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Kia Sportage: first drive review

  • By Paul Pottinger
  • The Sunday Telegraph
  • image

    Derived from the Kue concept, the visually striking Sportage is designed by Massimo Frascella and features the corporate grille and accents that have become increasingly familiar under the direction charted by chief designer Peter Schreyer. Photo Gallery

Paul Pottinger road tests and reveiws the Kia Sportage at it Australian launch.

Car clichés die hard, but if there’s one to incinerate that old chestnut about ‘Korean equals drive away then chuck away’, Kia’s third generation Sportage could be it.

The signs have, of course, been there for all who can see beyond their comfort zone. Not for nothing did Hyundai’s i30 diesel manual win Carsguide’s 2007 Car of the Year. This year an offering of its sister company could at the very least be in the running.

In terms of its execution alone, the Sportage softroader transcends its country of origin in that while it’s built in Korea, it happens to be designed by an Italian based in California and – just as importantly – has been re-adapted to meet Australia’s uniquely challenging road conditions.

The Sportage is longer, wider, lower and an altogether slicker package than the model it replaces. Of course, it could hardly be otherwise, the old one being more of an inducement to take public transport.

But then it has to be up to formidable line-up in the ever-growing compact SUV segment, including Volkswagen’s Tiguan, Nissan’s Dualis, Hyundai’s ix35, Holden’s Korean-made Captiva, Mitsubishi’s new ASX and the stalwart Toyota Rav4 and Honda CR-V.

Appearance

Derived from the Kue concept, the visually striking Sportage is designed by Massimo Frascella and features the corporate grille and accents that have become increasingly familiar under the direction charted by chief designer Peter Schreyer.

The high beltline and proportion of glass to metal are meant to evoke a coupe. From the rear three quarters you could almost be looking at a premium hatchback. At any rate, it is light years removed from the slab-sided dullard it replaces.

As pert and no doubt fashionable as that back end may be, vision is compromised to say the least by that slot of a rear window. No sooner have you overtaken a car than it almost disappears. Vast wing mirrors, intended to compensate, combine with almost thigh-thick A-pillars to restrict the front view.

Mechanical

Unprecedentedly, the Australian version of the Sportage receives a suspension a set-up adapted from the British version and refined over 1700km of testing by a team including former Toyota dynamics guru Graeme Gambold. Its steering calibration is unique. The mid and top spec versions receive a new AWD system from Magna Dynamax that uses electro-hydraulic sensors to activate a coupling which in turn feeds up to 40 per cent of the torque to the rear wheels more or less instantly.

It’s this dynamic package that primarily distinguishes the Sportage from it virtual sibling, Hyundai’s ix35. Kia’s Australia CEO MK Kim said Sportage is the “first of our new generation cars to benefit from the determination to deliver Australian flavour. It will not be the last.”

Pricing and equipment

The front-wheel-drive Si manual with its 122kW/197Nm 2.0-litre starts at $25,990 for the five speed manual. The six speed auto adds $2,000. It’s no stripper, with equipment including 17-inch alloys, front fog lamps, and the full safety package including six airbags.

The mid-spec SLi runs a 130kW/227Nm 2.4-litre petrol engine ($31,990) or a 2.0-litre turbo diesel ($34,990) through a six speed auto. Its gains on the Si include chrome accents, leather trim, rear view camera and roof rails. The Platinum uses the same drivetrains (petrol $35,990; diesel $38,990) and adds full leather, daytime running lights, smart key and ventilated driver’s seat.

All get a full-size spare. Back seats, which easily accommodate a couple of six foot blokes, can be dropped with the flick of a switch.

Against that, all trim levels equal, if not better, the obvious rivals. It’s not so long ago that ventilated driver’s seats were optional in top end Euro luxury cars; this decadent leather finished pew comes standard on the $36K Platinum.

Driving

The launch roads around Queenstown in New Zealand’s south island, while glaringly superior to much of the corrugated bitumen found in the bigger island to the west, make a good case for Kia’s big talk about getting it right for Antipodean punters.

Equally, it’s hard to enthuse about the only manual, which, it’s rapidly apparent, is there only to provide an attractive price point. The 2.0-litre engine is simply inadequate, especially with four on board, whining ineffectually around 3200rpm in top gear at 110km/h. Though the bigger engine of the SLi has more weight to shift, it does so far more convincingly. The petrol-engine auto’s tall sixth gear has it spinning 1000 revs under the lesser model at freeway speed. The need for neck-wringing removed, this model is far more likely to achieve its claimed fuel consumption.

