Skip advert
Advertisement

Infiniti G37S Coupe

Our Infiniti has been on a road trip to the South of France

There’s no logical reason to drive to the south of France. It’s significantly cheaper to fly, and there are plenty of perfectly good hire cars available at Nice airport. But there is something about doing it the hard way, actually being properly involved in the process of getting from A to B rather than spending hours twiddling your thumbs in stale airports and on stuffy aeroplanes. Driving gives you a proper feeling of distance, and even if you’re making the journey in a modern car on modern autoroutes, there’s a sense of old-fashioned adventure about it. So with a week on the Côte d’Azur planned, my wife and I decided we’d travel by Infiniti.

Advertisement - Article continues below

After an early ferry crossing, the cruise control was set to fine-avoiding speeds, putting the engine at a barely audible 2500rpm or so, and progress was truly effortless. Even swapping drivers was a doddle, thanks to the two memory settings for the driver’s seat and steering wheel. As the miles slipped by, the only flies that landed in the ointment were the spurious traffic info being picked up by the satnav and the lack of height adjustment for the driver’s seatbelt, which bugged Mrs Ev until we found a makeshift solution.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

The 750 miles from Calais to Cannes took less than 12 hours, and we arrived feeling… well, about as fresh as you could expect after a 5.30am start. Costs amounted to £84 in tolls and, at an average of 31mpg, £150 in fuel. Perhaps that’s another reason to make a journey like this by car now – if fuel prices rise much further, it won’t even be worth contemplating.

All things considered, the Infiniti earned its country-crossing GT badge with ease, and over the week that followed it was infinitely more enjoyable than a bog-basic rental Twingo would have been. It attracted glances while cruising la Croisette in Cannes (perhaps people were tired of looking at the 599 GTOs and Veyrons), its torquey V6 and auto gearbox made light work of climbing the spectacular Route des Crêtes, and the quick steering was just the thing for enjoying the endless turns of the Route Napoleon. And could there be a more fitting machine in which to clip the red and white kerbing in Monaco than one from the manufacturer whose name is on the car that won the Grand Prix there earlier this year?

After racking up 2250 miles in just eight days, the G37S had proved itself to be a consummate all-rounder, which was exactly what we needed. My respect for this car continues to grow.

Running Costs

Date acquiredJuly 2010
Total mileage23,340
Costs this month£0
Mileage this month3733
MPG this month26.9
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Why the wild V8-powered Land Rover Defender D7X-R has ‘flight mode’
Land Rover Defender Dakar D7X-R
News

Why the wild V8-powered Land Rover Defender D7X-R has ‘flight mode’

The Land Rover Defender will take on the world’s most gruelling off-road race in 2026. Here’s our first look at the car that will do it
25 Nov 2025
How a sub-200bhp runabout exposes the problem with today’s performance cars
695C Turismo
Opinion

How a sub-200bhp runabout exposes the problem with today’s performance cars

A shortage of long-term test cars flags up a wider problem, says Meaden
27 Nov 2025
Everyone loves the idea of a GT car, so why does nobody buy them?
Aston Martin Vanquish
Opinion

Everyone loves the idea of a GT car, so why does nobody buy them?

We all love a great GT, says Jethro. Trouble is, no-one wants to buy them
21 Nov 2025