Kia EV6 2022 News

The brand with nine lives: why Nissan is the one to watch if a new hybrid or electric car, SUV or ute is in your future | Opinion
By Byron Mathioudakis · 18 Feb 2023
Here are two facts. For over 60 years Nissan has been on a rollercoaster. And for the remaining six years of this decade, Nissan is set to be on a roll. Not that you’d know it with the Japanese brand’s long-term shrinking market share and – until late last year – a worthy but dull and dated core model range.
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Electric car sub-brands should be banned! | Opinion
By Laura Berry · 21 Jan 2023
At last, it seems a car-maker has realised just how silly it is to have an entirely different brand name for its electric car line-up. Yes, Mercedes-Benz sounds as though it's going to drop its EQ brand name for its EVs, because it’s all going electric, right? So what’s the point? Now we just have to wait for all the other car manufacturers to realise that it was all a big mistake.Yep, last week I wrote a story about how Mercedes-Benz was rumoured to be planning to axe its EQ sub-brand name.Currently, Mercedes-Benz uses EQ to denote an electric vehicle in its line-up. There’s the EQB which is an electric version of the GLB, the EQE which is an electric E-Class, and so on. Well, a Reuters report questioned Mercedes-Benz over the rumours to which the car maker responded with this statement:“With the goal of our parent Mercedes-Benz becoming fully electric by the end of the decade, we will adapt the positioning of the vehicles and thus the use of the brand in line with the times, but it is too early for details on this at the moment.”Sounds very much like the bosses at Benz have realised the whole EQ thing was not a very good idea. An electric E-Class in the future will be an E-Class, as there won’t be a combustion engine version.So what about the rest of the carmakers who have also gone down the same dead-end street?I’m looking at you Hyundai with your Ioniq brand - your Ioniq 5 and Ioniq 6. Great cars, but why not just use your existing nameplates such as i30 and Tucson and Santa Fe? Are you going to throw those in the bin?And Volkswagen. You’re doing it, too. There’s the ID.3 which is obviously being lined up to replace the Golf. The Golf, which celebrates its 50th anniversary next year. Nice birthday present. You're old, get out. Word is, Volkswagen will keep the Golf name for that petrol car only for as long as it exists and the same goes for Polo, Tiguan, Passat and the rest. You can get sentimental about a 2009 Golf GTI, but will anybody be looking back on their ID.3 the same way? And Kia with your imaginatively named EV6 and EV9. I’m being sarcastic, Kia. Come on, these aren’t phones or computers we're talking about. Sure, Carnival probably isn't the best name and neither is Stonic, nor Seltos or Sportage and what was going on with Pro_ceed GT? But that’s beside the point. When it comes to names give me a Sportage Electric over an EV6 any day.BMW your names have always been extremely methodical and read like a list of ammunition supplies. When you did try to start bringing in actual words you messed it all up with things like Gran Coupe, but at least your electric names aren’t completely ridiculous. Then iX, the i4, the i7 -  they make sense even if the whole ‘i’ thing is as out of date as an iPod.And Audi. Don’t even get me started on e-tron.Why do we have these EV sub brands when the whole car industry is going to go electric anyway? Well, it could be because vehicle development plans can stretch decades ahead. They need to create a name separate to the current line-up as the new electric vehicles will be on entirely different platforms, so they are essentially totally different cars.Car-makers could also be protecting their breadwinning petrol and diesel models too, from the potential failure of electric models by keeping them in separate ‘baskets’ until the EV models start to prove themselves and pay their way.These electric sub-brands could be being used as testing labs until the technology, the charging, the batteries and the cars are good enough to wear the regular nameplates?So what’s going to happen? Are we going to go through a whole series of Final Edition i30s and Farewell Special Golfs, or will car companies see the light like Mercedes-Benz it seems and drop the electric sub-brand name thing altogether?Well, it will come down to money. If the car company feels that losing a loved nameplate is detrimental in how customers view and connect with the brand, and especially if the action significantly affects sales, then you’ll probably see the name stay… or return.Imagine the fanfare (and the sales) around bringing back the Golf nameplate after everybody thought it was long gone.Perhaps that’s been the plan all along…
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Who cares? Why we need to stop worrying about how fast electric cars can go | Opinion
By Stephen Ottley · 25 Dec 2022
Even the most diehard anti-Tesla advocates cannot ignore the impact the brand had on the uptake of electric vehicles. Even executives from other car companies have acknowledged that Tesla was responsible for driving consumer demand in electric cars.
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Richard Berry's top 5 cars of 2022: From the Genesis Electrified G80 to the Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV
By Laura Berry · 25 Dec 2022
This year I've driven more than 200 cars and the most of them have been pretty darn good, but there have been five standouts.
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It's not easy being green: Why electric cars must be exciting like the Ford Mustang Mach E, Tesla Model Y and Kia EV6 | Opinion
By Stephen Ottley · 13 Nov 2022
Say what you will about Tesla - and I’m sure many of you will in the comments section - but the American brand was unquestionably the catalyst for the current electric car boom in the car industry.
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Has BMW finally cracked the successful electric car code? Why the iX1 might be the best-buy German electric SUV going
By Byron Mathioudakis · 01 Nov 2022
After years of trying and failing with worthy attempts like the i3 luxury hatchback and i8 supercar, BMW Australia seems to have finally found the right formula for electric vehicle (EV) success with the coming iX1.
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Who will win? Kia and Hyundai sales race remains close with more cars to come in 2022
By Chris Thompson · 21 Sep 2022
The sales figures between sibling brands Kia and Hyundai are almost neck and neck, with little more than 1000 units separating the two so far this year.It's reminiscent of this time last year, when the brands were locked in an even closer sales race that
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Is it worth waiting for Kia EV6 or Tesla Model Y when you could possibly have a Subaru Solterra sooner?
By Tim Nicholson · 20 Sep 2022
Next year is shaping up to be a massive year for electric vehicle launches in Australia, with some major brands set to finally enter the EV race.Focusing on the electric family SUV segment, there are already a number of highly regarded EVs on sale, but ma
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Is it time to ditch terms like 'SUV', 'sedan' and 'hatchback'? Electric cars are changing how we categorise vehicles | Opinion
By Tim Nicholson · 31 Jul 2022
If I asked you what sort of car you have, could you answer it? I don’t mean the make and model, I’m talking about the body style. Is it a hatchback? Or perhaps an SUV? Maybe a sedan or wagon? Could also be a ute? Possibly a crossover - whatever that is.
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Why the Kia EV6 is everything the Stinger wasn't: The new electric model is the long-awaited game-changer for the brand - Opinion
By Stephen Ottley · 26 Jun 2022
The Kia EV6 isn’t the biggest-selling model for the South Korean brand - but it is the most important.
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