Nissan Kicks P15

  • Nissan Kicks e-Power Impul Edition open for booking in Malaysia – RM8.5k package: bodykit, 18-inch alloys

    Nissan Kicks e-Power Impul Edition open for booking in Malaysia – RM8.5k package: bodykit, 18-inch alloys

    Five months after its KLIMS24 launch, the Nissan Kicks e-Power now gets some Impul accessories to jazz up its looks. The Nissan Kicks e-Power Impul Edition is now open for booking ahead of deliveries expected in July. Quite garang, no?

    What’s on is a bodykit that comprises a front lip, aero garnish on the side skirts, and a sportier-looking rear bumper with a diffuser-like element. There’s also an M-shaped tailgate spoiler, an Impul bonnet emblem and 18-inch Impul Aura SX-50 bronze clear-polished alloys (one inch up from stock) wrapped in 225/45 Goodyear Eagle F1 Sport tyres.

    The entire package costs RM8,500 and it’s applicable to all variants of the Kicks e-Power. You can have just the bodykit, tailgate spoiler and bonnet emblem for RM5,000, just the wheels and tyres for RM3,500, or just the spoiler for RM3,000.

    However, under an early bird promo, all buyers of both variants of the Kicks e-Power will get the bodykit, bonnet emblem and roof spoiler for free, plus a free ‘Active Package’ which comprises a door visor, boot tray, door handle protectors, kick plates, sport pedals, speaker trim cover, a dashcam, ICE COOL tint (if VL), V-KOOL security tint (if VLT) and auto-dimming rear-view mirror with reverse camera (if VL).

    After the promo period (end date not announced yet), the ‘Active Package’ will be offered at RM8,500. There are also some a la carte items – RM1,800 for black leatherette with blue stitching seats (VL only), RM2,800 for black Nappa leather seats (VLT only) and RM150 for (additional) floor carpets.

    All Impul accessories come with a three-year/100,000 km warranty. Learn more about the five-star ASEAN NCAP-rated series hybrid via our launch story, full review, full gallery and spec run-through.

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    Nissan Kicks e-Power Impul Edition at Malaysia Autoshow 2025

    Nissan Kicks e-Power Impul Edition official images

     
     
  • Nissan Kicks e-Power – early bird RM5,000 rebate, 10-year EV warranty extended to first 1,000 customers

    Nissan Kicks e-Power – early bird RM5,000 rebate, 10-year EV warranty extended to first 1,000 customers

    The Nissan Kicks e-Power was launched at the Kuala Lumpur International Mobility Show (KLIMS) 2024 two weeks ago with an early bird package – a RM5,000 introductory rebate plus two years extra on the EV warranty for a total of 10 years/160,000 km – for the first 500 customers.

    Well, Edaran Tan Chong Motor (ETCM) has announced that said package has been fully taken up (meaning bookings have exceeded or at least reached 500) and the company is extending it to the next 500 customers for 1,000 in total.

    With the package, the VL is priced at RM108,800 and the VLT, RM116,800 (+RM4,000 for a black roof, VLT only), and as mentioned, the EV warranty is now 10 years/160,000 km (up from eight years, same mileage), covering the battery, ECU, inverter and electric motor. The five-year/100,000 km vehicle warranty does not change.

    Learn more about the five-star ASEAN NCAP-rated series hybrid via our launch story, full review, full gallery and spec run-through.

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT at KLIMS 2024

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VL at KLIMS 2024

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT Malaysia drive gallery

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT two-tone in Malaysia full gallery

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT two-tone in Malaysia showroom

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VL in Malaysia showroom

     
     
  • Nissan Kicks e-Power launched in Malaysia, series hybrid, 129 PS, 280 Nm, 21.7 km/l, RM114k-126k

    Nissan Kicks e-Power launched in Malaysia, series hybrid, 129 PS, 280 Nm, 21.7 km/l, RM114k-126k

    At long last, the Nissan Kicks e-Power has been launched in Malaysia at the ongoing Kuala Lumpur International Mobility Show (KLIMS) 2024. The VL is priced at RM113,800; the VLT at RM121,800, OTR before insurance. Add RM4,000 for a black roof on the VLT.

    The five-star ASEAN NCAP safety rated Kicks e-Power carries a front-mounted 129 PS/280 Nm electric motor is hooked up to a 82 PS/103 Nm HR12DE 1.2 litre naturally-aspirated three-cylinder that only serves as a generator for the 2.06 kWh battery, with no mechanical connection to the wheels.

