A Long Weekend In Sydney In The Infiniti Q30 Diesel

At times it can be hard living so far away from home. I grew up in Queensland, and have had the same best friend since high school.

It’s rare that we get to see each other outside of my usual Easter and Christmas trips home, so when she found out she had to bring her young family to Sydney for a junior soccer tournament and decided to come down a little earlier, I was so excited I almost exploded.

Of course, we planned to enjoy a long lunch and talk family, relationships, friends and more over a bottle of wine or two, and espresso martinis. But she hadn’t spent much time in Sydney before and wanted to see the usual sights like the Harbour Bridge and Opera House. So we needed wheels! As fun as public transport would have been, the aim was to do the tourist thing, then get down to business over oysters and chardonnay.

The Infiniti Q30 is an all-new car, and the Japanese brand’s first compact model. Production began last year in England, which is also a first with Infiniti having built all of its previous cars in Japan.

As interesting as that is… even more so is the ‘Liquid Copper’ colour our Q30 2.2D Sport Premium was finished in. The tone shifts from copper, to champagne, to rose gold, to bronze depending on the light. It was certainly polarising around the office, and though it wasn’t a hit with everyone, I really liked the chameleon-like behaviour of the paint.

And that may very well be the reason I was allocated it over the recent long weekend. Initially, that was a bit unfortunate. My BFF’s partner and child were joining us a day later. Add my daughter to the mix and we had three adults, one teenager and a child to cart around in a small hatch…not ideal.

I had been hoping for a larger car to play ‘tour guide’ in over my extended long weekend. However, right from the get-go, the Q30 proved itself to be the right car to handle what was in store. She arrived at Sydney airport early on the Thursday morning and it was crawling with people.

We all know how frustrating it can be to be told to ‘look for the white SUV’ – geez that narrows it down! On the flip-side, ‘look for the pink car’ literally narrowed it down to one option and we were out of there in record time.

After the colour and it’s arguably stylish looks, the next thing that jumped out was its lack of a second stalk behind the steering wheel. Other than a paddle-shifter, the right side was bare which felt odd. The left stalk handled windscreen wipers, indicators and high beam. Of course I discovered this by trying to indicate and simultaneously activating the windscreen wipers and high beams. Oops. After you’ve done that once, you won’t do it again.

It’s a gorgeous sunny day and we headed over the Harbour Bridge, stopped at the bottom of McMahons Point to admire the view, and then headed back through the city for the Opera House.

Infiniti market the Q30 as a ‘crossover’ and it’s even listed as a small SUV in the segment breakdown. However, even if you squint really hard, there’s no way this is a small SUV. It’s a city car, a hatch, or simply a small passenger car.

As Trent pointed out in his review, it has less ground clearance than a Mazda 3. As such it is a city car, and that’s nothing to be ashamed of. It was fun to zip around the city in… and navigate the crazy Opera House car park.

It was a great way to test the steering because that car park is a nauseating, seemingly never ending spiral down multiple levels. Upon reaching the bottom we still hadn’t found a park, so we began the uphill corkscrew and finally found one.

The electrically assisted power steering was direct and light, but still had enough weight to remain solid around the never-ending corner in the car park.

My friend was surprised to discover it was a diesel. It has a 2.2-litre four cylinder turbo diesel engine teamed with a seven-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission that drives the front wheels and delivers 125kW of power and 350Nm of torque.

Though it is considerably refined, there is no mistaking it’s an oiler. Being able to access the torque lower in the rev-range makes it a confidence-inspiring thing to drive in the busy Sydney traffic too; it’s particularly punchy in sport mode.

After a whirlwind tour of the iconic Sydney locations, we headed to the Coogee Pavilion –always a perfect spot to relax in the sun for the afternoon and enjoy food, wine and martinis. We were there all afternoon and eventually moved the party on to Bondi. A reggae band were playing at El Topo and we danced the night away – my questionable moves really made my bestie look great on that dancefloor!

The rest of the crew flew in the next day to take part in a long weekend junior soccer tournament at North Narrabeen. The team bus had transported our visitors from the airport to the fields, but we had to pick them up. North Narrabeen is not somewhere you just ‘pop’ to from the Eastern Suburbs. The traffic along Military Road, Spit Road and beyond is consistently thick and slow moving and the road isn’t great at times.

