2017 KIA Stinger GT -Wow

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To counter that argument the only benefits of a (non performance) saloon is they are great mile munchers, that's about it. There's a reason they're called rep mobiles. Other than the extra cost crossovers have a lot of positives for those that actually need more than two seats regularly, or want a more practical vehicle. If you don't need more than two seats then a hatchback is fine for most instead.

Hatchbacks and saloons are fine for families. Managed fine with ours, 2 kids, never felt the need/requirement to get a bus.

Wife wanted one for the express purpose of sitting up higher and that they were big, except the ones we looked at Q3, Q5, couple of other randoms, had less legroom and were smaller than a hatchback. Most of them are crap. :) Managed to talk her out of it.
 
It's the 7yr warranty and no hassle ownership that draw people to Kia. Their latest models really do look good and appear to offer good value for money with the current quality of them as well.
 
Its 365bhp isn't it? 0-60 under 5 seconds.
Not too bad for a big car.
But ain't nobody in the UK going to pay 40k for a Kia. People are snobs in the UK and just too brainwashed now with only wanting Merc, Audi, BMW, or VW when it comes to anything over average price.

The V6 twin-turbo is, but I don't think that is coming to the UK. Nor the AWD option.

But yea, I don't think it appeals to any market here. People who don't know much about cars just think anything German is best. Nor are petrolheads going to take a second look at it, because there are better sporty options for a lot less.

Most people who buy a Kia do it because they just want something with seats and a steering wheel and is cheap on the used market, cheap to maintain and/or have a long warranty. Not much else.
 
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The V6 twin-turbo is, but I don't think that is coming to the UK. Nor the AWD option.

But yea, I don't think it appeals to any market here. People who don't know much about cars just think anything German is best. Nor are petrolheads going to take a second look at it, because there are better sporty options for a lot less.

Most people who buy a Kia do it because they just want something with seats and a steering wheel and is cheap on the used market, cheap to maintain and/or have a long warranty. Not much else.
Shame the UK is not getting the full fat version would make a great second hand buy in a few years thanks to depreciation with its long warranty.
But as you say there are better proven options for less
 
Hatchbacks and saloons are fine for families. Managed fine with ours, 2 kids, never felt the need/requirement to get a bus.

Wife wanted one for the express purpose of sitting up higher and that they were big, except the ones we looked at Q3, Q5, couple of other randoms, had less legroom and were smaller than a hatchback. Most of them are crap. :) Managed to talk her out of it.

Depends on the size of the crossover but something like a CRV has the same footprint as a medium sized saloon but has significantly more legroom than a hatchback (but then it is significantly bigger) and more bootspace than a saloon. Compared to your average saloon the drive is going to be pretty much of a muchness so all you have left is the question of whether the ride height and extra space are worth the relatively small extra running costs.

Not that I'm suggesting saloons aren't fine for families, but that crossovers are more practical as they provide more bootspace, and usually are much easier to get bulky things in and out of. I just feel saloons, outside of performance saloons (such as the above) are a bit of a no mans land now, which is why sales are down.

As for performance saloons, they're similar to proper 4x4s. Do you really need them? The average performance saloon probably gets used on the track as much as the average 4x4 gets used off-road. :p

Edit: and if you're tall crawling into a saloon/hatchback is a bit annoying, much nicer to just step straight in.
 
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You can use far more of a powerful cars performance on the road tho (legally or otherwise) than you can a 4 x 4's ability.

It's also a bit short sighted to say saloons have no place, long boots are actually pretty useful, refinement is better than a hatch (generally) and they typically drive much better than any suv type vehicle. We had a crv in the family for a while and it didn't drive anything like as well as say the Accord that preceded it. Fine, but felt heavy and cumbersome by comparison (because it was). Doesnt need to mean driving on the door handles so will extend a bit beyond people who particularly want a quick/ well handling car. Think you're overestimating legroom a bit too tbh, something like an ix35 is tiny in the back, particularly average boot but has the higher roof and walk in load position.

Plus I personally think they're vastly better looking than a jacked up soft roader - albeit I can totally see the appeal of those too (for some people) for the reasons you've already pointed out. The UK just seems to generally prefer a hatch, pretty much always has and now there's even more choice
 
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Most people who buy a Kia do it because they just want something with seats and a steering wheel and is cheap on the used market, cheap to maintain and/or have a long warranty. Not much else.

