This review originally appeared in the September 2013 edition of the Northern & Central California Cruisinâ News published out of Folsom, California â" mg
Kia has an all-new-for-2014 flagship offering called the Cadenza, and for those of you familiar with the typical Kia offering, prepare to be surprised.
This full-size sedan with a handsome two-tier grille and jewel-like wheels is downright luxurious, loaded with pleasing comfort and convenience features. From its perfectly fitted headlights to its nicely sculpted back end, the Cadenza is a head-turning bit of classy artwork.
Be advised: The price of the front-driver is not a bargain-basement deal, starting at $35,100. And with the addition of a Technology Package and Luxury Package (my tester had both), the bottom line on the sticker swells to just shy of $42,000.
Call it a fancy Kia with a lot of extras. Yes, I liked my week in it, with the full understanding that Kia needs a high-end offering in its vehicle lineup.
The 3.3-liter V-6 rated at 293 horsepo wer gives you more than you need to be sure, but you have to put your foot pretty deep down the well to get the full, press-me-to-the-seat rush. The power plant provides more than enough to hold your own in a busy rush-hour commute, and hill climbs are likewise butter in the hands of the six-banger. The Cadenza is pleasingly firm in slalom maneuvers.
The Technology Package is a nicely loaded mix, with a good blind spot detection system. Only a couple times did it give me an unnecessary alarm when I was blazing past stragglers. The lane departure warning system was not too sensitive, a big plus in my book. I hate other systems that donât understand the concept of a freeway exit.
The Luxury Package was likewise good. I donât expect to see a power tilt/telescoping, heated steering wheel in a Kia. White interior leather touches? Yeah, cool and classy.
Another cool thing with the tester: power exterior mirrors automatically unfolding as I approached the Cadenza on foot. So with a proximity sensor fob capable of engineering that trick, youâd think the driverâs door would automat ically unlock when my hand touched the door. Alas, it doesnât do that.
No big deal, I guess. But if you have a system that unfolds the mirrors before you touch the car, youâd think they add the already established system that unlocks the driverâs door when hand skin touches door metal. That absence produces the same reaction as opening a hotel mini-bar stocked only with 2 percent milk. Just saying.
One other thing: You kind of have to dig deep in the center-mounted audio/navigatio n control systems to get what you want. It might take you a few days of playing around and consulting the ownerâs manual. But once you get the pattern down, youâll do fine.
Overall, a solid B-plus grade for this new arrival. Hey Kia, any chance of putting a V-8 in it up the road? Iâd like that.
No comments:
Post a Comment