The SLi petrol version is the sweet spot in the line-up. Apart from the surety of all-wheel-drive, it feels altogether more planted and secure, highlighting the light but evenly weighted steering. For the likely user (that’d be urban families whose driving gets not a lot more adventurous than picnicking with their 2.5 offspring) the ride/handling compromise seems pretty much perfect. While that 2.4 fizzles out at 6000rpm, there’s enough useful performance beneath that. Not until it’s pushed hard do you remember this is a soft-roader first, a car second.

It’s hard not to love the class-thrashing 392Nm of the 2.0R diesel. Even more than most such things, it packs a knockout mid-range punch, reducing overtaking exposures to a safe minimum and making it the obvious candidate for towing. But it requires more diligence through the tight stuff, turning in sharply but rapidly requiring more lock as the heavier front end pushes determinedly wide.

Again, though, it’s a matter of asking the right questions. And if you’re asking for a family-friendly, smartly-presented, sharply-priced soft roader, this Kia answers in the affirmative.   

KIA SPORTAGE

Price: From $25,990-$38,990
Engines: 2.0L 4-cylinder petrol; 2.4L 4-cylinder petrol; 2.0-litre turbo diesel.
Thirst: 8.7L/100km (2.0); 9.2L/100km/h (2.4); 7.5L/100km (2.0D) combined claims
Transmissions: 5-speed manual or 6-speed auto.

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 7 comments

  • The first Rav4 was the ideal shape for many.  For Gods sake, you cant make something handle thats 2 foot off the ground—or look good. The seats must be more or less flat for ease of entry /exit from a high seating position, (unless you like a wing in your crack)meaning you cant corner fast even if it had a lower centre of gravity. And they are getting so heavy unlike the 1300kg first Rav4. Today, they are all nudging 1600-1700kgs.

    Rusty Posted on 12 June 2011 1:25pm
  • Hey lets face it, some people buys car like the way they have their political and religious preferences ; that is never go outside the square they in. So I never waste time on their comments.

    Harry Ray of Melbourne Posted on 28 December 2010 7:12am
  • Alex you’re a tool, Sadly not one that is useful to anybody. Try and catch up to the rest of the world. I personally doubt you are out of school yet but when you do actually get a license go and drive them. The Koreans are set to dominate the world car market (providing Nth Korea keeps its missiles in its pants) in the coming years. Get on board or get left behind kiddo.

    Oh and the Falcon wagon was scrapped because no-one wanted it.

    Neal of Cairns Posted on 30 November 2010 2:41pm
  • Alex- gosh… when is your last time driving a Korean cars? You must be kidding or living in 1980’s. Yes, they may have started with a crap cars but Hyundai is top 5 company in the World who manufacture many cars. Better looking, Better Price, and the features are Great and some of these features are better than other cars. Please go and visit Hyundai and have a test drive. Please Mate!!!!!

    Daniel of Sydney Posted on 27 August 2010 11:24am
  • It’s no surprise that the JD Power surveys are giving the Kia & Hyundai brands the thumbs up. Having recently driven the latest Santa Fe, and the new diesel Sportage, I for one am impressed with the power both these SUV’s provide. The Sportage was a delight, even in auto format, with the sportshift feature providing some input to gear selection, especially for someone who has always driven a manual. The interior is well laid out and with a good list of features this compact SUV represents great value. As an average family bloke with two children under 10, I find it hard to justify the extra $8k to $10k for the likes of a diesel CX7, which I also took for thorough test drive 2 months ago. Kia have done their homework with the latest Sportage, which should appeal to a broad range of drivers.

    Michael of Central Coast Posted on 16 August 2010 9:47pm
  • Alex! Mate! When it comes to the car industries all around the world I don’t think we live in a better country than Germany or America, since there are more brands competing and bigger consumer groups producing their opinions about the cars they deal with every day. In America and Germany, Hyundai/Kia satisfied their consumers with right quality and right price. If you think BMW or Merc are the only cars to drive, than what you wrote below sounds OK. If not, please surf the internet a bit more often than play around your Proud Holden vs Ford ground. If you visit JD power consumer survey websites, you’ll know what I’m taking about. One thing for sure is, Kia and Hyundai are not crap cars anymore! You test drive and feel it yourself please!

    Peter of Sydney Posted on 15 August 2010 12:58am
  • They may look great and be tinselled with an impressive array of luxuries & features but I’m not sold. Kia/Hyundai has always made mechanically crap cars - and it seems most of these new models still follow suit. At least now they’re better looking

    alex Posted on 09 August 2010 9:06am
Read all 7 comments

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