There are few modifications that can ruin a vehicle as thoroughly as a lift kit and big tires. Acceleration gets worse. Braking gets worse. Handling gets worse. Fuel economy gets worse. Ride quality gets worse. Wind noise gets worse. Durability gets worse. And yet, we — like so many Americans — went ahead and did it anyway, raising our 2014 Nissan Murano CrossCabriolet’s suspension by 1.5-inches, and then installing 1.3-inch larger diameter all-terrain tires on very, very cool wheels that I found on Facebook Marketplace. Let’s look at how we simultaneously ruined our convertible Nissan Crossover SUV and also made it so, so much better.
A few months ago, we bought one of the weirdest cars of all time — a 2014 Nissan Murano CrossCabriolet — and had our brand partner, XPEL, cover half of it with paint protection film. The goal of our partnership is to test how well XPEL PPF protects our vehicle as we subject it to a barrage of brutal tests meant to simulate, among other things, a police hood-slide and the harsh environment that is the parking lot/parking deck. Our next test is going to involve off-roading, and before you chuckle at the idea, you should know that the Crosscab is far, far underrated in terms of its theoretical off-road potential.
First off, the most important element of any good off-road vehicle is geometry, and on that front the CrossCab crushes it. Look at these numbers:
- Angle of approach (degrees) 28.8
- Angle of departure (degrees) 25.5
- Breakover angle 15.6
OK, that breakover angle is rough, but the approach angle of almost 29 degrees and a departure angle of 25.5? Those are great!
To put this into context, you may have seen our review of the new off-road focused Honda Passport Trailsport — a review titled “The 2026 Honda Passport Trailsport Is An Excellent Off-Road Starting Point To Keep Up With Your Subaru Pals.” Here’s a look at that vehicle:

The Passport Trailsport’s angles are:
- Angle of approach (degrees) 23
- Angle of departure (degrees) 23.1
- Breakover angle 16.7
So our CrossCab crushes the approach angle, beats the departure angle, and loses out to the breakover angle by just 1.1 degrees. Overall, the CrossCab’s geometry is actually better, and geometry is huge when it comes to off-road capability.
Of course, I have some concerns about the CrossCabriolet’s gearing. Per Nissan, the CVT offers gearing ranging between 2.371 and 0.439. The final drive ratio is 5.173, and the transfer case ratio is 0.4048, yielding a crawl ratio of just… 5:1. Which doesn’t sound quite right to me; that seems way too low, with the Honda Passport Trailsport’s crawl ratio sitting at around 22 and a proper off-roader’s (one equipped with a two-speed transfer case with low range) often hitting above 50:1. Two hundred and sixty-five horsepower and 248 lb-ft of torque aren’t bad, but with tall gearing and a 4,438 curb weight, the Crosscab’s powertrain/drivetrain definitely doesn’t sound ideal for off-roading, even if the world is filled with CVT-equipped ATVs and side-by-sides.
But the geometry is good, and beyond that, there’s this “AWD Lock” switch just to the left of the steering column:

This should ensure that torque goes to both the front and rear axles at all times. So there should be traction, there should be ground clearance/proper geometry… but there may not be enough torque at the wheels to propel the vehicle without frying that CVT.
But hey, two out of three ain’t bad, so I decided to jack up those approach/departure/breakover angles even more and increase our grip by lifting the Murano CrossCabriolet and installing some 31.5-inch Vredestein Pinza AT tires (see below — Vredestein sent us these for free; thank you!). That’s an increase in tire size of about 1.3-inches, which — along with the 1.2-inches of lift — yields about 2-inches of overall vehicle lift.

The only issue was that the CrossCabriolet comes with 20-inch wheels, which are not going to work off-road. After searching everywhere online for some good aftermarket wheels, I decided to cheap out and buy a used wheels from Facebook Marketplace. But what wheels would fit a Nissan Murano CrossCabriolet?
I chatted with Autopian writer Thomas Hundal, and he told me that about a vehicle with the same 5×114.3 lug pattern as the Nissan, and with a center bore big enough for the Nissan: The SN95 Mustang. And, after a bit of searching, I managed to find the ultimate SN95 wheels: Tri Bars.


They cost me $250 for the set, and they’d been absolutely beaten on, with three coming with tires that had metal cords poking out (never grab a tire with cords poking out; they will pierce straight through your skin). It’s no surprise, and these had been drifting wheels for the seller’s Mazda RX-7.

Getting the Plasti-Dip off the wheels was an absolute nightmare, and required lots of Goo-Gone, some scrubbing with a brush, my pressure washer, and lots of patience.

After many hours of squirting with Goo-Gone and spraying with my pressure washer, the wheels looked great:

I hit them with some self-etching primer:

And then I sprayed them all with some gold wheel-paint:

From there, I bought some new lug nuts, tire pressure sensors, and hub-centric rings to get the tri-bar wheels’ center bore the right size for the CrossCab:



Before installing the Vredestein tires onto those Tri-Bars and then onto our CrossCab, I decided we’d give our Nissan a small lift kit. Did we need that for a 1.3-inch larger diameter tire that’s wider by only about 0.4 inches? Probably not. But again, I want to give the Nissan Murano CrossCabriolet as good of a chance off-road as possible, even though I fear the vehicle will end up being severely gearing-limited.
So I found a cheap 1.2-inch lift from Ukraine:

I brought this extremely basic lift‚ which just spaces the springs and dampers an extra 1.2-inches from the vehicle’s body — to our friends at Galpin Auto Sports, and they installed it:

Here you can see the subtly lifted vehicle on its factory wheels:

I then took our gold wheels, our awesome all-terrain tires, my new lug nuts and TPMS sensors, and those little center bore plastic adapters to a tiny tire shop near Galpin. If you’re wondering how four wheels and four tires fit into the CrossCab, the answer is: They sorta didn’t.