I tend to disagree. I just got a fully loaded used Qashqai but seriously considered a Kia Sportage GT Line which, even brand new, offered an excellence balance of styling, equipment and practicality for the price point.

In fact, if I was buying brand new I'd have the Sportage over more prestigious brands. Mostly as to get the same equipment / trim levels as the Kia you are spending mental money on options.

Kia have come a long way. It's nothing like what Ssangyong and Dacia are currently for example.
 
If I were in the market for a 340i, S4 or the like I'd be very tempted by this. By the sounds of TG's first drive, it comes very well equipped as standard, plus has the 7 year warranty. In addition, it should marginally undercut rivals, and with Biermann at the head of dynamics it should be a decent steer too. On paper I'd have this towards the top of the list, and anyone who dismisses it out of hand needs their blinkers removing.
 
You can use far more of a powerful cars performance on the road tho (legally or otherwise) than you can a 4 x 4's ability.

Really? Legally the extra couple of seconds saved to get to 60, and the occasional semi power slide round a corner is pretty much akin to the 4x4 users ability to jump up a curb when needed, or go a bit faster over those speed bumps/rutted road. Hence the point I made. There's very little difference IRL in the amount each one is really used remotely to it's full potential. You have to go on the track or a closed road to really see the difference, and I'd wager the number of performance saloons used on them is probably less than the number of people using a 4x4 offroad (or in inclement weather).

It's also a bit short sighted to say saloons have no place, long boots are actually pretty useful, refinement is better than a hatch (generally) and they typically drive much better than any suv type vehicle. We had a crv in the family for a while and it didn't drive anything like as well as say the Accord that preceded it. Fine, but felt heavy and cumbersome by comparison (because it was). Doesnt need to mean driving on the door handles so will extend a bit beyond people who particularly want a quick/ well handling car. Think you're overestimating legroom a bit too tbh, something like an ix35 is tiny in the back, particularly average boot but has the higher roof and walk in load position.

I didn't say they have no place, in fact I said the opposite. The refinement you speak of is great for people that sit and drive a lot - the "rep", and the better handling is great if you're a performance nut, but for the average family they are that awkward middle ground, and people have voted with their feet, with saloon sales plummeting as crossovers/CUV and small "city" car sales have increased significantly. That higher roof and walk in/load position is also what draws a lot of people to them.

We're actually in the market for either a small/mid hatchback or smaller crossover/CUV* at the moment and have been looking at them over the last couple of weeks. We actually tested the Tucson (the replacement for the ix35) last weekend and had no issues with rear legroom - in fact that's one of the first things I check on new cars, and there was plenty for 6'2 me. The Tucson is also one of the smallest crossovers out at the moment. I've also been driven thousands of miles in the back of an X Trail and the legroom was always plenty and have rented a CRV for a period too. All had more space in the back than our current VW estate or the two longer term saloon rentals we had (one a small and one a larger).


Plus I personally think they're vastly better looking than a jacked up soft roader - albeit I can totally see the appeal of those too (for some people) for the reasons you've already pointed out. The UK just seems to generally prefer a hatch, pretty much always has and now there's even more choice

Agreed, to an extent. Out of all the vehicles we've looked at I actually prefer the Cherokee because it's actually a 4x4, but then I find most saloons boring as sin styling wise - although the Kia (and a lot of performance saloons away from the German marques) does look sharp. The Hatch is here to stay and the non performance saloon is being replaced by the more practical (IMO and I'm guessing many others considering sales) crossover is replacing the saloon.

*Because we want AWD/4x4 for winter in the mountains.

Anyway, way OT, sorry, just responding to Nasher!

Going back to the Kia, I assume their aim is to have a "prestige" vehicle that will hopefully pull the marques name up and increase desirability of the lower models. It may actually be beneficial for them to have it priced the same as the german marques, to make it look like they are comparable, even if very few sell. It's a "halo" car IMO, it doesn't need to sell well, just make people admire it so they are more likely to buy the new Rio/Optima/Sportage or Soul.

I tend to disagree. I just got a fully loaded used Qashqai but seriously considered a Kia Sportage GT Line which, even brand new, offered an excellence balance of styling, equipment and practicality for the price point.