    The century sprint is done in 9.5 seconds. ‘In-gear’ acceleration is also strong, the car able to get from 100 to 120 km/h in four seconds flat. Fuel consumption is rated at 21.7 km per litre, resulting in a claimed total range of up to 900 km with the 41 litre fuel tank. You get a choice of Normal, Sport and Eco drive modes, plus a one-pedal e-Pedal Step mode. EV mode (petrol engine stays asleep) is possible up to 2.5 km at 40 km/h.

    The VL comes with full LED front lighting (headlamps, fog lamps, signals), auto-folding wing mirrors, 17-inch alloys (no spare, tyre repair kit), ‘zero gravity’ fabric seats (manual), electronic parking brake with auto hold, auto air con, cruise control, a 7.0-inch digital meter panel, an 8.0-inch infotainment touchscreen with Apple CarPlay/Android Auto and six speakers. Safety wise, it’s seven airbags plus forward collision warning and braking (AEB).

    The VLT adds on two-tone (brown-black) leather for the seats (brown is also on the door cards and dash), a 360-degree around view monitor, intelligent rear view mirror (LCD screen with camera), active cruise control, blind spot warning and rear cross traffic alert. You can have the VLT in two-tone paint as well; count this in and there are three variants in total.

    Speaking of colours, choose from Black Star, Brilliant White Pearl, Brilliant Silver (VL only), Red Pearl, Sunrise Orange and Dark Metal Grey (VLT only). VLT buyers can opt to have a black roof on orange, white, red and grey.

    Warranties are five years/100,000 km for the vehicle and eight years/160,000 km for the battery, ECU, inverter and electric motor. The first 500 customers get a RM5,000 intro rebate and two years extra on the EV warranty for a total of 10 years/160,000 km. See our full review, full gallery and spec run-through for more information.

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT at KLIMS 2024

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VL at KLIMS 2024

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT Malaysia drive gallery

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT two-tone in Malaysia full gallery

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT two-tone in Malaysia showroom

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VL in Malaysia showroom

     
     
  • Nissan Kicks e-Power open for booking in Malaysia, estimated below RM130k, 5-star ASEAN NCAP

    Nissan Kicks e-Power open for booking in Malaysia, estimated below RM130k, 5-star ASEAN NCAP

    Edaran Tan Chong Motor (ETCM) has announced that the Nissan Kicks e-Power is now open for booking in Malaysia at an estimated price of below RM130,000, ahead of its launch next month, most possibly at the Kuala Lumpur International Mobility Show (KLIMS) 2024. ETCM also says the vehicle has achieved a full five-star ASEAN NCAP safety rating.

    VL and VLT variants will be offered in Malaysia, both powered solely by a front-mounted 129 PS/280 Nm electric motor. It’s hooked up to a 82 PS/103 Nm HR12DE 1.2 litre naturally-aspirated three-cylinder that only serves as a generator for the 2.06 kWh battery, with no mechanical connection to the wheels.

    The century sprint is done in 9.5 seconds. ‘In-gear’ acceleration is also strong, the car able to get from 100 to 120 km/h in four seconds flat. Fuel consumption is rated at 21.7 km per litre, resulting in a claimed total range of up to 900 km with the 41 litre fuel tank. You get a choice of Normal, Sport and Eco drive modes, plus a one-pedal e-Pedal Step mode. EV mode (petrol engine stays asleep) is possible up to 2.5 km at 40 km/h.

    Click to enlarge

    The VL comes with full LED front lighting (headlamps, fog lamps, signals), auto-folding wing mirrors, 17-inch alloys (no spare, tyre repair kit), ‘zero gravity’ fabric seats (manual), electronic parking brake with auto hold, auto air con, cruise control, a 7.0-inch digital meter panel, an 8.0-inch infotainment touchscreen with Apple CarPlay/Android Auto and six speakers. Safety wise, it’s seven airbags plus forward collision warning and braking (AEB).

    The VLT adds on two-tone (brown-black) leather for the seats (brown is also on the door cards and dash), a 360-degree around view monitor, intelligent rear view mirror (LCD screen with camera), active cruise control, blind spot warning and rear cross traffic alert. You can have the VLT in two-tone paint as well; count this in and there are three variants in total.

    Speaking of colours, choose from Black Star, Brilliant White Pearl, Brilliant Silver, Red Pearl and the signature Sunrise Orange. VLT buyers can opt to have a black roof on orange, white and red. There’s also a Dark Metal Grey for the two-tone VLT. This means that grey is exclusive to the VLT while silver is VL-only. See our full review, full gallery and spec run-through for more information.

