Forgotten Concept: Nissan Tri-X

Nissan Tri-X Concept

Nissan Tri-X Concept

Forgotten Concepts, Forgotten Concepts

This is an installment in a series of posts looking back on show cars that we feel deserved a little more attention than they got. If you have a suggestion for a Forgotten Concept topic, please shoot us a line or leave a comment below.

Nissan Tri-X

First Shown: 1991 Tokyo Auto Show

Description: Midsize premium coupe

Sales Pitch: “Responsible beauty”

More Forgotten Concepts

Nissan Tri-X Concept

Nissan Tri-X Concept

Details:

First shown at the 1991 Tokyo Auto Show, the Nissan Tri-X Concept was a rear-drive midsize coupe powered by a 32-valve V8. With the Tri-X, Nissan was testing the market for a luxury coupe to sell alongside its Asian-market performance coupes, the Skyline and Skyline GT-R. As such, the Tri-X featured a leather-lined cabin with four-place seating, an automatic transmission (the Skyline came only with a manual), and a high-tech control interface. (Take note of the trackball-style controller in the center console.) Pitched by Nissan as “responsible,” the Tri-X’s 4.5-liter engine was tuned to run on methanol as well as gasoline, a feature thought to be eco-conscious at the time.

The Tri-X was a fully functional vehicle, but it was never displayed on the U.S. auto-show circuit (note the right-hand-drive dashboard), so for Americans it’s likely more unknown than forgotten.

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Nissan Tri-X Concept

Nissan Tri-X Concept

CG Says:

I can’t decide what I think of the styling here. There’s a lot going on, though I’m pretty sure the ducktail rear-end treatment doesn’t work. While the methanol thing is kind of a yawner, Nissan’s exploration of the premium-car market is interesting.

Remember, it was at this time that Nissan was introducing the Infiniti brand to the United States. Nissan’s nascent luxury division did indeed feature a smallish/midsize coupe at the time, though that car–the M30–looked nothing like the Tri-X.

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Nissan Tri-X Concept

Nissan Tri-X Concept

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Forgotten Concept: Ford SYNus

Forgotten Concept: Ford SYNus

Ford SYNus Concept

Forgotten Concepts, Forgotten Concepts

This is an installment in a series of posts looking back on show cars that we feel deserved a little more attention than they got. If you have a suggestion for a Forgotten Concept topic, please shoot us a line or leave a comment below.

Ford SYNus Concept

First Seen: 2005 Detroit Auto Show

Description: Compact crossover

Sales Pitch: “An urban sanctuary.”

More Forgotten Concepts

2005 Ford SYNus

Ford SYNus

Details:

First seen at 2005 Detroit Auto Show, the SYNus Concept was a compact crossover that featured a tough, armored-vehicle exterior with a comfort-themed cabin. The vehicle was a collaboration between Spanish designer Jose Paris (exterior) and industry veteran Joe Baker (interior).

The bank-vault-esque exterior included bullet-resistant glass and armored shielding for the windshield and side glass which appeared when the vehicle was in “Lockdown Mode.” The modern cabin featured seating for four, and included a hideaway rear bench seat and front bucket seats that could be rotated 180 degrees to face the rear of the vehicle. In place of a rear window, the SYNus featured a large TV monitor.

The SYNus’s drivetrain, borrowed  from the European Ford Mondeo, was a 2.0-liter “Duratorq” turbodiesel engine coupled to a 5-speed manual transmission.

Pronounced “sin-u-ehs,” the SYNus name was a pairing of syn—sort for synthesis—and us—for urban sanctuary. Ford had initially considered calling the concept Armadillo, but discovered that Fiat had used the name for a concept in 1996.

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Ford SYNus

Ford SYNus

CG Says:

It’s hard to pick the best dystopian landscape for this rolling exercise in vehicular paranoia, but I’m going to go with that of Robocop. I saw this vehicle in the flesh when it first made the rounds, and still wonder how a concept car designed for the bleakest of realities made for good, happy, move-the-sheetmetal fun. Strange that Ford stopped with the armor cladding. Why not include a solar-powered dehydrated-meal reconstituter, and a water purification system? I am happy to report that nothing this depressing or paramilitary-looking has made its way into Ford showrooms since the SYNus debuted, so we’ll just call this odd exercise a one-off and forget about it.

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Ford SYNus Concept

Ford SYNus

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Ford SYNus Gallery

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Ford SYNus Concept

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