2019 Infiniti Q60: Stylish and Powerful Luxury Sport 4-Seater
Apr 3, 2019, 16:22 PM
by
Mike Blake
The Infiniti Q60 is a 2-door sport luxury 4-seater coupe, not to be confused with the cross-over QX60. The Q60 is the successor to the Infiniti G Coupe and convertible, and began as a rebadged “G” for the 2013 model year. Unlike other alpha-numeric nomenclature in which the number is directly related to engine size (e.g. the old G37 stood for a 3.7-liter engine), the “Q” stands for sedan-class and the “60” is for the proposed relative ranking in the “Q” universe, where the entry-level Q is the Q50, the sporty convertible is called the Q60, the luxury Q is the Q70 and the cross-over is the QX with its own number placements.
For 2019, the third year of its second generation, Infiniti has eliminated its old 2.0-liter turbo engine and has replaced it with a 3.0-liter twin-turbo setup, available in two power ranges. This year’s Q60 is offered in three grade levels – PURE, LUXE and RED SPORT 400 – the RED SPORT 400 gets its name from the traditional power production – a 400hp engine, as opposed to 300 horses for the other trims. And a few cosmetic packages have been renamed, while several previous options are now standard on the various trims, including standard automatic emergency braking on the uplevel offerings.
Building on Infiniti's luxury-sports sedan design, performance and technology, the Q60 delivers an in-motion appearance with its aggressive stance, low and wide proportions and muscular lines. Its low center of gravity enhances driving dynamics, and is augmented by trapezoidal, honey-comb grille and crescent-shaped C-pillars that arc forward. Signature LED headlights, employ light guide technology to spread light evenly on the road ahead, and are designed to emulate the shape of the human eyelid, providing an alluring face to the car. The deep grille is inset from the high-strength steel corrosion-resistant body and aluminum hood. The 2019 Q60 measures 184.4 inches long, 54.5 inches high and 72.8 inches long on a 112.2-inch wheelbase.
The well-appointed interior is cramped up top and in the rear, and the backseats are difficult to access, but the cockpit is tailored to meet a driver’s needs. The layout includes natural contour ergonomic-design front seats for enhanced comfort, premium leatherette seating surfaces, available semi-aniline leather-appointed seating, 8-way power-adjustable driver's seat with manual lumbar support (power available), 8-way power-adjustable front passenger seat, available power torso bolsters (driver's side), Infiniti Intelligent Key with Push Button Ignition, touch unlock door function, available heated front seats and heated steering wheel, Fine Vision electroluminescent instrumentation, premium 13-speaker Bose® sound system, Infiniti InTuition™ – a customizable digital environment for storing and providing various driver settings and driving characteristics to Intelligent Key, and much more. But as mentioned, interior dimensions are a bit tight north and south and in the rear, with 37.9 inches of front headroom and 34.5 inches in row two; legroom is comfortable at 43.1 inches in row one, but a child-worthy 32.4 in the rear; and shoulder room measures 54.6 and 52.0.
Available in rear-wheel-drive or all-wheel-drive, Q60 delivers power with its standard 3.0-liter longitudinal V-6 twin-turbo that provides 300-hp. 295-lb-ft of torque. The uptweaked Q60 Red Sport 400 model gets its numerics from a 400-hp, 350 lb-ft 3.0-liter V-6. The engines are teamed exclusively to a 7-speed automatic transmission, and the vehicle delivers when called upon. While inclement weather forced test track closures, my test LUXE trim should complete a zero-to-60mph dash in about 6 seconds, with a quarter-mile accomplished on about 14.5. Fuelwise, I averaged 22.8mpg during mixed-use tests.
Handling is quick-turn worthy and the power-assisted, vehicle-speed-sensitive rack-and-pinion steering is predictable, while the independent double-wishbone front suspension with a stabilizer bar, works well with a multi-link independent rear with a stabilizer bar for good road-feel without a harsh ride.
From a safety perspective, Q60 is outfitted with six airbags, LATCH connectors for child safety seats, brake assist, anti-lock brakes with electronic brake-force distribution, advanced vehicle dynamic control and traction control, tire-pressure monitoring and an emergency inside trunk release. Optional safety features include backup-collision intervention, blind spot monitoring, predictive forward-collision warning, forward emergency braking with pedestrian detection, blind spot intervention, lane-departure warning and lane-departure intervention with active lane control and front-seat pre-crash seat belts.
The 2019 Infiniti Q60 is available in three trims in RWD and AWD configurations, with the AWD adding $2000 to the base. The 3.0t PURE starts at $40,750. The 3.0t LUXE that I tested, started at $44,900 and the 400hp RED SPORT starts at $54,900. My test LUXE added AWD for that $2000 increase, and upgraded with the Essential Package ($3200) for Navigation with voice guidance, voice recognition, Lane Guidance and 3D building graphics, heated front seats and steering wheel, power tilt and telescoping steering column, dual-occupant memory system for driver's seat, steering column, and outside mirrors, driver's seat power lumbar and side bolsters, auto-dimming outside mirrors with reverse tilt-down feature and remote engine start system. A carbon fiber rear decklid spoiler added $870; carbon fiber look rear bumper protector added $50; remote engine start added $328; trunk protector added $120; Infiniti WiFi added $495; and destination and handling fees added $995 for a sticker-as-tested $52,958.
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Mike Blake, former editor of KIT CAR magazine, joined Carlisle Events as senior automotive journalist in 2004. He's been a "car guy" since the 1960s and has been writing professionally for about 30 years. </I>
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