Category Archives: Kia

News and reviews of Kia electric cars (including plug-in hybrids).

Kia Soul EV 2020 (Image: Kia.com)

2019 Kia Soul EV – price, specs and release date

New Kia Soul EV will challenge rival electric cars including the Nissan Leaf and Hyundai Ioniq Electric, and here’s everything you need to know about it…

On sale: Early 2019 | Price from: £32,000 (est)

Treading the fine line between funky looks and being practical for families, the Kia Soul is a boxy small SUV which competes with small SUV rivals including the Nissan Juke, Renault Captur and the current class leader, Seat’s Arona. An all-new version has been revealed at the Los Angeles motor show, but in a sign of the times it will only go on sale in electric Soul EV form in the UK, with conventionally powered versions reserved for the US market.

Kia Soul EV 2020 (Image: Kia.com)
Kia Soul EV 2020 (Image: Kia.com)

That means that as well as the small SUVs mentioned above, rivals also now include the Nissan Leaf and Hyundai Ioniq Electric.

 

2019 Kia Soul EV electric motor and range

Described as being “just as quirky, fun-loving and crowd-pleasing as ever,” the new Soul EV is powered by a single electric motor developing 201bhp and 291lb ft of torque. There’s also new suspension designed to give the car more agile handling and a more comfortable ride – both are areas where the old Soul fell down next to key rivals. Drivers can choose from four different modes – Eco+, Eco, Comfort and Sport – which adjusts the accelerator response to potentially conserve energy, as well as adjusting the Soul’s climate control and regenerative braking settings. All of that could lead to you getting more miles out of each full charge, the same as hypermiling in a conventional car.

Read more: What Car

Kia e-Niro EV (Image: Kia)

DrivingElectric 2019 Car of the Year is the Kia e-Niro

DrivingElectric has named its first Car of the Year, the Kia e-Niro, at the first ever DrivingElectric Awards

Our inaugural awards have been won by the all-new Kia e-Niro, and it’s not hard to see why. This pure electric, compact family SUV gets a range of 301 miles, and promises to be comfortable and great value when sales start later this year.

Other success stories from the Driving Electric Awards include the Jaguar I-Pace, our best large electric car for 2019, while the Hyundai Ioniq Plug-In and the Volvo XC60 T8 won the compact and large plug-in hybrid awards respectively. Toyota and Lexus took the prizes for conventional hybrids with the Toyota Prius and Lexus RX winning in the compact and large categories for non-plug-in cars.

Read more: Driving Electric

Kia e-Niro EV (Image: Kia)

Kia Niro EV offers over 300 miles of real world range for half the price of its rivals

KIA has confirmed that the new Niro EV’s real-world range which rivals the likes of Tesla and beats car such as the new Jaguar I Pace, Audi e-Tron and Mercedes EQC but will cost half the price.

Kia has confirmed the impressive real world range for the new Niro EV.

It will be able to achieve range of up to 301 miles on a single charge when it goes on sale towards the end of 2018.

Powering the car is a high-capacity 64 kWh lithium-polymer battery.

Its range was confirmed on the WLTP combined cycle. On the WLTP ‘urban’ test cycle, the e-Niro is capable of travelling for up to 382 miles (615 km) – further than many petrol cars.

Kia has also optimised the battery to be able to use a ‘fast charger.’

When plugged into a 100kW fast charger the Niro’s battery pack can be recharged from zero to 80 per cent in just 54 minutes.

There is also a smaller 39.2 kWh battery pack variant which produces 193 miles of real-world range on a single charge.

Models equipped with the 64kWh battery pack are paired with a 150 kW (204 ps) motor, producing 395 Nm torque.

This allows the vehicle to sprint from zero-62mph in just 7.8 seconds.

Standard 39.2kWh battery pack variants are paired with a 100 kW (136 ps) motor, also producing 395 Nm torque.

It enables the car to travel from zero-62 mph in 9.8 seconds.

The car is expected to costs around £30,000 when it goes on sale which makes it over half the price of a lot of its rivals including the Tesla Model X, Jaguar I-Pace, Audi e-Tron, and Mercedes EQA.

Read more: Express

Kia e-Niro 2019 review

Niro comes of age as an electric car with an excellent drivetrain and impressive real-world range

What is it?

Electric cars may seem to dominate the mainstream media motoring coverage, but there really are not that many pure EVs you can buy yet in the UK, and even fewer with a ‘big’ range.

So the Kia e-Niro arrives at quite the opportune time, with electric cars – and the charging network to support them – gaining momentum with acceptance and awareness among the wider buying public beyond early adopters.

The Niro is a couple of years old now and launched as Kia’s dedicated eco-friendly model, promising hybrid, plug-in hybrid and, in time, all-electric drivetrains within the same range, and now the time has come for that electric version.

You’ll spot more than one or two similarities between the e-Niro and the Kona Electric from sister brand Hyundai. The drivetrain is common between the pair, consisting of an electric motor powered by a 64kWh lithium ion polymer battery.