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT Malaysia drive gallery

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT two-tone in Malaysia full gallery

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT two-tone in Malaysia showroom

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VL in Malaysia showroom

     
     
  • 2025 Nissan Kicks e-Power Malaysian review – too little, too late, or true-blue EV with zero range anxiety?

    2025 Nissan Kicks e-Power Malaysian review – too little, too late, or true-blue EV with zero range anxiety?

    Ladies and gentlemen, the Nissan Kicks e-Power. Ahead of the B-SUV’s launch next month (after what has seemed like an eternity) at the Kuala Lumpur International Mobility Show (KLIMS) 2024, we’ve given you a full gallery and specs. Now that we’ve taken the car on a trip to Melaka and back courtesy of Edaran Tan Chong Motor (ETCM), it’s time to go deep.

    Let’s start with size. The Kicks’ 4,290-mm length and 1,760-mm width place it between the Perodua Ativa and the Proton X50 in the horizontal sense, but its 1,605-mm height makes it as tall as the X50 and slightly taller than the Chery Omoda 5 and Honda HR-V. No beating the 1,635-mm tall boy Ativa, though. The Kicks’ 2,615-mm wheelbase just about equals the HR-V; in other words, between the X50 and O5.

    Honey, I expanded the Almera? Quite – sharp edges all around, V-Motion face and squinting LED headlamps. I particularly like the side profile, with its ‘floating roof’, upswept C-pillar kink that’s sharper than the Almera’s, and the deep swage lines along the doors. Together with the connected LED tail lamps, roof rails and 17-inch five-spoke alloys wrapped in 205/55 Yokohama BluEarths, the Kicks is a sight for my sore eyes at least.

    It’s Almera-like inside, too. You’ll recognise the flat-bottomed steering wheel (rake- and reach-adjustable), padded dashboard with contrasting-colour opportunities (brown here), eight-inch touchscreen, half-analogue-half-digital instrument cluster, circular air vents and single-zone auto air-con control panel, but of course here you get a stubby e-Power-specific gear lever, an electronic parking brake with auto hold, Drive Mode button and an EV mode switch.

    It’s a nice place to be – I do like the brown bits, which you’ll also find on the door cards and seats courtesy of the range-topping VLT, although mine could be an unpopular opinion given Malaysians’ penchant for all-black interiors. The tops of the dashboard and door cards are hard plastic, but the brown padded bits go some way towards elevating the atmosphere. Auto up/down window only for the driver, though.

    In a time when car interiors are looking more and more like cinemas, the half-analogue-half-digital instrument cluster does unfortunately look old hat. The seven-inch unit’s graphics are fine, legible and fairly modern-looking, but completely at odds with the big traditional speedo and its trip reset knob poking out of the glass, which reminds you of the Kicks’ age.

    Fighting back the years are the very-intuitive touchscreen (with wired Apple CarPlay/Android Auto) and digital rear-view mirror (VLT only) – you turn the latter on simply by flicking the lever beneath, just as you do to dim a conventional mirror. This is a B-segment-first in Malaysia.

    I find it a boon – the view is very wide-angle and won’t be blocked by D-pillars, rear passengers’ heads and tall items in the boot. Even in heavy rain, although you would still need to operate the back wiper from time to time, you will see better than with a conventional mirror on the whole.

    The manually-adjustable Zero Gravity front seats, while a little narrow on the thighs, are very supportive and comfortable. Also narrow is the centre console, being just wide enough to house dual cupholders (with two ‘floor’ settings to fit big and small cups) lengthwise. It follows that the armrest box is also narrow, and opening it reveals a shallow cubby that could probably only take a bi-fold wallet and some keys at best.

    Back seat space is acceptable – no centre armrest nor rear air-con vents, but you do get two USB-A charging ports. The boot swallows a very respectable 423 litres; if you need more, the back seats fold 60:40, but the load floor is not flat and there’s quite a big protrusion on the floor where the seats split. Under the boot floor you’ll find a tyre repair kit instead of a spare tyre.

    This is the facelifted first-gen Kicks that launched in Thailand over four years ago (you read that right and it’s not the new second-gen, no RHD nor e-Power for that yet), although Malaysia now gets the second-gen e-Power powertrain (updated for Japan, Thailand and Singapore in 2022), which increases the battery’s capacity from 1.57 to 2.06 kWh and the number of cells from 80 to 96.

    Nissan says the second-gen e-Power powertrain is more compact, lighter and offers better performance. In the Kicks, which is the first e-Power model in Malaysia, a 1.2 litre three-cylinder engine acts purely as a generator to charge a 2.06 kWh battery that feeds a front-mounted 129 PS/280 Nm electric motor.