In fact, if I was buying brand new I'd have the Sportage over more prestigious brands. Mostly as to get the same equipment / trim levels as the Kia you are spending mental money on options.

Kia have come a long way. It's nothing like what Ssangyong and Dacia are currently for example.

The GF wants to look at the new Sportage for our next car as well. I can't shake the brand name though, and the horrible experience of older Kias (looking mostly at you Sedona :/).
 
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The old ones were pretty terrible. The clutches and other things on Kias used to wear really quickly and rust was pretty bad (including corrosion on wiring which isn't good!), but maybe they sorted that. That's what got them a bad rep.

Yea you get a 7 year warranty but you need to read in to it. It's not as comprehensive as it first looks.
 
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I think it looks great. If they offer highly competitive finance deals then I can see them doing well. If not then not so much. I think they'll do quite well in the business sector as company cars as it'll provide something premium without having to cough up for a £50k OTR car.
 
Just got rid of a £42k KIA Sorento at 6 months old. Terrible cars. Terrible dealers. Everything is so mickey mouse - no attention to detail yet they are charging way too much for what they are. They may have poached Audi's designers and done a good job of making them look good, but they have not poached their developers or engineers.
After 5 minutes I realised how bad it was compared to European cars in terms of attention to detail and useability.
LED backlights don't have matching whitepoints in interior illumination, unoccupied seatbelt bangs on B pillar, rain sensing wipers have a life of their own. e.g. If it was raining when you park the car, they do a dry wipe the next time you start it, even days later in hot sun the wipers labour and screech across a hot dust screen for a single wipe. Keyless entry is like something from 20 years ago. Sat nav map data from 2012 on a 2017 car. All the software for infotainment and driver aids is buggy and laggy like alpha versions. I'd rather have a 1 year old decent car than a KIA.
 
Just got rid of a £42k KIA Sorento at 6 months old. Terrible cars. Terrible dealers. Everything is so mickey mouse - no attention to detail yet they are charging way too much for what they are. They may have poached Audi's designers and done a good job of making them look good, but they have not poached their developers or engineers.
After 5 minutes I realised how bad it was compared to European cars in terms of attention to detail and useability.
LED backlights don't have matching whitepoints in interior illumination, unoccupied seatbelt bangs on B pillar, rain sensing wipers have a life of their own. e.g. If it was raining when you park the car, they do a dry wipe the next time you start it, even days later in hot sun the wipers labour and screech across a hot dust screen for a single wipe. Keyless entry is like something from 20 years ago. Sat nav map data from 2012 on a 2017 car. All the software for infotainment and driver aids is buggy and laggy like alpha versions. I'd rather have a 1 year old decent car than a KIA.

Sounds like they still have a long way to go in the engineering and technical department lol.

If you want something that just works, go Japanese.
 
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Depends on the size of the crossover but something like a CRV has the same footprint as a medium sized saloon but has significantly more legroom than a hatchback (but then it is significantly bigger) and more bootspace than a saloon. Compared to your average saloon the drive is going to be pretty much of a muchness so all you have left is the question of whether the ride height and extra space are worth the relatively small extra running costs.

Not that I'm suggesting saloons aren't fine for families, but that crossovers are more practical as they provide more bootspace, and usually are much easier to get bulky things in and out of. I just feel saloons, outside of performance saloons (such as the above) are a bit of a no mans land now, which is why sales are down.

As for performance saloons, they're similar to proper 4x4s. Do you really need them? The average performance saloon probably gets used on the track as much as the average 4x4 gets used off-road. :p

Edit: and if you're tall crawling into a saloon/hatchback is a bit annoying, much nicer to just step straight in.

Have to disagree there, parents CRV is stupendously awful to drive. :)
 
Just got rid of a £42k KIA Sorento at 6 months old. Terrible cars. Terrible dealers. Everything is so mickey mouse - no attention to detail yet they are charging way too much for what they are. They may have poached Audi's designers and done a good job of making them look good, but they have not poached their developers or engineers.
After 5 minutes I realised how bad it was compared to European cars in terms of attention to detail and useability.
LED backlights don't have matching whitepoints in interior illumination, unoccupied seatbelt bangs on B pillar, rain sensing wipers have a life of their own. e.g. If it was raining when you park the car, they do a dry wipe the next time you start it, even days later in hot sun the wipers labour and screech across a hot dust screen for a single wipe. Keyless entry is like something from 20 years ago. Sat nav map data from 2012 on a 2017 car. All the software for infotainment and driver aids is buggy and laggy like alpha versions. I'd rather have a 1 year old decent car than a KIA.