While the Kona Electric offers a smaller battery, as does the e-Niro in Korea and in other markets, in the UK the e-Niro is set to be offered with just the larger battery, and a price that aims to come in below £30,000 when it launches early next year.

What’s it like?

Our test e-Niro is a Korean-spec model driven on Korean roads, but while the odd bit of trim and optional extra may differ, this is the drivetrain and chassis we’ll be getting.

Some drivetrain it is too. My, the e-Niro is brisk. It feels far quicker than its 0-62mph time of 7.8sec suggests, and even more impressive is the way it responds at higher speeds. Look for a bit of extra poke to make a pass on the motorway, and it’s all there before your right foot has barely touched the pedal. We even managed to spin the wheels accelerating out of a 30mph zone into a main A-road.

As such, the e-Niro is likely to have appeal to any enthusiast, but anyone swapping into one from their Ceed diesel is likely to be unprepared for such real-world pace and drivability. A test drive is essential, as such power – or rather torque in the case of the e-Niro – could catch many unaware.

The e-Niro isn’t uncomfortable in the way it rides, yet neither does it isolate its occupants from bumps in the road; the chassis does not display any great sophistication in how it handles the road, or indeed that level of torque, a bit like a black cab. That’s most likely down to the weight; much of the chassis tuning feels geared towards masking that weight as much as possible. A bit like a black cab…

Our test route wasn’t one for the e-Niro to reveal itself as a driver’s car. Yet it did demonstrate competent if not inspiring handling. There’s a pleasing heft to the steering, even more so in Sport mode, where the urgency of the drivetrain is increased further.

Something else that can be tweaked is the level of regenerative braking through four different levels via some paddle-shifters on the gearlever, as with the Kona Electric. The system seems to default to an auto mode for the most time even if you try to set it to the level you’d like, meaning it’s not quite as pleasing a feature as it should be.

The range figure seemed a true one too. Our test route wasn’t the longest, but the battery life and range indicator dropped in line with the distance covered, and the starting range of 272 miles on an almost full charge was indicative of the claimed figure of just over 300 miles. At least 250 miles per charge should be expected, based on this test.

Read more: Autocar

Kia Niro PHEV shown at Fully Charged Live (Image: T. Larkum)

2018 Kia Niro PHEV EX Premium review

Kia’s Niro PHEV is a plug-in hybrid for stealth environmentalists

The 2018 Kia Niro is a car for people who don’t really know what they want. We tested it with a plug-in hybrid powertrain, but Kia also offers a conventional hybrid, and will soon add an all-electric model to the lineup. The Niro’s tall body and low ride height blur the line between crossovers and hatchbacks. But in trying to fill every niche, has Kia created a car that doesn’t quite fit anywhere?

Kia Niro PHEV shown at Fully Charged Live (Image: T. Larkum)
Kia Niro PHEV shown at Fully Charged Live (Image: T. Larkum)

To find out, we borrowed a 2018 Kia Niro PHEV EX Premium for a few days. This is the highest of three trim levels so in addition to standard features from the more basic LX and EX models, such as 16-inch alloy wheels, adaptive cruise control, and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto compatibility, our test car benefitted from leather upholstery, heated and ventilated front seats, a heated steering wheel, navigation, and an upgraded eight-speaker Harman Kardon audio system.

Our tester also wore the optional snow white pearl paint ($395) and came with carpeted floor mats ($135). The base Niro PHEV (plug-in hybrid electric vehicle) LX starts at $27,900, but our EX Premium tester rang in at $35,970 with destination.

The Niro’s competitors include the Toyota Prius Prime, Chevrolet Volt and Kia sibling Hyundai’s Ioniq Plug-In Hybrid. Like the Niro, they’re dedicated green models that don’t have non-electrified counterparts. Since Kia considers the Niro to be a crossover, it’s conceivable that people might cross-shop it against the larger Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV as well.

Read more: Digital Trends

Kia Soul EV (Image: T. Larkum)

Kia to offer Soul in Europe as electric car only

Kia wants to keep its Soul lineup exclusively electric in Europe. The decision was made against the backdrop of falling sales of the fossil-fuelled versions of their little car. A turbo Soul called the Final Edition marks the change.

Kia have made up their mind and so there will be no other Soul but the Soul EV be available at dealerships across Europe. For the Koreans the switch reflects the reality of a market, where most people opted for the all-electric version, particularly at a time when there were not many EVs on sale.

Kia Soul EV (Image: T. Larkum)
Kia Soul EV (Image: T. Larkum)

But also today, sales are strong. In Germany for example, of those 2,245 Kia Soul sold this year so far, 1,899 had an electric drive.

Moreover, Kia is about to release the next generation, this time sitting on the same platform also used for the Kona and Niro plug-ins.

Read more: Electrive

Kia Niro Not Easing Hyundai IONIQ Production Output

South Korean carmakers are now widely recognized as major players in the automotive industry and they are about to touch new heights after launching new electric vehicles.