    2025 Nissan Kicks e-Power Malaysian review – too little, too late, or true-blue EV with zero range anxiety?

    It’s a series hybrid in the same vein as the Perodua Ativa Hybrid, the Mazda MX-30 R-EV and the BMW i3 REx. Since the petrol engine never drives the wheels, it’s an EV where propulsion is concerned. It’s an EV with zero range anxiety, but not zero emissions. And no, you can’t plug it in to charge.

    Unsurprisingly, the Kicks e-Power is very EV-like to drive – instant torque and silent progress. Around town, you really wouldn’t realise that the petrol engine has kicked in unless you’re keeping an eye on the instrument cluster – there are next to no vibrations despite it being a three-cylinder. You’d really have to perk up your ears to hear just a muted hum. Of course, the engine wake-up is more discernible when you’re waiting at the lights, but overall, refinement levels are very high.

    I said it feels like an EV to drive, didn’t I? But it can also feel like an ICE vehicle at times – bear with me. You know when you give a CVT vehicle the beans, you hear the engine first before vehicle speed catches up? Well, it’s uncannily the opposite here. Floor it and the EV-like instant torque shoves you forward, but a split second later you hear the engine, and the revs correspond very closely to throttle position (like an ICE car) as it toils to charge the battery based on your right foot’s demand.

    2025 Nissan Kicks e-Power Malaysian review – too little, too late, or true-blue EV with zero range anxiety?

    I must reiterate here that at no point is engine operation intrusive or rough in the slightest. This is without doubt the Kicks e-Power’s top strength – its quietness. Even at speed, I can only stop short of saying there’s zero road and wind noise, lest someone brings out a NASA-grade decibel meter to prove me wrong.

    A 0-100 km/h time of 9.5 seconds is all well and good; what’s perhaps more impressive is its mid-range acceleration of 100-120 km/h in four seconds flat. Indeed, when you ask for more power at highway speeds, the Kicks e-Power simply complies, the speedo needle climbing relentlessly in a manner you wouldn’t expect from a 129 PS/280 Nm car.

    Let’s talk modes. Besides Normal, there are Eco and Sport which influence throttle response and increase regen braking (Normal has the least amount of regen). Funnily enough, EV mode, which tells the engine not to wake up, can only be engaged when you’re in Eco or Sport, but because the battery is small, you’ll only manage at best 2.5 km of zero-emissions driving (and that’s if you do a constant 40 km/h and your battery is full) before the engine has to intervene.

    Since the system always tries to keep the battery’s state of charge between 20% and 80%, how do you maximise EV-only driving? Well, there’s a hidden Charge mode, accessible by holding the EV mode switch for two seconds. The engine will then come alive and stay alive until it has fully charged the battery.

    The ride is on the comfortable side of stiff, while handling, although the Kicks is light on its feet, is perhaps par for the course. The e-Pedal Step is unlike the Leaf’s in that the car will slow to a creep instead of coming to a complete stop when you get off the throttle.

    Standard safety equipment includes seven airbags, AEB and Intelligent Driver Alertness – the top VLT spec adds adaptive cruise control (VL gets normal cruise control), a 360 camera, blind spot warning and rear cross traffic alert. Warranties? Five years/100,000 km for the vehicle and eight years/160,000 km for the battery, ECU, inverter and electric motor.


    Click to enlarge

    What about running costs? ETCM actually showed us a comparison (above), of warranties, servicing costs and battery replacement costs between the Kicks and its T- and H-brand competitors (which obviously refer to the Toyota Corolla Cross Hybrid and the Honda HR-V e:HEV currently on sale in Malaysia).

    All three have five-year vehicle warranties, but the Kicks’ is limited to 100,000 km while the Toyota’s and Honda’s are unlimited mileage. In terms of the warranty on EV components, the Kicks’ eight years equal or better the other two, but is limited to 160,000 km as opposed to T’s and H’s unlimited mileage.

    The Kicks’ 2.1-kWh battery is also the largest capacity of the trio, and based on ETCM’s internal survey, the second-cheapest to replace at RM9,000 per unit. Finally, servicing costs – up to 100,000 km, the Nissan has 10 paid service intervals costing RM3,624 in total. This is RM264.10 cheaper than the Honda (also 10 paid service intervals) and RM1,440.70 cheaper than the Toyota (12 paid service intervals).

