sponsored links

Kia Soul 1.6 CRDi CAR review








By Ben Barry

16 October 2008 13:36

We got up close with the production Kia Soul a couple of weeks back at the 2008 Paris motor show, but today CAR has driven the Soul in Korea. It’s a B-segment offering from Kia, a model the Korean firm hope will help build on the Ceed’s success while attracting a younger audience. Think of it as our Mini or Fiat 500, say the Kia people.







The Kia Soul looks good to me...

Certainly does. Thank ex-Audi designer Peter Schreyer for that. The Soul’s bold creases, chunky wheelarches and slabby sides lend it a sense of solidity while the blacked-out A-pillars and wing vents add a mini-me Range Rover feel. It doesn’t just look sturdy, though; slam the doors and it sounds quality too, a chunky thunk emanating rather than the kind of tinniness you might expect from a Korean product.







How about inside the Soul?

It can’t quite live up to the quality promised by the exterior and it’s off the pace when compared with European competitors like the new Ford Fiesta, but it’s not bad. In fact, as a whole it looks pretty good: clearly laid out controls, durable feeling fabric on the comfy (though unsupportive) seats and a tough-looking honeycomb design that covers the dash.

There’s even standard air-con and the option of an eight-speaker stereo (developed in-house) to please the funky urban types that Kia hope to attract – which sounds good.

But look at the parts that make up the whole and the façade falters – some of the lower plastics look cheap and scratch-prone while the door handles and electric window switches and surround look dated.

All top-spec models (possibly tagged Extreme and thought to account for around a fifth of sales) get a colour-coded dash with the upper sections of the front and rear seats coloured to match. It probably looks good on subtler hues, but our red test car was a tad too garish – a bit explosion in a Dulux factory for our tastes.

There are other options too: leather might be offered, but is not yet confirmed, while a range of so-called ‘character’ cars will be run for limited amounts of time. ‘Some might be more chic, others bling, girly or outdoorsy,’ said a spokesman. Quite.

The Kia Soul looks tiny. Will I fit?

Yes, unless you play basketball for the Miami Heat team. Your tester measures up at 6ft 2in in a stout pair of heels and found plenty of head- and legroom for four similarly sized adults – though some may be frustrated by the steering wheel only adjusting for rake, not reach. But the real compromise is in boot space, which is tiny. It was a struggle to line up two size 10 shoes end-to-end lengthways so getting a pushchair or even a large suitcase heaved in might be an issue.

You have to wonder if the target 20-something buyer might not be better served by a larger boot for storing their snowboards/guitar amps/base jumping paraphernalia than with spacious rear seats that will rarely be filled. A small boot didn’t hurt the Mini, mind, and you do get split-folding rear seats.

How does the Soul drive?

Nicely. CAR Online sampled both the 1.6 petrol and 1.6 diesel that will come to the UK. Avoid the petrol – it feels gutless, never really hits a sweet spot and needs thrashing to get anywhere. Yet the diesel is a peach: it’s refined and packs a zesty turbocharged punch from just 1500rpm that continues through the mid-range.

The gearbox comes only in a five-speed flavour across the range and isn’t the slickest we’ve experienced – it feels particularly vague and long of throw when you’re moving across the gate from, say, fifth to fourth.

The Soul's steering is light, progressive and precise but it also has a slight over-eagerness to self-centre at low speeds while a bit of extra resistance through high-speed corners wouldn’t go amiss.

Nonetheless, the Soul is a fun car to drive with taut body control and an agile front-drive chassis that dances through corners. The steering remained free of vibration, there was no kickback through the column and the damping generally adds an underlying layer of suppleness, but it did feel slightly clattery on the roughest surfaces.

Perhaps the 18-inch wheels were to blame (standard on the top-spec, probably optional on the two lesser specs), but we were unfortunately unable to sample the 16s.

Verdict

All in, the Soul is a good car, if not perfect. With an expected price range of around £12k-£14k, it has some tough competition in the B-segment (not least the new Fiesta), but its tough looks, entertaining dynamics and charcterful personality will no doubt see the 3000 units Kia hopes to shift annually in the UK snapped up quickly enough.

But are good cars like the Ceed and Soul good enough to shake Kia’s budget-cars-for-the-elderly image? We think so, but have your say by responding below.