 The Q30 Sport and Sport Premium have sports suspension, and despite being firmer than the softer GT variant, it’s still quite a comfortable ride and softens road joins, potholes and uneven surfaces.

Among the sea of young soccer enthusiasts and hundreds of cars, the directive to ‘look for the pink car’ again saved us a lot of time. Here was the real test, three adults, a teenager and a child had to squeeze in and hopefully remain comfortable for at least an hour or so.

In the front the sports seats with integrated headrests are really nice. They’re finished in Nappa leather with white contrast inserts and they are well bolstered and hug you in. The Sport Premium variant also gets a panoramic sunroof, which was enjoyable in the spring weather, whether you were in the front or the back.

The rear seats are a similar design, and all three were impressed with the comfort level. Though, climbing in was a different story, the rear doors are lacking in height and width, making it feel like you’re trying to squeeze through the door to visit Frodo at Bag End – the Hobbit-hole in Hobbiton located in Westfarthing, which is one of the four farthings that make up the Shire.

Once inside though, it’s not ridiculously cramped for a small car and our three passengers had little to complain about. The Q30 2.2D Sport Premium has dual-zone climate control and rear air vents. The rear seats are 60:40 split fold, and there’s an armrest with pop-out cup holders and ski-hatch through to the 430-litre boot that easily accommodated three people’s luggage.

Once we’d collected the rest of the tribe from the soccer fields, it was time to drop my three visitors to the hotel they’d be staying at for the rest of the weekend. I didn’t know where it was and went to enter the destination into the satellite navigation system.

The 7.0-inch touchscreen can also be navigated using a dial controller located near the gearshift, but some menu’s required a combination of both touch and dial. I had a massive issue with this. It only responds to pressure from the pad of a finger, not a fingernail. So trying to touch an icon tucked tightly in a corner of the screen was incredibly difficult.

It has speed sign recognition, which was a huge help, especially given that it was double demerits over the long weekend. Every time we passed a speed sign, it would pop up in the instrument cluster display giving a clear visual alert that the speed limit had changed.

Being the top-specification, it has a host of safety features including forward collision warning with emergency braking function, front and rear parking sensors, blind spot monitor, around view monitor with moving object detection, lane departure warning, park assist and adaptive cruise control. There’s not much more you’d want or need.

When it comes to comfort and convenience, the list is similarly impressive with heated front seats, auto LED headlights, fog lamps and rear lights, auto-dimming rear view mirror, keyless entry and push button start, rain sensing wipers, Bluetooth connectivity, two USB ports and more.

It has a very distinct exterior style with sharp angles and sweeping lines, there are dual exhaust pipes at the back that accentuate its sporty stance, as do the 19-inch alloy wheels with run-flat tyres.

We spent hours on the road over the long weekend to cover a comparably minute number of kilometres – a lot of time was spent crawling in queues of traffic. The claimed urban fuel consumption is 6.2-litres per 100 kilometres and we saw 8.2L/100km over the course of the five days.

The Infiniti Q30 is unequivocally an attention grabber, from the styling through to the colour of our test car.

The interior is comfortable and nicely finished, the Nappa leather seats being particularly worthy of praise. It may have its quirks, but overall it served our party of five well and we had a fabulous time.

The Carousel thanks Tegan Lawson from Car Advice for this article.

Tegan Lawson: Tegan Lawson is the Lifestyle writer and Motoring Expert for The Carousel. Tegan produces in-depth interviews and reviews and helps readers make the best choice for their next car purchase. Tegan got her first taste of motorsports journalism working for a regional newspaper. She was still a student at the University of Southern Queensland but was moonlighting patrolling the pits at the Leyburn sprints and heading to the drags, as well as working trackside at the Queensland Raceway V8 supercar rounds in the early 2000s. With petrol firmly in her blood, these early days spawned her love of all things automotive. Her driving career as a 17 year-old began with the unique experience of a Suzuki Carry Van that was quickly upgraded to a more image-appropriate Holden Barina.
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