    2025 Nissan Kicks e-Power Malaysian review – too little, too late, or true-blue EV with zero range anxiety?

    Nissan touts an NEDC figure of 21.7 km/l and a max range of 900 km on a 41-litre tank of petrol. From PJ to Melaka, 16 cars covered 231 km solely on trunk roads and were rebrimmed at the destination. The drive was quite spirited with a fair bit of overtaking, and the median car used 13.99 litres of petrol, yielding 16.5 km/l. It was half-B-road, half-highway on the way back, and although we did not rebrim the cars this time, my readout hovered around 15 km/l in spite of a good turn of speed on the highway.

    All in all, it’s not going to be a breeze for ETCM’s first all-new model in four years. Even before we single out the hybrid rivals (upcoming Toyota Corolla Cross Hybrid RM140k estimated, Honda HR-V e:HEV RM142k, Haval H6 HEV RM140k), the B-SUV market is a very red ocean, with some C-SUVs eating into the pie as well (Proton X70 RM99k-127k, Chery Tiggo 7 RM124k, Jaecoo J7 2WD RM139k).

    And these are all CKD. Our Nissan Kicks e-Power is going to come CBU from Thailand. But who knows – if ETCM can somehow get the all-important pricing right, this car could just be the viable quiet, comfortable and good-looking alternative the market needs.

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT Malaysia drive gallery

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT two-tone in Malaysia full gallery

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT two-tone in Malaysia showroom

    Nissan Kicks e-Power VL in Malaysia showroom

     
     
  • Nissan Kicks e-Power in Malaysia – full gallery of local-spec VLT hybrid B-seg SUV, 129 PS, 280 Nm, 21.7 km/l

    Nissan Kicks e-Power in Malaysia – full gallery of local-spec VLT hybrid B-seg SUV, 129 PS, 280 Nm, 21.7 km/l

    Yesterday, we brought you initial photos, specs and equipment of the Nissan Kicks e-Power, but now we present to you a full gallery of the car – in top-spec VLT trim, no less. Edaran Tan Chong Motor (ETCM) is gearing up for the hybrid B-segment SUV’s launch next month, likely at the Kuala Lumpur International Mobility Show (KLIMS).

    The company may be supremely late to the party, given that the car debuted in Thailand in facelifted form back in 2020, but it’s adamant the Kicks is able to give the established players a run for their money. As previously reported, the crossover is CBU fully imported from the Land of Smiles.

    A total of two variants will be offered in Malaysia, the VL and this VLT, both powered solely by a single electric motor at the front producing 129 PS and 280 Nm of torque. It’s hooked up to a 82 PS/103 Nm HR12DE 1.2 litre naturally-aspirated three-cylinder that only serves as a generator for the motor and the 2.06 kWh battery, with no mechanical connection to the wheels.

    Nissan Kicks e-Power in Malaysia – full gallery of local-spec VLT hybrid B-seg SUV, 129 PS, 280 Nm, 21.7 km/l

    This is similar to how the Honda HR-V e:HEV‘s powertrain works, except that car’s engine is connected to a single-speed transmission and a lock-up clutch to provide motive power at higher speeds. The Kick’s tardiness to enter our market does mean that Malaysians get a more powerful engine and a larger battery compared to the initial 2020 version.

    So equipped, the Kicks e-Power is capable of sprinting from zero to 100 km/h in 9.5 seconds. “In-gear” acceleration is also strong, the car able to get from 100 to 120 km/h in four seconds flat. Fuel consumption is rated at 21.7 km per litre, resulting in a claimed total range of up to 900 km with the 41 litre fuel tank. You get a choice of Normal, Sport and Eco drive modes, plus a one-pedal e-Pedal Step mode.

    Break out the measuring tape and you’ll realise that the Kicks is about half a size smaller than the competition. At 4,290 mm long, 1,760 mm wide and 1,605 mm tall, the Nissan is nearly 100 mm shorter than the HR-V and 170 mm shorter than the Toyota Corolla Cross, although its 2,615 mm wheelbase is comparable to both. Also comparable is the 423 litre boot, proving that the smaller size is not an impediment.

    The styling of the Kicks is as per what was shown in 2020, with wide LED reflector headlights, a deep V-motion grille, a full-width taillight design and blacked-out A- and C-pillars for the de rigueur floating roof look. You also get standard-fit 17-inch two-tone five-spoke alloy wheels that are similar to what you’d find on the pre-facelifted Leaf EV.

    Inside, the Kicks will be very familiar to those who own the Almera, sporting an all-but-identical flat-bottomed steering wheel, two-tone dashboard and door cards. The tech is also shared with that car and includes a seven-inch part-digital (speedometer is still analogue) instrument display and an eight-inch infotainment touchscreen with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. The only visible differences are the black and maroon colour scheme, the e-Power-specific flat gear selector and an electronic parking brake.

