Quote:
Originally Posted by theman23
Genesis GV60 also looks pretty cool. Saw a couple parked at the Hyundai Canada HQ in Toronto the other day. hyundai/Kia have some really cool products in the market at the moment, and the Ioniq 5/EV6 are probably the best BEVs on the market.
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yeah Kia (imho) has some of the best designed cars with really nice interiors in 2022. Hyundai has nice vehicles as well, but Kias just look sportier. (Kia is the Honda to Hyundai being (usually) more conservative Toyota like)
For those who don't believe Kia is now right up there with Honda and Toyota, please test drive one!
In the early fall my Dad bought a 2022 Kia Sorento PHEV. Previously he's always owned Camrys or Accords.
I went with him to test drive Toyota Rav 4 Hybrid (Prime wasn't available) and the Kia Sorento. While the Toyota is nice (the Prime version is also hella fast), the Sorento's interior looks higher end, more modern with the clean wide screen/digital gauges. The fit/finish seemed to be a cut above the Toyota.
When you use the turn signal one of the digital dials shows the side camera for blind spots, which is a cool feature.
It's AWD and has a "snow" terrain mode so in most places you won't get stuck or fear driving in wintry conditions. With a combined 261hp and 258 lb-ft of torque it's no slouch, even if much slower than a Rav 4 Prime.
He loves it. It looks great, its fully loaded with panoramic moonroof, Bose stereo, has a very nice light grey leather interior with quad captains chairs, heated and cooled seats, and will do ~52km on full electric. When the electric range is exhausted, the 1.6L turbo 4 cylinder kicks in. It's so quiet in electric that one really notices when the gas engine starts running lol
Since my Dad's retired and lives in a small city most of his driving is in full electric mode. Overall it will do a combined 79MPG-equivalent (EPA numbers).
I think with his driving he's getting closer to 90MPG-equiv. With gas prices at
$1.50/litre or higher it makes a
huge difference.
It also pollutes 3.3 times less in GHGs (EPA figures) while using 1/3 the barrels of oil of the 2009 Camry he owns.
He bought it right before the car lots started to go empty with lack of new vehicles due to the chip shortage + high demand during the pandemic.
It looks very similar to this but with the new 2022 logo as seen on the steering wheel.