About Infiniti M35h
The Infiniti M35h is marketed as Nissan Fuga Hybrid in Japan. It offers the top performance trim there. Nissan's first in-house developed electric hybrid technology is introduced. The fuel economy will be doubled in the gasoline-powered version. Nissan also announced that the M35h will provide with new Vehicle Sound for Pedestrians system to alert pedestrians, the blind, and others to their presence when the hybrid is operating at low speeds in all-electric mode.
The M35h will provide one electric motor and two clutches to allow the 3.5L V6 (302 hp (225 kW) and 258 lb-ft (350 N·m)) gas engine and electric motor to drive the rear wheels simultaneously. The Atkinson cycle is used in the VQ35HR 3.5 L V6 Hybrid. It offers the electric motor, installed in parallel between the engine parts and the transmission, which produces 68 PS (50 kW; 67 bhp) from 1.3kWh lithium-ion batteries. The service life of the batteries is expected to last for 10 years. Behind the rear seats, parts installed the batteries. Changes have been made in the luggage compartment space. It is reduced. Its rear seat parts are fixed in place and cannot fold down. They are not available with all-wheel drive. The combined power output of the M35h's hybrid power train is 360 hp (268 kW; 365 PS) at 6500 rpm, and 391 lb·ft (530 N·m) of torque at 2000 rpm.
Infiniti M35h parts online
In the same class, the 2012 Infiniti M35h made its debut as the best-executed hybrid performance luxury car. The M35h is the first hybrid gasoline-electric vehicle with an automatic transmission to return frugal fuel economy figures and retain the acceleration/handling characteristics of its gasoline-only counterparts. The M35h's fuel economy is better than the M37. If you want parts that enable your cars to boast the same good fuel economy as the M35h, you may try on OEM parts.
The M35h is good at accelerating production and sets an official Guinness world record on August 23, 2011. The is shown at the United Kingdom's Santa Pod Raceway, where CAR magazine journalist Tim Pollard drove the vehicle down the quarter-mile dragstrip in 13.896 seconds. It reaches speeds over 100 mph (160 km/h) with an average of 13.9031 seconds for all runs. Guinness adjudicators have witnessed the run and certified the record. According to the official data, the M35h can travel up to 100 km/h (62 mph) in 5.5 seconds.