    Other bits of standard kit include LED fog lights, keyless entry, push button start, manual Zero Gravity seats, fabric upholstery, single-zone auto air con and six speakers. Seven airbags and autonomous emergency braking also come standard.

    Nissan Kicks e-Power in Malaysia – full gallery of local-spec VLT hybrid B-seg SUV, 129 PS, 280 Nm, 21.7 km/l

    The list of additional kit for the VLT is short but significant and includes a digital rear-view mirror, a 360-degree camera system with Moving Object Detection (MOD), adaptive cruise control, blind spot monitoring and rear cross traffic alert. The top trim level also gains the option of a black roof.

    The available colours are Black Star, Brilliant White Pearl, Brilliant Silver, Red Pearl and this Sunrise Orange hero hue, with the aforementioned black roof available on all but Black Star and Brilliant Silver (an exclusive Dark Metal Grey takes their place).

    Given the late timing, the Kicks e-Power will need to be priced competitively to compete against the HR-V e:HEV RS and Corolla Cross Hybrid, which retail for RM141,900 and RM143,000 respectively. Would you buy the Nissan if it is priced well? Sound off in the comments after the jump.

     
     
  • Nissan Kicks e-Power B-SUV Malaysia specs revealed – 100% motor drive, 1.2L generator, 21.7 km/l, AACP

    Nissan Kicks e-Power B-SUV Malaysia specs revealed – 100% motor drive, 1.2L generator, 21.7 km/l, AACP

    Specifications of the Malaysian-market Nissan Kicks e-Power has been revealed by Edaran Tan Chong Motor (ETCM) ahead of the B-segment SUV’s launch in December, possibly at KLIMS 2024. We’re getting the facelifted, first-generation Kicks as per Thailand, and the model is CBU imported from there as well.

    The Kicks comes with Nissan’s second-generation e-Power technology, a hybrid system that is 100% electric motor driven, with the ICE purely as a generator. This makes it stand out in the market, as the other Japanese hybrid systems in the market switch between full EV driving, combined or even ICE-only, depending on the situation.

    Here, the e-Power’s 1.2-litre naturally-aspirated inline-three petrol engine acts solely as a generator for a 2.1-kWh battery, with no mechanical connection to the wheels. As the engine only serves to generate energy for the battery and operates under fixed conditions, Nissan says it is able to consistently achieve a high level of thermal efficiency for improved fuel efficiency while reducing emissions.

    Nissan Kicks e-Power B-SUV Malaysia specs revealed – 100% motor drive, 1.2L generator, 21.7 km/l, AACP

    The battery powers a front-mounted e-motor rated at 129 PS and 280 Nm, which is good for a 0-100 km/h time of 9.5 seconds (100 to 120 km/h acceleration in 4.0 seconds). Claimed combined fuel consumption is 21.7 km per litre, and with that, range from the 41-litre fuel tank is up to 900 km, ETCM says.

    There’s a single-pedal ‘e-Pedal Step’ system as well as an EV mode where the ICE is not in play at all. As the battery is small relative to full EVs, EV mode is good for 2.5 km of travel at 40 km/h, ETCM says. That’s useful for driving in traffic jams or shopping mall carparks.

    We’re getting three variants, or rather two plus one two-tone option. The range kicks off with the VL, which comes with full LED front lighting (headlamps, fog lamps, signals), auto-folding wing mirrors, 17-inch alloys (no spare, tyre repair kit), ‘zero gravity’ fabric seats (manual), electronic parking brake with auto hold, auto air con and cruise control.

    Nissan Kicks e-Power B-SUV Malaysia specs revealed – 100% motor drive, 1.2L generator, 21.7 km/l, AACP

    The mid spec car also comes with a 7.0-inch digital meter panel and an 8.0-inch infotainment touchscreen with Apple CarPlay/Android Auto and six speakers. Safety wise, it’s seven airbags plus forward collision warning and braking (AEB).

    The VLT adds on two-tone (brown-black) leather for the seats (brown is also on the door cards and dash), a 360-degree around view monitor, intelligent rear view mirror (LCD screen with camera), active cruise control, blind spot warning and rear cross traffic alert. You can have the VLT in two-tone paint as well; count this in and there are three variants in total.

