Three problems related to electrical jack have been reported for the 2015 Nissan Rogue. The most recently reported issues are listed below. Please also check out the statistics and reliability analysis of the 2015 Nissan Rogue based on all problems reported for the 2015 Rogue.
When we bought the car 2 years ago, the ac went out the day after we purchased it. The dealer finally got it fixed after about 3 months of trying different things. Last month it went out again. They replaced the compressor under warranty; I paid labor and for a new ac belt. Now it is out again after less than 6 weeks. This is a safety issue for me because I cannot drive with windows down. The last time I tried that, a yellowjacket flew in and stung me, resulting in a trip to the hospital. I have seen multiple complaints about this issue from other Rogue owners, and I hope that you will make Nissan do something about the faulty ac in 2015 and 2016 Rogues. The date below is the date of the most recent time the ac failed.
While driving down john turner butler in jacksonville, FL, the sunroof shattered and glass spewed throughout the vehicle. I was traveling with my two children under the age of two years old in the vehicle. Glass ended up in their car seat and throughout the vehicle.
The problem is that the doors do not unlock until you press the engine stop button. Then all the doors unlock, not just the driver's door. That makes it very easy for car jackers, purse snatchers, and child abductors to wait at a gas station for you to pull up, turn off your engine so you can get out, and commit their crime when all the doors unlock. Obviously the same would be true if for some reason you were pulling into a shopping mall or grocery store parking lot. There is a method to reverse the operation so no doors unlock when you turn off the engine and this is safer, except: the driver's door lock and front passenger door lock are not mechanically connected the the door handle. Ie, if you disable the auto door unlock, you cannot open the driver's door in an emergency -- like a car fire, heart attack, accident -- unless you can find and release the door lock which has been "aesthetically" hidden in the door and designed so it is not easily opened -- I assume to prevent someone from using a wire to unlock the door. This is the first vehicle I have ever driven that the driver (and front seat passenger) cannot exit without manually finding and flipping the door lock. How insane is that? I mentioned that none of my american cars had this problem and the mechanic I was talking to said it was only a Nissan thing. No other car that he knows of will not let the driver exit the car by pulling the door handle. This is extremely dangerous and you truly have very little control over your own security in this vehicle. Any person with any kind of even minor hand disability, like arthritis, would have a very hard time unlocking the car doors. The truly crazy thing is that we are talking about, maybe, 5-10 cents of clothes hanger-type wire to correct the problem and potentially save people's lives. Does this violate ada rules?.