Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

SWINGS AND ROUNDABOUT­S

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IT DOES WHAT IT SAYS ON THE LABEL

The Niro Hybrid is Kia’s first foray into hybrid vehicles and it doesn’t disappoint from a fuel consumptio­n perspectiv­e.

The official label says it will sip just 3.8 litres of fuel every 100km and we saw less than that during a mix of freeway and city driving. It has a 45-litre fuel tank, which gives it a theoretica­l range of more than 1100km.

We don’t doubt you could do that if you went light on the throttle.

The fuel consumptio­n stacks up well against Toyota’s popular RAV4 hybrid, which uses 4.7L/100km.

The RAV4 is a much bigger vehicle, though. If you want to be even more miserly you can plump for a plug-in hybrid version of the Niro, which uses just 1.3L/100km on the official cycle, thanks to its ability to run for up to 58km on electricit­y alone.

VALUE EQUATION DOESN’T ADD UP

It might be spectacula­rly efficient but the Niro hybrid is also very expensive compared with convention­al petrol SUVS of the same size. The more stylish and modern looking Kia Seltos is cheaper and better equipped, while you can get the larger, more powerful Toyota RAV4 Hybrid for less money as well. Prices start at $41,990 drive-away for the S model, rising to $45,990 for the Sport. That’s a lot of dough for an SUV that’s based on the same underpinni­ngs as a Seltos.

For reference, the similarly equipped Seltos Sport with the safety pack is $32,790 and the better equipped Seltos Sport Plus costs just $35,290. Then again, it’s cheap compared with the Niro plug-in hybrid, which starts at $49,990 drive-away.

THE FEATURES LIST ISN’T VERY LONG

The Niro caters to younger buyers with wireless Apple Carplay and Android Auto, while backseat passengers are treated to their own airconditi­oning vents, which are rare on a car this size. But front parking sensors and built-in satellite navigation are missing.

It also misses out on some active safety gear, including blind-spot warning and rear crosstraff­ic alert, standard on a lot of cheaper cars.

A NEW MODEL IS ON THE HORIZON

The Niro arrived in Australia late in its product cycle. An all-new model arrives in the middle of next year, so you’re effectivel­y buying a run-out model. That means there could be some deals in the New Year if you’re able to wait.

The Niro is starting to show its age in some areas. The cabin is pleasant enough but the centre screen is smaller than the Seltos and it doesn’t have the digital driver readout that recently debuted in the Sportage.

The exterior styling looks a little plain, too. The cabin has decent room, with attractive cloth and imitation leather trim that should wear well.

City-focused hybrid SUV will cut your fuel bills but you’ll pay a premium up front RICHARD BLACKBURN

IT’S FOR FUEL MISERS, NOT REVHEADS

The Niro is powered by a 1.6-litre petrol engine supplement­ed by a small electric motor.

The power outputs of the petrol engine are modest (77kw and 147Nm) and you need to rev it hard to access those numbers.

A 44.5kw electric motor helps the Niro get off the line reasonably smartly, boosting the combined power to a more respectabl­e 104kw.

Steering and cornering are sharp enough for a city SUV and the suspension does a reasonable job of cushioning occupants from road imperfecti­ons and it soaks up bigger bumps taken at speed, but it can get a little noisy on coarser road surfaces.

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