    Speaking of colours, choose from Black Star, Brilliant White Pearl, Brilliant Silver, Red Pearl and the signature Sunrise Orange. VLT buyers can opt to have a black roof on orange, white and red. There’s also a Dark Metal Grey for the two-tone VLT. This means that grey is exclusive to the VLT while silver is VL-only.

    That’s about it, leaving the price to be revealed at the launch next month. What do you think of the Nissan Kicks e-Power’s specs and looks? Japanese hybrid SUV rivals awaiting the Kicks are the Honda HR-V e:HEV RS and the Toyota Corolla Cross 1.8 Hybrid – both are going for RM142k. RM140k will also buy you the GWM Haval H6 HEV, which is larger than all of the above and has a turbocharged ICE.

    GALLERY: Nissan Kicks e-Power VL, Malaysia-spec

    GALLERY: Nissan Kicks e-Power VLT two-tone, Malaysia-spec

     
     
  • Nissan Kicks e-Power to debut in Malaysia in Dec

    Nissan Kicks e-Power to debut in Malaysia in Dec

    The Nissan Kicks e-Power will be making its Malaysian debut in December, as confirmed by Edaran Tan Chong Motor (ETCM) in a series of social media posts. The company didn’t provide an exact date for the hybrid model’s introduction but there is a possibility it will coincide with this year’s Kuala Lumpur International Mobility Show happening in the same month.

    We’ll be getting the facelifted, first-generation Kicks – the same as in Thailand – and not the second-generation model that made its debut in the United States earlier in March. For those unfamiliar with Nissan’s e-Power technology, the hybrid system features a 1.2 litre naturally-aspirated inline-three petrol engine that acts solely as a generator for a 2.06-kWh battery, with no mechanical connection to the wheels.

    As the engine only serves to generate energy for the battery and operates under fixed conditions, Nissan says it is able to consistently achieve a high level of thermal efficiency for improved fuel efficiency while reducing tailpipe emissions.

    Energy from the battery is used to power a front-mounted electric motor rated at 129 PS and 280 Nm of torque, which is good for a 0-100 km/h time of 9.5 seconds. Meanwhile, the claimed combined fuel consumption is 21.7 km per litre. The Kicks e-Power will join the hybrid SUV market here that currently includes models like the HR-V e:HEV as well as Corolla Cross Hybrid.

    GALLERY: Nissan Kicks e-Power preview in Malaysia

     
     
  • Nissan Kicks e-Power coming soon – arrival of hybrid crossover hinted by Bayan Lepas, Penang dealer

    Nissan Kicks e-Power coming soon – arrival of hybrid crossover hinted by Bayan Lepas, Penang dealer

    Following confirmation by local Nissan distributor, Edaran Tan Chong Motor (ETCM) that the Nissan e-Power hybrid drive technology will be coming to Malaysia, the Facebook page of a Bayan Lepas, Penang-based sales consultant has also indicated that the Nissan Kicks e-Power is coming soon to the local dealer network.

    Edaran Tan Chong Motor has stated towards the end of last month that the e-Power hybrid model will be launched in Malaysia in the fourth quarter of this year. The Kicks e-Power employs a 129 PS/280 Nm electric motor that is mated with a 1.2 litre naturally aspirated three-cylinder unit that serves as a generator – there is no mechanical driveline connection to the driven wheels – and feeds a 2.06 kWh battery.

    Acceleration from 0-100 km/h is quoted at 9.5 seconds, with a claimed combined fuel consumption figure of 21.7 km per litre. The Malaysian arrival of the Nissan Kicks e-Power will bring it into a hybrid SUV field occupied by the likes of the Honda HR-V e:HEV and Toyota Corolla Cross Hybrid, in addition to the growing presence of Chinese ICE and EV entrants.

    Nissan Kicks e-Power coming soon – arrival of hybrid crossover hinted by Bayan Lepas, Penang dealer

    Followers of the model will note that this is the first-generation model which is nearing the end of its lifecycle, as a new, second-generation model has been unveiled for the US market in March this year.

    Further along the product pipeline, the indication that there will be more e-Power models to be introduced later on hints that Nissan is also preparing for the launch of the C28-generation Serena, which has been sighted testing in Malaysia.

    This e-Power equipped MPV packs a 163 PS/315 Nm electric motor, with power generation coming from a 98 PS/123 Nm 1.4 litre HR14DDe naturally-aspirated three-cylinder petrol engine that charges the 1.77 kWh battery. As with the setup in the Kicks, there is no mechanical connection from the petrol engine to the driven wheels in the Serena.

