quote:relax man! car, truck whatever! i was just stating that the MAJORITY of suv owners don't drive off road, that is why crossover vehicles are so popular. You are just sore that I picked apart your post and you have no comeback. If you do not realize the difference between a car and a truck and just choose to say ..."whatever", then I cannot help you any further.Crossover vehicles work very well for someone who wants something bigger than a car and never intends to off-road. (See: CRV, RAV4, Highlander, Freelander, Vibe, Murano, etc) Unfortately, the vast majority of off-road capable SUV's out there are owned by people with a "crossover vehicle mentality". Or in some twisted cases, they think their Jeep, or H2, or Xterra are crossover vehicles - when they are not.When you say that crossover's "have the versatility of an SUV" that is not really a true statement. They cannot off-road, and they do not have 4wd systems. They are also built from weaker car-based chassis. It's probably more accurate to say that crossover vehicles "have the versatitly of a van or a minivan". A crossover vehicle is basically a "tall-sedan" with some sort of innovation to separate it from a normal sedan. That would be more accurate. Crossover's have as much in common with SUV's as minivans do. It's really a farce to call a crossover an SUV.quote:i never called the xterra a crossover. don't be so quick to jump my rump I never said you did. You called it a car. And then you proceeded to compare it with a crossover vehicle, when really an SUV and a crossover have nothing in common and that would be like comparing apples to oranges.My take:Everyone who owns an SUV who doesn't use it like an SUV - should trade it in for a car or crossover or minivan. they don't use it as it was designed, and a car or van would suit them better. See
http://poseur.4x4.org/ for a more detailed discussion.quote:has anyone seen the new commercial for the xterra? nobody cares if it can drive over a rough, deserted terrain. People who are in the Xterra demographic will care.If people don't care about driving over deserted/rough terrain, then they shouldn't buy an SUV. But, you and I both know that people will buy SUV's cause they are "in" right now. (ex: the H2)Nissan is marketing toward the off-roading, rock-climbing, camping, kayaking, surfing, mountain biking, demographic. This makes sense afterall, the Xterra is an SUV. Naturally their ads will reflect that. If Nissan wanted to market the Xterra to the "mall crawler" demographic, then I am sure they would include lots of commericals of the Xterra cruising thru parking lots and shuttling kids to soccer practice. Nissan would probably also add some features like, remote entry doors, in-dash navigation, and leather seats. But none of those items are part of the target demographic. big tires, neoprene seats, and roof racks are.