Infiniti Q50 Forum banner

Infiniti Q50 vs. Lincoln MKZ - with PHOTOS

25K views 33 replies 15 participants last post by  MsNiecey  
I drove an MKZ rental car in Florida, and I didn't care for it nor did the rear passengers. The suspension would knock teeth loose for back seat passengers over the smallest parking bumps. The rear seat is ridiculously tiny while the rear shelf behind them extends about 3 feet to the glass, clearly showing the preference for trunk space was given over passenger space. The trunk is absolutely enormous in depth as well as height. The car is basically a giant hatchback coupe with rear doors as a cruel joke.

The MyFord TooMuch system was so slow and convoluted I never could get it to go anywhere or do anything I wanted. I'm sure there were suspension adjustments buried in that bird's nest of icons and menus somewhere, but nothing was where it belonged. Also, resting your hand casually on the center console leads to you accidentally touching invisible buttons/sliders embedded in the sloping console, changing settings you don't know exist without looking.

Fuel economy was admirable on my loaner though, and the headlights were perfect. Rear design was distinctive but Optimus Prime designed the front grille and it is too gaudy, even for a Lincoln.

Soft touch surfaces inside were deceptive. I'm a very tall guy and my knees end up resting on whatever is to the left and right of the steering wheel. To the right, lining the left side of the console-to-dash transition curve, there's a nice rubberized surface WITH A GIANT METAL PIPE UNDER IT. Not pleasant to have a steel wire digging into the side of your leg thinly veiled with a rubber skin.

With the driver's seat in the lowest position, slightly reclined (again, I'm 6' 7", this is how I fit), the dash dominated my view to the point that I couldn't determine where the sloping hood ended. I felt like a kid driving that car, with the curve of the dash taking up roughly 50% of my outward visibility forward.

All in all, it is still a Ford, and compares well against other US marques but not well at all against foreign competition. It's nice to see Lincoln trying now, but they have to try a lot harder than this. Maybe, just maybe, the stripped loaner I got is radically different than what most people shop for and buy, but if the stripper is this bad, how much better can a loaded model be? Most of the problems I had with it can't be addressed with options packages.