    GALLERY: Nissan Kicks e-Power in Malaysia

     
     
  • Nissan e-Power confirmed for Malaysia, first model launching Q4 2024 – tech previewed using Kicks

    Nissan e-Power confirmed for Malaysia, first model launching Q4 2024 – tech previewed using Kicks

    It’s been the worst-kept secret in the local automotive scene for a while now, but Nissan has confirmed that its e-Power hybrid technology is finally coming to Malaysia. The company will launch its first such model in the fourth quarter of the year, with more tipped to be introduced later on.

    For the uninitiated, Nissan’s e-Power technology works in a broadly similar fashion to Honda’s e:HEV system, whereby the car is driven by an electric motor, with the engine functioning as a generator to charge the battery. One difference is that there is no mechanical connection between the engine and the wheels, so the former can’t drive the latter on its own.

    Distributor Edaran Tan Chong Motor (ETCM) invited several members of the media to test out the facelifted first-generation Kicks e-Power – the same one that was shown at this year’s Malaysia Autoshow. That car utilises a 129 PS/280 Nm electric motor that’s juiced by a 82 PS/103 Nm HR12DE 1.2 litre naturally-aspirated three-cylinder mill, plus a 2.06 kWh battery. It gets from zero to 100 km/h in 9.5 seconds and delivers a combined fuel consumption figure of 21.7 km per litre.

    Nissan e-Power confirmed for Malaysia, first model launching Q4 2024 – tech previewed using Kicks

    Nissan hasn’t confirmed if the Kicks is coming here, but the car is at the end of its lifecycle, with a new second-gen model already launched in the US. It will have to be quite competitively priced if it’s to stand any chance against the Honda HR-V e:HEV and Toyota Corolla Cross Hybrid, to say nothing of the fierce Chinese petrol- and electric-powered competition.

    Nissan is also expected to be gearing up for the launch of the C28 Serena, which has been caught testing in Malaysia as early as March last year. That car uses a more powerful 163 PS/315 Nm electric motor and a larger 98 PS/123 Nm 1.4 litre HR14DDe petrol engine, plus a 1.77 kWh battery.

    GALLERY: Nissan Kicks e-Power in Malaysia

     
     
  • Nissan Kicks e-Power to be shown at Malaysia Autoshow 2024, previewing hybrid powertrain?

    Nissan Kicks e-Power to be shown at Malaysia Autoshow 2024, previewing hybrid powertrain?

    Just a few days to go until the Malaysia Autoshow 2024, and one of the brands set to be present, Nissan, has teased its lineup for its display. Distributor Edaran Tan Chong Motor (ETCM) appears to be rolling out a few of its current models, including the C27 Serena J Impul (no, not the new C28), Almera Kuro Edition (no, not the facelift) and an extremely rugged version of the Navara.

    But there’s one other car that will be shown at the event, and the not-very-well-disguised teaser indicates that it will be the Kicks e-Power. The B-segment crossover – which competes against the Honda HR-V in other markets – will be showing off its hybrid powertrain, which functions in a similar fashion to Honda’s Intelligent Multi-mode Drive (i-MMD) system found in its e:HEV models.

    In the Kicks, the hybrid system is centred around a 129 PS/260 Nm, which derives its electricity from a 1.57 kWh battery. The latter is juiced by a 79 PS/103 Nm 1.2 litre HR12DE three-cylinder petrol engine that functions solely as a generator. Unlike Honda’s version, there’s no lock-up clutch to enable the ICE to drive the wheels directly.

    Nissan Kicks e-Power to be shown at Malaysia Autoshow 2024, previewing hybrid powertrain?

    It’s tempting to treat this as a sign the Kicks will finally be sold in Malaysia very soon – after all, its arrival was telegraphed as early as 2022. But the ship has very much sailed on that one, not least because there’s an all-new model now being sold in the US.

    Instead, the Kicks will likely serve as a teaser for another model with e-Power technology – similar to how the Note e-Power was shown at the Kuala Lumpur International Motor Show (KLIMS) back in 2018 to gauge public interest.

    Nissan’s e-Power technology will likely make its debut in the new C28 Serena

    This yet-to-be-confirmed model is anticipated to be the C28 Serena. The MPV, which made its debut back in 2022, is no longer available in mild S-Hybrid form, hitherto the only powertrain option for the C26 and C27 Serena in Malaysia.

    The sole electrified version instead uses a more powerful 163 PS/315 Nm electric motor and a larger 98 PS/123 Nm 1.4 litre HR14DDe direct-injected three-pot generator. The car has already been seen undergoing testing locally and hence is long overdue for its Malaysian launch.

    GALLERY: Nissan Kicks e-Power

     
     
 
 
 

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