Statistics

How much? £12,000
On sale in the UK: March 2009
Engine: 1.6-litre four-cylinder turbodiesel, 124bhp @ 4000rpm, 188lb ft @ 2000rpm
Transmission: Five-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Performance: Performance n/a, 137g/km
How heavy / made of? na
How big (length/width/height in mm)? na


CAR's rating

Rated 4 out of 5

Handling

Rated 3 out of 5

Performance

Rated 4 out of 5

Usability

Rated 3 out of 5

Feelgood factor

Rated 4 out of 5

Readers' rating

Rated 3.5 out of 5



Kia Ceed 1.6 Hybrid (2008) CAR review











By Jesse Crosse

22 September 2008 14:00

Kia has changed almost beyond recognition over the last few years, from a low-cost Korean brand to a maker of well-made European-designed cars that can hold their own with the best of them. Now it’s launching a full-scale attack on the advanced environmental technologies too, with plans to launch a hybrid first in the Korean market and later in Europe. Based on the Ceed five-door, it’s a mild hybrid, which means the electric motor can boost power but doesn’t deliver enough grunt to drive the car on its own.







What’s under the bonnet of this Kia Ceed Hybrid?

A 1.6-litre petrol engine combined with a 15kW (20bhp) integrated electric motor mounted inline on the engine’s crankshaft. The 180-volt electric motor is only used to boost power and provide regenerative braking when the car is slowing down. The prototype we drove still retains a conventional starter motor and alternator although the plan is to do away with those by the time the hybrid reaches production.

The power unit drives through a CVT transmission designed in-house and the whole lot is mounted transversely under the bonnet just like a conventional engine. Power is supplied from a 180-volt, 5.3Ah lithium-ion battery back, although the ancillaries work on 12-volts as usual.







Are the controls any different?

Only the instruments give away the fact that you’re driving a hybrid. A pair of LED gauges tell you what’s going on with the hybrid drive system, so as you accelerate a crescent of red lights registers battery drain and as you lift off, it swings anti-clockwise around the clock face registering the regenerative braking in green. There’s also an animated graphic showing the energy flow between the engine, motor, battery and wheels.







Does it drive like a normal car?

Accelerate from standstill and you instantly enter the rubber band regime as the CVT allows the engine revs to soar. Interaction between the engine and electric drive is seamless as you would expect it to be, but the wailing of the engine note under even modest acceleration soon begins to grate on the nerves.

The Ceed hybrid also has stop-start like that used on the new Ceed 1.4 ISG (Idle Stop and Go) which goes on sale in the UK next year. This is all due to the CVT transmission which designers of low consumption cars like to use because they can optimise the powertrain’s operating range all the time.

Trouble is, it sounds awful and it would have been good to see an automated manual used instead. It is smooth though, and once underway, refined with the steering, handling and stopping just like the conventional 1.6-litre five-door.







Verdict

'Yet another hybrid' you may cry and you’d be right. But the Ceed hybrid is an essential piece of Kia’s eco-armoury along with the fuel-cell Sportage, the drive system for which is a shared project with parent company, Hyundai. This hybrid drops the CO2 figures from 152gm/km of the standard 1.6-litre Ceed, to 114gm/km, an improvement of 25 percent. And these days, CO2 is what, rightly or wrongly, is the stick being used to beat manufacturers the hardest.

There are no dates for European introduction yet but the hybrid will see action first in Korea, where it will appear as a dual-fuel hybrid capable of running on either petrol or LPG. First versions will probably wear Hyundai badge before being launched under the Kia banner too, then moving to the US and Europe. There are no prices yet, but with Kia’s value-for-money reputation this could be the one to watch in the hybrid market. Technically, it’s a neat enough package, if still a little rough around the edges, but you’ll need to be CVT-tolerant to live with it.







Statistics

On sale in the UK: Not before 2010
Engine: 1591cc 4-cyl 120bhp (petrol engine) and 20bhp (electric drive)
Transmission: CVT automatic, front-wheel drive
Performance: tba, 62mpg (estimated), 114gm/km
How heavy / made of? tba/steel
How big (length/width/height in mm)? 4235/1790/1480

CAR's rating

Rated 3 out of 5

Handling

Rated 3 out of 5

Performance

Rated 3 out of 5

Usability

Rated 4 out of 5

Feelgood factor

Rated 2 out of 5

Readers' rating

Rated 3 out of 5