Economy: Combined – 36.7mpg SEATS: 9
PRIMASTAR OR BUS
Our Rating: 7.6 / 10
Minibuses Have Come A Long Way Over The Last Few Years. Steve Walker Takes A Look At One Of The Sector’s Most Modern Offerings…
For many people, minibuses are irrevocably linked to their school days. The most seriously afflicted only have to sit in one to experience a harrowing flashback complete with shrieking din, pungent aroma of festering kit bag and the ignominy of being struck on the nape of the neck by a chewed-up piece of Cadburys Curly Wurly. If you can put memories of the good old days to one side for a moment, however, you’ll be able to appreciate that the minibus is not the preserve of school and college sports teams. Taxi firms, construction companies and the emergency services also need to get groups of between 8 and 14 people efficiently from A to B. There’s actually quite a demand and Nissan hope their Primastar Minibus will be able to meet it.
The Nissan Primastar Minibus arrived on the scene around the same time as the Renault Trafic minibus, which is typical in that the public at large waited years for a Renault or Nissan minibus to turn up and then two came along at once. The vehicles are broadly identical because, as anyone in the commercial vehicle know will be able to tell you, the Nissan Primastar panel van is a rebadged version of the Renault Trafic. The Vauxhall Viraro is the third member of this platform-sharing triumvirate and it too is offered in Minibus form.
It’s the Primastar Minibus we concentrate on here and it’s basically a short-wheelbase, low-roof 2.9T Primastar panel van with windows and seats bolted on inside. Obviously, there are other additions to the package as well, little extras to add the degree of comfort and quality that passenger-carrying vehicles need but vans usually don’t.
There’s space for nine people inside: that’s a driver and two passengers in front, as you’d get in the panel van, then two rows of three tucked in behind. Access is good with sliding side doors on both sides and a glazed tailgate that must be one of the largest on any vehicle currently available. This huge top-hinged door swings upwards to reveal a 1.24m3 luggage area behind the third row of seats. While this giant flap is open, it creates a large sheltered area behind the vehicle which may be handy when the British weather does its worst. If you need more capacity for bags, you’ll have to forgo some of your passengers but the back row of seating can be folded down, increasing the space available to 2.49m3.
Nissan have selected their 100bhp 1.9-litre dCi diesel engine to take pride of place under the shapely Primastar Minibus bonnet. It’s a common-rail injection unit that’s capable of returning a creditable 36.7mpg and if your last experience of minibus travel dates back twenty years or more, it will be a revelation. Where the Minibus used to be a rough, agricultural thing, devoid of airs or graces, the Primastar is a bit of a smoothy. With a useful kick of torque from just 2,000rpm, it’s eager enough to pick up its heels and get up to cruising speed, although acceleration is never particularly brisk. Far more important in this multi-passenger vehicle is refinement. It’s not passenger-car quite but once into its stride the engine keeps itself to itself. It’s clean too and a huge step on from minibuses of yesteryear where the rear view mirror was rendered virtually obsolete by the thick plume of acrid black smoke perpetually billowing from the exhaust.
Further to all of this, there are two trim levels to choose from – E and SE. The E forms the base of the Range and comes well equipped with power steering, engine immobiliser, steering wheel controls for the RDS Stereo, driver’s airbag and remote central locking, ABS with EBD and three point seatbelts on all seats. In addition, the SE squeezes in an ultrasonic rear parking sensor, that emits a series for bleeps to warn of impending car park collisions, as well as electric windows, a CD player and electric, heated door mirrors.
From the driver’s point-of-view, the Primastar package is difficult to beat - in a commercial vehicle anyway. It features the kind of dash-mounted gear lever that’s all the rage in panel vans at the moment and represents a genuine step forward in design. You can neatly punch your way through the gears with the short stick providing a real feeling of solidity and control. It’s a far cry from the traditional floor-mounted arRangements with their long bowing gearsticks waving around and making for a