I was concerned the tires might not fit under the front strut spring-perches, but they did, and the CrossCab looks fantastic:



Does part of me think I could have gone up a tiny bit more in tire size? Yes. Does part of me also think we’re tempting fate putting additional strain on the Jatco CVT? Absolutely.
Anyway, we’ve driven the vehicle from LA to Monterey, and it glides. Honestly, the bigger tires on the Mustang SN95 wheels haven’t really affected the ride much at all; it’s good, and though the vehicle can’t really go much faster than about 70 up even a slight grade, acceleration doesn’t feel significantly worse than it did before. I’m sure if we actually ran measurements we’d find that, indeed, the ride is technically worse, the handling is worse, the fuel economy is worse, the NVH is worse, the durability has been decreased (I think the spacers might have torn one of our control arm bushings), and on and on.
A lift and big tires really does make a car worse in almost any way. And yet, just look at those photos above. Some humongous compromises are worth it.
Now to see what this thing can do off-road…






Imagine how awesome this could be if they offered a manual transmission. Is there a manual that will swap into the cross-cab?
This thing is ridiculously cool now.
As someone who recently bedliner coated a 2004 Ford Taurus wagon beige I do not concur with the statement “ruined” as this Murano Cross Cab is now simply beautiful!
The usual step after guady rims and a lift kit is a litany of trump/2nd amendment/tuff guy bumper stickers but I assume you guys have something weirder in mind
I’d rock this rig 8 days a week! One detail to add, it’d be rad if the tires have white lettering like many AT tires do. Can they be flipped to show that lettering?
“I was concerned the tires might not fit under the front strut spring-perches,”
Do the math!! That is what I always tell my students, when they ask “will this work”.
Now there are a lot of online calculators where you can enter old and new tire, wheel and offsets and it will tell you exactly where the new combination will sit relative to the old one.
However since you are a former engineer I’m quite surprised you didn’t open up a spread sheet and do the calcs yourself. Back in my day we used to have to get out the paper and pencil to figure that out. But that pencil, paper and a little massaging allowed me to fit 235/60-14s where an A78-13 once was. Speaking of which while you quoted that they are 31.5″ but didn’t give the actual size.
I do have Pinza AT’s on our old family truckster. Overall I do like them and in my opinion are worthy of their snowflake on the mountain designation. They are also pretty good on dry and wet pavement. At the time they were a great value as they were just re-establishing their presence in the US. Back when I worked at a tire store they were one of the brands we sold, and the owner did sell them hard over the other brands we carried.
I did all the math, and it all worked out!
He is one of those fake till you make it engineers.
His articles prove that
On paper this seems like a terrible idea. But somehow it totally works!!
It’s like a new AMC Eagle Sundancer
I know you guys were trying to make this ridiculous looking. Yet somehow you IMPROVED it!
I wish you guys had like 40k to blow on this. But for a budget build this is A+
This is pretty cool I love just how preposterous it is!
I can’t believe the CrossCab now would look good on the FB page called: OEM Wheels on Other Makes & Models
Looks miles better with the lift kit on! And what a great colour for it too!
I always find it interesting that lifting a vehicle can decrease its off-road capability by reducing its articulation. Too much math involved for me to tell if that’s what has happened here, but I can’t wait to this with 2 wheels in the air.
Who needs a sway bar, anyway?!?!
I would just about faint if there is a comparable quick-release sway bar that could drop on it….
I never expected to say that a Nissan Murano Cross Cabriolet looks good, but with the lift kit, wheels, and tires, it kinda sorta works. Reminiscent of a dune buggy now.
It now looks a little like…
like…
sweet Jesus help me, like the YOUABIAN PUMA!
Don’t do anything too stupid with no rollover protection.
Trust me…they won’t need to worry about using any “protection” driving this…
I was going to make a disparaging comment about the vehicle, but then I realized that I was wearing my “Weird is Good” t-shirt. I don’t want to be a hypocrite.
A GR86 can fit 4 mounted tires with 4 replacements of 1-3/4 larger diameter. Also not well (the last tire sits in the passenger seat and wants to roll over you on a right turn), but I would think it’s less expected to be able to do so.
If only you had changed the oil after doing the suspension/wheels….
(oops)
God those rims painted gold suck.
It is beautiful
Isn’t that what Beloq (sp? no idea) said after he he opened the Ark in Indiana Jones and then he melted?
The wheels look a little Trumpian with the gold paint. Am I the only one who thinks Auric Goldfinger when I see the Orange One? “No American Democracy, I intend to kill you.”
Sorry. I’ll stop.
Think how much fun Delmar will have once he’s old enough to trust him with the power washer.
If I saw this in person, I’d probably laugh out loud.
Struggling to maintain 70 up a slight grade? What’s with that?
Schmoke and a pancake? Mmm, a peesh of schkin…
Nah, Goldmember from Austin Powers is more like it.
I also wonder about not maintaining 70, I have put some miles on one of these Muranos and there is plenty of power to handle a slight tire size change
I think the wheels would look better if it was a lighter shade, more of a champagne color than gold. But overall, I think it works.
(never grab a tire with cords poking out; they will pierce straight through your skin).
Just reading that after all these years caused me to shudder at the memories.
Singlehandedly one of the most painful experiences (and most memorable) I’ve ever suffered while working on cars. Unfortunately, it happened more once, on the rare occasion when I forgot to check and just jammed my hands blindly around the back (inner) side of the tire to remove it, or rotate it… 🙁
Always check all around a tire as good as you can and ONLY touch it in the areas that you have cleared as not having exposed cords, trust me!
If you are buying rims with tires the tires need to be usable otherwise tell the seller remove the tires or knock $100 off the price