Not exact matches
The engine makes passing on the
highway a breeze, and the sport suspension isn't too
firm for fast driving
over bad roads.
The
firm ride has plenty of road feel, revealing bumps and imperfections in
highways that I previously thought were butter - smooth, and then jarring and jostling my body
over the rougher surface streets and back roads around my San Francisco / Oakland stomping grounds.
That technical mumbo jumbo means the suspension can travel
over highway bumps without transmitting the harshness into the passenger compartment, but it's
firm enough so you don't wander and float around on the roadway in simple corners and turns, as was common with the pre-1986 models.
Yet that hasn't come at the expense of ride quality — though the
firm suspension does rear its ugly head when you're traversing rougher road surfaces or driving
over highway expansion joints, the Nissan Juke remains fairly calm and composed in almost all other driving scenarios.
It seemed much too
firm on sharp bumps and then too soft at the front
over highway undulations.
It's a little on the
firm side
over sharp small bumps but handles large bumps well and has a good
highway ride.