KIA Niro

Hyundai has got the IONIQ whereas Kia has a Niro. Both the IONIQ and Niro are offered with a hybrid system at the moment but they are about to welcome a full EV trim.

While it all sounds positive, the Niro is apparently putting the brakes on the IONIQ EV production output. The Niro is the more popular choice between the two and there is already a great deal of demand for the Niro hybrid.

The bad part about this is that both Kia and Hyundai rely on LG Chem for batteries and the supplier is struggling in meeting battery demand. This is having a negative effect on the Kia Niro and Hyundai IONIQ as their unexpected EV demand has created supply problems due to battery shortage.

With the Niro bagging more sales, the supply priority will be on them and it may leave the IONIQ further delayed.

Source: NSEAVOICE

Electric cars charging in Milton Keynes (Image: T. Larkum)

Electric Cars to Test Drive at the Experience Centre – How Many Can You Name?

There weren’t cars only on display inside the Electric Vehicle Experience Centre (EVEC) at the launch. There were also a large number charging up outside, presumably getting ready for test drives for the public for the opening the next day.

Electric cars ready for free test drives in Milton Keynes (Image: T. Larkum)
Electric cars ready for free test drives in Milton Keynes (Image: T. Larkum)

The large numbers and broad range of EVs available was impressive.

How about a quick quiz: can you identify them all? The answers are given below.

Electric cars ready for free test drives in Milton Keynes (Image: T. Larkum)
Electric cars ready for free test drives in Milton Keynes (Image: T. Larkum)

Of course, whether you own an EV or are considering your first, you’re welcome to test drive any of the vehicles on show for free. Just get in touch and we’ll help arrange it.

Answers to the Quiz: these are the electric cars waiting to give test drives (from nearest the camera to furthest away):

  1. Renault ZOE ZE40
  2. Nissan Leaf
  3. Volkswagen e-Up
  4. Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV
  5. Kia Soul EV
  6. BMW i3
  7. Volkswagen Passat GTE
  8. Volkswagen Golf GTE

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EVEC's BMW i8 plugin hybrid (Image: T. Larkum)

EV Experience Centre Nearly Ready

The Milton Keynes Electric Vehicle Experience Centre (EVEC) is due to open this Saturday, 22nd July. Being curious (ok, nosey) I scouted it out on Tuesday after my visit to the new Tesla showroom.

The new EV Experience Centre under wraps (Image: T. Larkum)
The new EV Experience Centre under wraps (Image: T. Larkum)

It has a fairly good location near the middle of the main shopping centre; it’s on Crown Walk, next to the big Boots store. It looks smaller than I expected, at least on the outside. Currently there isn’t much to see – the windows are blanked out and there was someone on the door in front of a sign saying ‘Invited Guests Only’.

EVEC's BMW i8 plugin hybrid (Image: T. Larkum)
EVEC’s BMW i8 plugin hybrid (Image: T. Larkum)`

Two plugin cars were on display at the intersection of Crown Walk and Silbury Arcade – a BMW i8 and a Kia Optima PHEV.

EVEC's Kia Optima plugin hybrid (Image: T. Larkum)
EVEC’s Kia Optima plugin hybrid (Image: T. Larkum)

We have been invited to the official EVEC launch so I’ll report back after that.

 

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Kia launches two new PHEV models at Geneva

Kia unveiled two new plug-in hybrid models at the Geneva Motor Show in the shape of the Niro and Optima Sportswagon, further strengthening a green car line-up that has grown dramatically over the past couple of years.

The Niro Plug-in Hybrid uses the same foundations as the hybrid crossover, though has a much larger battery and improved economy figures. Now with an 8.8 kWh battery pack, compared to the Niro hybrid’s 1.56 kWh, the Niro Plug-in Hybrid also uses a more powerful 44.5 kW electric motor to support the 1.6 litre Kappa petrol engine.

Kia Niro Plug-in Hybrid_Geneva 2017 (image: Next Green Car)

This will result in official efficiency figures of less than 30 g/km CO2, though the car has yet to be formally tested, and Kia expects an all-electric range in excess of 34 miles.

As an extra incentive to potential buyers, Kia will also offer an optional towing pack. This will allow braked loads of up to 1,300kg to be towed, a very rare option for hybrid cars.

Kia Niro & Optima, Plug-in Hybrid. Geneva 2017 (image: Next Green Car)

Also announced was Kia’s Optima Sportswagon Plug-in Hybrid. Using a similar electric powertrain to the saloon version of the Optima Plug-in Hybrid, but with a larger battery – now 11.26 kWh – and a 50kW electric motor. Kia again hasn’t got official efficiency figures available, but expects 34 g/km CO2 and 188.3 MPG to be achieved, along with an electric range of more than 37 miles.

The two new announcements mean Kia will have five electrified models in its fleet, adding to the Niro, Optima Plug-in Hybrid, and Soul EV. Considering that the Hyundai-Kia group also has the likes of the Hyundai ix35 Fuel Cell and three car Ioniq range to offer too means that the company quickly become one of the market leaders in electrified fleets.

Source: Next Green Car