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Nissan Serena Review (1993 to 2002)![]() Quick Summary Lots of room, yet this Nissan takes up a minimum of space in the garage and costs a lot less to run than most of the competition. For what you pay, the Serena is excellent value.Overall: ![]() Models Covered:JANUARY 1993 – JANUARY 2002:4 & 5 DOOR, 7 & 8 SEATS, 1.6, 2.0, 2.0 & 2.3 DIESEL [LX, GX 16V, SLX, SGX, EXCURSION]
VALUE-ADDED TAXI
This is the vehicle that many people unfairly overlook when considering a used people carrier. As recently as 1996, however, the Serena outsold the car that started the European MPV ball rolling, Renault's Espace. Available new and used at prices well below those of most of the competition, Nissan's high-sided hold-all makes sense if, like many family buyers, price is all.The Spanish-built Serena is based heavily on the Japanese original, itself derived from a van. Compromises had to be made for the European market, though the main one, narrow width, is actually appealing to many buyers. It makes the car easier to manoeuvre in narrow streets but also results in high-sided styling.Because Nissan didn't have to spend billions designing a people carrier from scratch, the Serena is sold at prices that undercut most of the new (and used) competition. To be fair, you won't be buying a vehicle that handles as well as some sophisticated European competitors but you will get a well-equipped family car, readily available on the used market, at prices that give it the edge over most rivals.
History of the Serena
The Serena arrived in the showrooms in January 1993 and was available with three different engines. There were 1.6 and 16-valve 2.0-litre versions as well as a 2.0-litre diesel. A newer, bigger 2.3-litre diesel replaced the original unit two years later. This and the introduction of a 16-valve version of the 1.6-litre engine in July 1996 were the only major mechanical changes to the Serena range so far. A new Excursion trim level arrived in mid '96 and this and the SLX gained standard air conditioning (always a selling point with used MPVs) in May 1997.The 2.3 diesel models were only ever available with sliding doors on both sides though Serenas with other engines had either a passenger-side sliding door or the dual-door arrangement.
Nissan Serena Road Test
Handling is well controlled as is body roll – a bugbear with many cars of this type. It helps that the engine is positioned under the front seats instead of the bonnet, giving the Serena better all-round balance.Around town, driving could hardly be easier thanks in part to the narrow design – a real advantage in nip-and-tuck traffic. The clutch, gearbox and steering are all as light as you could want and the brakes are powerful and progressive (with anti-lock on the later SLX and Excursion models).
Buying a Nissan Serena
There are, perhaps, unsurprisingly, very few areas to watch with the Serena. Shock absorbers tend to get quite a work-out if the car has been driven regularly with a full complement of passengers and luggage.Push down on the bonnet and the body should resist sagging. If it bounces back, the shock absorbers will need replacement. Mechanically, though, the rest of the Serena's underpinnings are long lasting and reliable but watch for rattly or smoky engines as worn camshafts are not unknown.Interior trim may have had a hard life at the hands of the young children. Don't forget to check the electric windows and door-locks, if fitted, as well as both electric sunroofs and air conditioning standard on many of the more recent models.
Nissan Serena Typical Pricing
You're looking at a minimum of about £1,300, which should be enough to put a 1.6-litre K-reg LX four-door in your driveway. Pay up to another £600 and you can have a younger 94L car, or, if your budget will stretch to around £2,300, you could have a 95N-plater. The 16-valve five-door GX versions are mostly N to W-platers with prices ranging from under £2,500 to £4,800.For 2.0-litre petrol Serenas, expect to pay less than £1,500 for the first five-door 1993K SLX examples. A 94L-plater will be about £1,800 and a 96N about £2,900 and late-plate 00W Excursion models are around £5,275.A diesel 2.3 will cost you at least £2,300 for the earliest 95M-reg LX five-door versions, while N-platers start at about £2,500. A more luxurious SLX will be about £2,500 on a 95M or around £4,400 with a 99T-plate, while an eight-seater 98R-reg should be roughly £3,500.
Nissan Serena Parts
(approx. for a 1995 1.6) Expect to pay around £160 for a full clutch assembly, about £270 for a complete exhaust system (excluding catalyst), up to £180 for a front headlamp and about £300 for a starter motor.Brake pads are up to £60 front and £50 for the rear set, around £195 should buy a new radiator and an alternator is about £290.
Nissan Serena Rated
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