the 1.
8-litre engine and Sport and SE models both open at around £2,575 on a 2000 V plate, with the SE+ and Sport + variants commanding an additional £300. If diesel is more your cup of tea, Nissans 2.2-litre turbo diesel unit is well worth looking out for. With S trim diesels starting at £3,025, SE variants at £3,150 and Sport+ models commanding £3,250 for 2000 V-plate examples, you dont have to spend big to save big.
All Almera models attract reasonable insurance premiums with the 1.5 starting at Group 4 and even the raciest 1.8 Sport+ model squeaking into Group 7.
Youd probably be shocked if we were to catalogue a litany of fundamental faults with a Nissan. It isnt going to happen. The only boring thing about the second generation Almera is its metronomic reliability record.
(approx. for a 1.5-litre hatchback) Consumables for the Almera are reasonable, although prices crank up for more specialist parts. Expect to fork out £12 for an air filter and a similar amount for a fuel filter.
An oil filter retails at just over £5 whilst spark plugs are around £2.50 each.
On the road, as we've suggested, the car's very good to drive - a quality promoted in the latest model by a body that's 30% stiffer than before. The gearbox is positive but a bit vague, a pity since all three engines feel very willing. The 1.8 petrol is the fastest engine currently on offer (no GTi replacement is planned), making rest to sixty in 11.
1s en route to 115mph. Don't ignore the new turbodiesel if you're so inclined though: it takes a little time to get going but once it does, you can hustle it along quite rapidly and get over 1,000 miles on a tankful. The handling is superb with plenty of grip and good feedback from the chassis. The light clutch and steering make the Almera effortless to pilot through town.
If you could combine Japanese reliability with German interiors and French driving characteristics that would make quite some car. Fortunately, Nissan have taken the effort out of such a task with the second generation Almera. Its not the obvious choice but it s up there with the class leaders. Without the shrunken MPV styling that cars like the Fiat Stilo, Peugeot 307 and Honda Civic have adopted, its tempting to write it off as slightly old fashioned, but the Almera has the power to convert.
With a fair number of low mileage used examples turning up and with used demand running slightly below the aforementioned ilk, you can afford to be fussy. Pick of the range? Although the head says 2.2 turbodiesel, the 1.8-litre Sport variants have enough verve to put a smile on the face of the most jaded motorist.
Unexpectedly recommended.
Nissan Almera (2000 - 2007)
















