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By Mark Jones

Road Test Editor


Kia Sonet Turbo is poetry in motion

New 88 kW engine option brings Kia Sonet up to speed with its main rivals.


Remember, me saying playing with a car in the compact SUV segment is like opening a packet of Liquorice Allsorts. They are all the same, yet come in various colours, and all have a slightly different taste.

Stephen Crosse, sales and marketing director, Kia South Africa says: “The Sonet was one of the most anticipated new Kia models in several years when it was introduced to the South African market in April 2021.

“At the time, the global supply chain constraints hampered our efforts to launch Sonet with a broader range of engine and transmission options, but as some of these constraints begin to normalise, our persistent desire to expand the Sonet range has now come to fruition.”

So, in this packet of so many choices, there will be those you won’t like, and those you do. The Kia Sonet Turbo is one most should like, but a crazy past few years has ensured we will have to wait a little while for the sweetest one to become available.

Kia Sonet turbocharged

The segment runaway leader is VW with the turbocharged T-Cross offerings. Turbocharged models as a whole make up around 75% of all compact SUVs sold. So, it makes perfect sense that Kia has upped the ante and joined the party.

The original 85 kW and 144 Nm 1.5-litre naturally aspirated entry-level LX and mid-level EX specification models remain in manual and CVT guise.

They are joined by the 88 kW/172 Nm 1.0-litre three-cylinder force-fed EX and range topping EX+ models, running a seven-speed dual-clutch transmission.

The Kia Sonet Turbo EX+ rides on 16-inch alloys.

Before you dismiss the power and torque hike as inconsequential, remember that up on the reef, the air is thinner and less oxygen-laden than at the coast.

ALSO READ: Boosted Kia Sonet priced and specced

Just like a human, the higher you climb, the harder it becomes to breathe, and this same lack of oxygen reduces the power output of the naturally aspirated engine by about 18% of what is claimed.

Torque talk

Bottom line is that the turbocharged engine is somewhat peppier, as power-making oxygen is not only forced into its lungs by the turbocharger for more maximum power output, there is also torque on tap from as low as 1 500 rpm to 4 000 rpm.

It’s this wave torque that makes the Sonet Turbo just that little more fun to drive on a daily basis.
Talking of “on a daily basis”, the seven-speed DCT box is a step up from the CVT, but I wasn’t in love with the way Kia has programmed the delay time between gear shifts on the Sonet Turbo.

DCT boxes by design offer smooth, lightning-fast gear changes, but in the Sonet Turbo, the fast gear change aspect has been deliberately dulled so as not to offend the broader segment of the market.

Kia Sonet Turbo jam-packed

Spec levels are impressive, with the EX turbo model offering eight-inch touchscreen infotainment with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, Bluetooth with voice control, height-adjustable driver’s seat, leather-trimmed steering wheel and gear shifter, rear-view camera and rear park distance control, a combination of artificial leather and cloth seat trim and 16-inch alloy wheels.

The flagship’s cabin features artificial leather seats and red stitching.

Standard safety specification include Electronic Stability Control, ABS with EBD, Hill Start Assist, dual front airbags, ISOFIX child-seat anchoring points and automatic headlamp activation.

The EX+ spec adds side and curtain airbags, rear combination LED lights with signature graphic, a 4.2-inch TFT instrument cluster display, artificial leather seats with contrast red stitching, folding electric side mirrors, electrochromatic rear-view mirror, cruise control and drive mode selecter.

Conclusion

Its truly hard to fault the Kia Sonet Turbo. It looks good, it does exactly what it says it will on the box. And at a cost-versus-spec point where it is better priced than its chief rivals. You would be silly not to consider one.

The two new Turbo derivatives are priced at a recommended retail price of R359 995 and R389 995 respectively. They come standard with a five-year/unlimited km warranty and four-year/60 000 km service plan.

For more information on the Kia Sonet, visit the manufacturer’s website.

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