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Showing posts with label Kia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kia. Show all posts

Detroit motor show: Kia KV7 Sport Car Concepts

Kia has designed its KV7 concept to showcase its vision for the large MPV sector, particularly in the US.

Revealed at the Detroit motor show, the Californian-penned "convention-challenging” show car is nearly 4.9m long and more than two metres wide. Its most striking feature is a gullwing passenger-side door.

See the Kia KV7 concept - now updated with Detroit show pics

The car is powered by Kia’s 2.0-litre turbocharged petrol engine, as found in the US-market Optima. When it makes production, it is expected to be launched in both seven and nine-seat configurations,

Kia has yet to decide whether to bring the eventual production version to the UK, but Autocar understands it is unlikely to reach dealers here.

Instead of the KV7, UK buyers will be able to get an all-new seven-seat Kia Karens – set to be launched later in 2012 – as well as a seven-seat version of the new Sorento.

Kia Optima 2.4 GDi US spec

The Kia Optima is designed by ex-Audi design chief, Peter Schreyer

Park this next to a BMW 5-series, and many would think the Optima is the better looking car

Engine is barely audible most of the time and the transmission smooth

Big seller will doubtless be the top-spec model, equipped with niceties like touch-screen navigation

High quality interior matches its rivals with ease

Leather upholstered heated and cooled seats

Kia Sportage 2.0 CRDi

Sportage is easy to drive, cheap to buy and interesting to look at

It is well-judged in terms of its driveability, equipment levels, pricing and cabin usability

Could be best in class if not for loose body con ltrol, light steering and poor fuel consumption

The Sportage never feels like a particularly rapid machine

Rear visibility is poor, so First Editions get a rear camera

Only a 2.0-litre, turbodiesel now, but a 1.6 petrol and 1.7 turbo are coming in December

Kia’s cabin is a pleasant place to be

Front and rear legroom is very good

The big, conveniently shaped boot can hold up to 564 litres with the seats up

It’s clear that there has been cost saving inside the Sportage

Rear-view camera is located in the rear-view mirror

Kia Sportage 1.7 CRDi review

It's Kia's latest generation of Sportage, now available as a full 16-model range after being introduced by the 'First Edition', a 2.0 diesel-based variant that showed the new car's strengths but came fully loaded and well north of £20k.

Four engines are on offer; as well as the 2.0 oil-burner there are 1.6-litre and 2.0-litre petrols, and the new 1.7-litre turbodiesel tested here. Unlike its bigger black-nozzle brother, it's only available with front-wheel drive and a six-speed manual gearbox.

There are four trim levels for this powerplant. The base spec, 1, comes on 16in wheels but still offers air-con, Bluetooth, electric windows all round and LED daytime running lights that make the most of Peter Schreyer's sharp styling. Move up to 2 and you get 17in alloys, part-leather upholstery, reversing sensors and a panoramic glass roof.

If you want full leather then you'll need to choose 3, which also throws in heated front and rear seats, xenon headlights, dual-zone climate control and 18in wheels. However, our test car came in '3 Sat-nav' spec, which has all the kit plus an integrated 7in navigation system in the dashboard.

The 1.7-litre turbodiesel, which has 114bhp and 192lb ft of torque, feels pretty comfortable with the Sportage's 1490kg kerb weight. There's a decent slug of twist from a little over 1000rpm, allowing you to make relaxed, rapid progress that's pretty refined once the motor’s warmed up. And if you do need to throw gears at it, the 'box is slick and precise.





Throwing the Sportage at corners is an exercise that brings few nasty surprises and little real pleasure. The steering is precise enough and not badly weighted, but it's not particularly communicative, and while body roll is reasonably well contained, it is present. The overall package is extremely competent, without ever becoming involving.

The cabin, meanwhile, is pretty roomy and airy (particularly so with the panoramic roof that’s standard on all but the base spec). There are a few hard plastics, particularly along the top of the doors, but it's at least as respectable as a Qashqai or a Kuga. Indeed, the flashes of piano black trim in the Sportage's functional dashboard look a bit more coherent than some of the 'brushed aluminium' plastics you'll find in Fords these days.



The ride is rather less satisfactory - or at least, it is when you're sitting on a top-spec model’s 18in wheels. It's not exactly crashy, but there's a fair amount of fidgeting that finds its way through to the cabin. We also tried a 1.6 petrol on 16-inchers and it was noticeably more comfortable.

We can see why you would. The Sportage's striking design makes it stand out from the glut of crossovers on the market, and its cabin and powertrain are on a par with anything around this price range, with the possible exception of Volkswagen's more tightly specced Tiguan.

Just remember to ask yourself some stern questions about your must-have toys before choosing your Sportage's trim level; we suspect the sweet spot - on price and ride comfort - is further down the range than this.

Kia Sportage 1.7 CRDi 3 Sat-Nav

Price: £22,570; Top speed: 107mph; 0-62mph: 11.9sec; Economy: 52.3mpg; CO2: 143g/km; Kerb weight: 1490kg; Engine: 4 cyls, 1685cc, turbodiesel; Power: 114bhp at 4000rpm; Torque: 192lb ft at 1250-2750rpm; Gearbox: 6-spd manual

2011 Kia Optima Wallpaper

2011 Kia Optima
2011 Kia Optima


2011 Kia Optima
2011 Kia Optima

2011 Kia Optima
2011 Kia Optima

2011 Kia Optima
2011 Kia Optima