Nissan Xterra
Nissan motor vehicle (1999–2015) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Nissan Xterra is a truck-based compact SUV manufactured and marketed by Nissan from 1999–2015 across two generations; the first (1999–2004) sharing a platform and many of its major exterior parts from the front doors forward with the Nissan (D22) Frontier pickup[1] – and the second (2005–2015) sharing the Nissan F-Alpha platform with the Frontier and Pathfinder.
Nissan Xterra | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Manufacturer | Nissan |
Also called | Nissan Paladin (China) Nissan Roniz (Iran) Dongfeng Oting (China) |
Production | 1999–2015 2003–2015 (China) |
Body and chassis | |
Class | Compact SUV |
Body style | 5-door SUV |
Layout | Front-engine, rear-wheel-drive Front-engine, four-wheel-drive |
Chronology | |
Successor | Nissan Rogue Nissan Murano Nissan Terra (China) |
Sporting a name licensed from the XTERRA off-road triathlon race series,[2] the vehicle was positioned by Nissan[3] as functional and reliable outdoor gear, epitomized by its marketing tagline “Everything You Need, Nothing You Don’t.” [4]
It was developed in La Jolla, California,[5] by Nissan Design International (NDI)'s (now Nissan Design America) then Director of Design Tom Semple,[6] and became the first Nissan vehicle completely conceived, developed and manufactured in the United States.[7] According to Jerry Hirshberg, president of Nissan Design International (NDI), "the impetus for Xterra designers was to create an affordable, rugged, quality piece of equipment".[1] He later described it as "a garage tool that says, 'treat me rough' – it's designed to look better dirty than clean."[8]
While the two Xterra generations differed significantly, both prioritized ruggedness, practicality, and affordability over luxury.[9] Traditional body-on-frame construction and underbody skid plates reflected both its truck heritage and off-road capability.[10] Throughout its lifetime the Xterra used a two-box design with a prominent two-tiered roof enabling second row stadium seating, C-pillar-mounted rear door handles, asymmetrical rear window, and a distinctive tailgate bump-out for an inside mounted first aid kit. For hauling exterior loads a roof rack with a removable forward gear basket was standard equipment.
Road & Track described the Xterra as "an honest SUV that doesn't try to be a luxury car alternative, nor tries to hide its truck underpinnings".[11] Jalopnik called it a "knockoff of the Land Rover Discovery".[12] The Washington Post described it as "rugged without bravado".[10]
First generation manufacture took place at Nissan's Decherd, Tennessee Plant (engines) and Smyrna Assembly plant (final assembly). Second generation Xterras were manufactured at the company's Canton, Mississippi plant (final assembly). Variants were also manufactured in Brazil and China.