|

The 2006 Nissan Quest is offered in four trim levels: base 3.5, 3.5 S Special Edition, SL, and SE. All are the same length. All are powered by Nissan's superb 3.5-liter V6 engine, all are front-wheel drive.The Quest 3.5 ($24,000) comes with a four-speed automatic transmission, cloth upholstery, eight-way manually adjustable driver's seat with lumbar support, four-way manually adjustable passenger seat, cruise control with switches on the steering wheel, AM/FM/CD audio with eight speakers and RDS, power windows, power door locks with remote keyless entry, two 12-volt power points, cornering lights, dual sliding doors, and P225/65HR16 Goodyear Eagle LS all-season tires on 16-inch steel wheels. The 3.5 S Special Edition ($25,300) adds a power right-side sliding door, a power liftgate, power third-row vent windows, in-dash six-disc CD autochanger, upgraded audio speakers, rear sonar back-up warning system, and illuminated steering wheel audio switches. SL ($26,900) substitutes a five-speed automatic transmission and adds an eight-way power driver's seat, power-adjustable pedals, leather-wrapped steering wheel with cruise control and illuminated audio switches, rear-seat audio controls, upgraded stereo speakers, electrochromic rear-view mirror, HomeLink transmitter, front-row folding center tray table with cup holders, and 16-inch aluminum wheels. The SL can be upgraded with a Special Edition package ($1,150), which adds some of the features of the SE, including a power left-side sliding door, RearView Monitor, rear sonar back-up warning system, and the in-dash six-disc CD autochanger. The Leather/Bose package ($2,500) upgrades the SL with leather trim in first and second row seats, heated front seats, and 265-watt Bose sound system with 10 speakers and a six-CD in-dash changer. SE ($33,500) adds the RearView Monitor with a seven-inch screen, plus leather seats in the first and second rows, heated front seats, four-way power for the front passenger seat, memory function for the driver's seat and pedals, front-seat side-impact airbags, dual power sliding doors, 265-watt Bose sound system with 10 speakers and a six-CD changer, Vehicle Dynamic Control (VDC), automatic headlights, fog lights, and P225/60HR17 Goodyear Eagles on machine-finished 17-inch aluminum rims. The Seat Package, which nearly every Quest has, features fold-flat captain's chairs in the second row, with cupholders and an easy-entry feature, a fold-flat bench in third row with grocery-bag hooks, 3-point seat belts, and LATCH-style child safety seat anchors. The DVD Entertainment Package ($1,500) includes a DVD drive mounted under the front passenger seat, a seven-inch color screen, remote control, auxiliary inputs, rear-seat audio controls and two wireless headphones. A dual-screen version of the system ($1,900) is available exclusively for the SE. A GPS navigation system ($1,800) with DVD is available for the SL and for SE models with Bose audio. It features a seven-inch display mounted in the center instrument cluster. The Skyview Roof is available on the SL and SE ($1500). It consists of a power glass sunroof over the first row plus panoramic glass panels over the second and third rows; the package includes sunshades and a full-length overhead console. A Michelin PAX run-flat tire package that provides a 125-mile driving range on flat tires is available for the SL ($1,200) and SE ($850). Other factory-installed options include satellite radio with XM or Sirius receiver ($350), and a tow package that gives Quest a towing capacity of 3500 pounds (adequate for a small boat, wave runners or snow mobiles). Eight port- or dealer-installed accessories are available, including running boards ($560), roof rack cross bars ($240), and cargo organizer ($210).
|