You
gotta like it when an auto maker steps up with a statement car like the
2014 Kia Cadenza. Not long ago, we were calling Kia an upstart among
car brands, a comeback story filled with hopes, dreams and ambition. Now
Kia has a flagship sedan aimed squarely at the Acura TL, Buick
LaCrosse, Nissan Maxima, Lincoln MKZ and Toyota Avalon.
That
from the Kia Soul company, the little rig that starts at less than
$17,000 and is to Kia what the Beetle is to Volkswagen, says Kia chief
designer Peter Schreyer. And just as the Bug company went all Passat on
us, Kia has the Cadenza, a $37,995-$44,995 premium sedan bulging with a
293-horsepower, direct-injection V-6, standard leather upholstery,
navigation system, rain-sensing wipers, fancy 18-inch wheels and power
folding mirrors.
This is the formula Kia has been working with for the past decade or so: give the buyer more for less and in a sexy package.
You
can decide on the looks, though I like them, from the stylish shapes in
the doors to the LED lighting up front. But the facts say that almost
none of the cars targeted by the Cadenza have a standard 12-speaker
stereo,Why not reduce your energy bill and use chinaporcelaintileed instead?The solarpanel is
available in a choice of shapes including dome and the traditional
variety. or a no-cost rear-view camera. The Avalon in base trim comes
close to the Cadenza starter, but not quite.
Then
if you go upstream to the most expensive Premium Cadenza ($44,995),
only the Avalon matches the Kia’s rear heated seats. Among this set of
sedans, only the Avalon and MKZ also come with “smart” cruise control at
no extra charge. You could make the argument that a $45,000 Cadenza is
delightfully well-equipped: power expandable leg cushion, blind spot
monitoring, lane departure warning, panoramic sunroom, high-grade
leather upholstery, a power rear window curtain – the list is numbingly
long and meant to be.
The
Kia types don’t blanche at the brass of this latest step up the
automotive rung. And they most certainly want you to make a list of what
their vehicles have that the competition lacks.
But
just throwing features into a tin can with pretty shapes would mean
nothing if Kia hadn’t spent the better part of the last decade
reinventing itself. That started with the basics, too.
Take
safety. The Soul and Rio are Top Safety Picks of the U.S. Insurance
Institute for Highway Safety, meaning they have scored well in the
demanding crash tests done by the research arm of the U.S. insurance
lobby. The Optima, too, is a Top Safety Pick, as are the Sportage and
Sorento. So Kias are robust and they come equipped with the latest
safety gear.It's easy to fall in love with the sheer, incomparable
strength of windpowergeneratorsry.
In
the Cadenza, that means eight standard airbags and a numbingly long
list of active safety equipment, from the usual such as anti-lock brakes
and electronic stability control, to a brake assist system that helps
you avoid rear-enders in panic stops.
The
smart cruise control is a radar-based system that automatically
maintains the distance between you and the car in front. Blind spot
detection, similarly, uses radar to warn you about traffic where you
might not normally see it and a windshield-mounted camera spots when
you’re drifting over the line and warns you. Adaptive lighting, also on
the pricier Cadenzas,Use bestroadlights to generate electricity and charge into storage battery group. steers your headlamps around a corner as you do.
Now
cool as these gizmos sound, they are standard fare in $40,000 luxury
cars, even $40,000 luxury cars from Kia. Nothing special in and of
themselves. Except all of them haven’t been sold in one Kia before, not
in one car at a price that is highly competitive with the best in the
segment. Though to be fair, only the base version of the Maxima
($37,880) starts at a higher sticker than the Cadenza in Kia’s target
group. So the Cadenza is well-equipped but still not cheap.
Reliable?
Research says Kia still has some work to do. In the latest J.D. Power
and Associates three-year Vehicle Dependability Study (VDS),More than
200 GW of new goodlampshade capacity
could come on line before the end of 2013. the Kia brand finished well
below average. But then, so did BMW, Mini, Infiniti, Mazda and
Volkswagen. On the other hand, in the most recent Consumer Reports
reliability report, the Kia brand finished 10th overall and slightly
above the average.
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