Have to disagree with most of that to be honest. I have a 16 plate Sorento and have not suffered any of the issues you speak of. I have done nearly 15K in mine in less than a year and it has been fautless, my dealer has been brilliant.

The infotainment system is far better and quicker than others I have used certainly quicker than in my mates Mustang, the maps never had an issue with them, the only major thing missing is the new A14/M6/M1 junction but that was only completed last year so not the fault of Kia.

Not sure what you mean by "LED backlights don't have matching whitepoints in interior illumination" but my interior lights are all white LED's.

I have never noticed the wiper behavior you have said about in terms of a dry wipe will check next time it rains.
 
Have to disagree with most of that to be honest. I have a 16 plate Sorento and have not suffered any of the issues you speak of..
I am glad you like it, for me a massive step back. The forums have people pitching a fit about the maps. Panaromic roof rattles are common too and the dealers don't know what to do and told one owner they would have to cut the roof open to do anything else. I mean the cluster white and infortainment white do not match. When you dim the illumination, the cooled seat illumination goes off completely, like there is a mismatch of LED voltage to brighness curves. There is no illumination on loads of buttons, all of them on the overhead panel are uniluuminated. The KX4 has motor-on-rack steeringand it sort of goes to sleep on the motorway and then wakes up when you start to turn and overreacts. We found if you turn the engine off on a hill and roll down the steering is stepped like coarse gear teeth or you are overcoming motor magnets and then after overcoming the resistance it jumps to the next one which may expain the disconnected feeling and the continual corrections needed when cruising.
 
Just got rid of a £42k KIA Sorento at 6 months old. Terrible cars. Terrible dealers. Everything is so mickey mouse - no attention to detail yet they are charging way too much for what they are. They may have poached Audi's designers and done a good job of making them look good, but they have not poached their developers or engineers.
After 5 minutes I realised how bad it was compared to European cars in terms of attention to detail and useability.
LED backlights don't have matching whitepoints in interior illumination, unoccupied seatbelt bangs on B pillar, rain sensing wipers have a life of their own. e.g. If it was raining when you park the car, they do a dry wipe the next time you start it, even days later in hot sun the wipers labour and screech across a hot dust screen for a single wipe. Keyless entry is like something from 20 years ago. Sat nav map data from 2012 on a 2017 car. All the software for infotainment and driver aids is buggy and laggy like alpha versions. I'd rather have a 1 year old decent car than a KIA.

The GF wants to look at the new Sportage for our next car as well. I can't shake the brand name though, and the horrible experience of older Kias (looking mostly at you Sedona :/).

I tend to disagree. I just got a fully loaded used Qashqai but seriously considered a Kia Sportage GT Line which, even brand new, offered an excellence balance of styling, equipment and practicality for the price point.

In fact, if I was buying brand new I'd have the Sportage over more prestigious brands. Mostly as to get the same equipment / trim levels as the Kia you are spending mental money on options.

Kia have come a long way. It's nothing like what Ssangyong and Dacia are currently for example.

Having owned 2 Kia Sportage's and the current one being a GT line - I would strongly disagree with terrible cars/dealers

The service we received when we had an issue/breakdown with the first one, was outstanding. Car picked up within 30 mins, wife and 2 kids dropped home at the house, hire car on my driveway inside 45 mins. all dealt with by the local dealer/Kia Customer services.

4 days at the dealers - they delivered the car back to us, bunch of flowers for my wife, took the hire car away - all at zero cost/hassle etc. Also note that the car was leased via an online broker, not a local dealer but the local dealer was superb along with Kia customer services.

GT line we currently have is excellent - all the toys, everything you could want from a family car.

Keyless entry is great - zero issues, Sat nav is perfect.

I appreciate everyone has different situations but having had Kia Sportages for a total of 6 years now - I have nothing but praise for the cars/customer service etc.
 
did someone here had problem with KIA garage? one of the garage guy broken the rear camera. there was onboard a video/voice recorded the whole thing. KIA garage manager didnt care too!
 
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