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Page 36

TESTER’S NOTE You have to admire Kia’s design integrity. Like with an Audi, there’s a cohesion to the interior; even the vents and door handles are styled. Classy stuff. PW

TESTED 5.4.22, BUCKINGHAMSHIRE ON SALE NOW

KIA SPORTAGE PHEV Plug-in hybrid is last of no fewer than nine powertrains to be added to family SUV t’s the initial touchpoint that grabs you. Back when Kia was a cheap Korean brand trying to make its way up in the world, the leather on the steering wheel was that fake-feeling plastic stuff, with the sort of grip factor that meant a healthy dose of climbing chalk was needed before you drove off. All that has changed now, and it’s the sort of instant grab-you quality to the leather on the wheel that marks the latest Kia Sportage out. This car is considerably less powdery. The plug-in hybrid is the last variant to join the Sportage ranks, alongside petrol, diesel, mild-hybrid and hybrid versions. That’s a total of nine different powertrains. Talk about hedging your bets. With a 178bhp 1.6-litre turbo petrol engine and a 90bhp electric motor, total output is 261bhp and 257lb ft of torque. Just think about the latter number for a minute: that’s just 11lb ft shy of the Ferrari F355. In a family SUV. Ye gods. Although, to be fair, it’s not out of the ordinary. The rival Peugeot 3008 Hybrid manages 266lb ft, for instance. It’s the size of the battery (nestled between the axles) that will steal the

headlines. At 13.8kWh, it’s the same size as in the larger Kia Sorento. In a car like the Sportage, it means the electric-only range is 43 miles. Despite only an additional 0.6kWh capacity over the 3008, the Sportage does an additional four miles. That’s not much, but crucially, along with 25g/km of CO2 emissions, it drops the car into the 8% benefit-inkind tax bracket, which is very handy for company car drivers and betters rivals such as the 3008 Hybrid. On a fairly warm, dry day, our test car was showing 35 miles from a full charge. Inside, twin 12.3in digital screens feature on the one-from-the-top 4 trim level, with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto functionality. This is a smart cockpit of ultrathin screens and modern styling, plus plenty of this season’s musthave piano black plastic. There are physical knobs for the climate control or radio volume, but they both have to function as the other. So if you want to change the temperature but have the radio controls live, you need to press the secondary, lower touch-sensitive strip to flick it into climate mode. We found that a bit fiddly, but it could be

something that you get used to. Rear leg room is impressive. The floor is a bit high (blame the batteries), but there’s easily enough for two six-footers to sit one behind the other. There are also USB-C ports in the front seats so the little darlings can remain charged up. When we ran a Sorento PHEV as a long-termer, one of the biggest bugbears was the crude four-cylinder engine. Not so in the Sportage. It’s not quite totally silent when internal combustion kicks in, but it’s a lot more hushed and refined. Hard overtaking runs are when it gets a bit more grumbly, but the roll-on acceleration is sufficiently punchy that you don’t need to delve into the deeper reaches of the engine all that often. Electric-only running is predictably quiet, and again Kia has made small improvements here. In the Sorento PHEV, you only had to breathe on the throttle for the engine to kick in, but that threshold seems to have been moved. It’s easier to keep the Sportage driving on its battery in all bar the swiftest acceleration runs. Sitting on the same N3 platform as the Sorento, the Sportage handles

Powertrain has been made more competent; interior is spacious and could hardly be trendier 36 AUTOCAR.CO.UK 13 APRIL 2022

predictably. It rolls a bit more than something like the Mazda CX-5, but it’s by no means poor in this regard. The ride isn’t the quietest, though, the tyres chattering at the road surface and generally not isolating with as much quality as the classy interior would have you believe. The Sorento PHEV comes with 19in wheels wrapped in 235/50 tyres as standard, and you can feel the heft of both those and the powertrain over lumpy bits of Tarmac. That’s a pity, because otherwise it’s a refined drive. Prices start at £38,295 for the GT Line and rise to £43,795 for the GT-Line S, neither of which is cheap. Better-quality leather this Kia may have, but it seems that comes at a cost. PIERS WARD

@piers_ward

KIA SPORTAGE 1.6 T-GDi ISG PHEV 4 PHEV version of the Sportage feels like the future, with impressively low tax rates for business drivers

AAAAC Price £41,795 Engine 4 cyls in line, 1598cc, turbo, petrol, plus electric motor Power 261bhp at 5500rpm Torque 257lb ft at 1500-4500rpm Gearbox 6-spd automatic, 4WD Kerb weight 1900kg (est) 0-62mph 7.9sec Top speed 119mph Battery 13.8kWh (usable) Economy 252mpg Electric range 43 miles CO2, tax band 25g/km, 8% RIVALS Ford Kuga PHEV, Peugeot 3008 Hybrid


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Take it or leave it XE Project 8; Fiesta; Touran; MX-5

5min
page 71

Slideshow Engines that went from road to race track

4min
pages 82-84

Road test index Track down that road test here

12min
page 81

As good as new New Honda Jazz has wider appeal

2min
page 70

Cult hero Mini Cooper gets red-carpet treatment

6min
pages 68-69

Ford Puma ST Is it cut out for motorway cruising?

5min
page 65

McLaren GT We visit the ultimate car configurator

4min
page 64

Peugeot 508 PSE Our final verdict of French PHEV

7min
pages 62-63

On this day When we caught the EB110 Bug in 1992

3min
page 61

BMW i3 A love letter to the outgoing EV trailblazer

10min
pages 48-53

Toyota Aygo X A city car and electric-free – honest

2min
page 38

Aston Martin DBX 707 SUV thinks it’s a supercar

8min
pages 30-33

Mazda MX-5 Updated roadster in £30k-plus spec

2min
page 39

Mercedes-Benz EQE E-Class saloon in electric guise

5min
pages 34-35

Audi A8 Can it keep up with new S-Class, 7 Series?

4min
page 37

Kia Sportage PHEV Family’s flexible friend rated

4min
page 36

Damien Smith BTCC boss on seismic season ahead

7min
pages 28-29

Steve Cropley C5 Aircross shines in its homeland

3min
page 27

Swap shop Nio batteries topped up in five minutes

3min
page 24

Kia EV6 GT “True GT” with Taycan 4S-beating pace

3min
page 20

Jim Holder Will hybrids be spared the 2030 cut-off?

5min
page 25

Jesse Crosse The race to make better EV batteries

5min
page 19

Smart reinvented Details and pics of crossover EV

7min
pages 16-17

Microfactory We visit EV start-up’s pioneering plant

8min
pages 22-23

Matt Prior Why car designers need to be more dog

4min
page 21

New Huracán Sweet spot between Evo and STO?

3min
page 18
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