Otago Daily Times

Behold Kia’s Flagship EV

Hyundai’s Ioniq 5 is already New Zealand’s Car of the Year, now the arrival of its cousin, the Kia EV6, has provided a high point of the 2022 automotive year. David Thomson checks in after time behind the wheel on local roads. KIA EV6 GTLINE AWD LONG RAN

- Wheel drive. nil (over rebate

What’s new?

Kia’s push for a chunk of the burgeoning EV market has gathered pace this year with the launch of the EV6. While not the first Kia model offered with a batterypow­ered drivetrain, it is the first available solely in electric guise.

Though an utterly different vehicle, the EV6 supersedes the sporty petrolpowe­red Stinger as the flagship of the Kia range. It also follows on from Hyundai’s Ioniq 5 as the second of several vehicles that will use a new underlying platform designed solely for EVs.

Moving to a dedicated EV platform is significan­t in design terms, most obviously because it enables a far longer wheelbase relative to the vehicle’s overall length.

While sharing a common platform and deploying a nearidenti­cal choice of EV drivetrain­s, the EV6 and

Ioniq 5 are otherwise quite different machines. Visually,

Overall Rating:

Design & Styling:

Interior:

Performanc­e:

Ride & Handling:

Safety:

Environmen­tal:

SPECIFICAT­ION

Price (as tested): $111,990

Clean Car rebates and charges (additional to price): price threshold)

Powertrain: 77.4kWh Lithiumion battery pack with Permanent Magnet Synchronou­s Dual Motor, 239kW of power, 605Nm of torque.

Transmissi­on: Direct dualmotor allthe EV6’s sleek and contempora­ry lines contrast markedly with the futuristic boxiness of the Ioniq 5. Both are substantia­l machines, but while sharing a common 2900mm wheelbase, Kia’s EV6 is 60mm longer and 50mm lower.

Kia offers four variants within the Kiwi EV6 family.

The EV6 Air is the singlemoto­r, reardrive option, available in standardra­nge guise with a 125kW/350Nm motor and 58kWh battery pack, or in extendedra­nge form, with a 77.4kWh battery pack and 168kW/350Nm motor. Priced at $75,990 and $78,900 respective­ly, both models meet the sub$80k threshold to qualify for a Clean Car rebate.

The $99,990 Earth and $111,990 GTLine are both fitted with the 77.4kWh battery

Brakes and stability systems: Front and rear disc brakes, ABS, EPB, ESC, FCA.

Safety rating: 5Star NCAP

Wheels and tyres: Alloy wheels, 255/45 R20 tyres.

Fuel and economy: 18.0kWh per 100km on standard combined cycle.

Emissions: None.

Dimensions: Length 4695mm, width 1890mm, height

pack, delivering power to all four wheels via a 239kW/610Nm dualmotor setup.

An even more spectacula­r standard bearer, the pure EV6 GT, has been confirmed for launch early next year. Carrying a $139,990 tag, this version will pack a 430kW/ 740Nm punch, and its 0to100kmh sprint time of 3.5 seconds and top speed of 260kmh will make it the quickest ever Kia road car.

Back in the hereandnow, Kia supplied the current GTLine flagship for this appraisal.

What comes as standard?

The standard EV6 safety suite includes adaptive cruise control, lanekeep assist, lane following assist, blindspot monitoring, rear crosstraff­ic alert, traffic sign recognitio­n, intersecti­on assist and autonomous emergency braking with car, pedestrian, and cyclist detection. Extra safety items reserved for the AWD variants are parking collision avoidance assist, a blind sport view monitor, and a full 360degree surroundvi­ew camera system.

A fullydigit­al dualwidesc­reen touchscree­n and instrument cluster take pride of place on the dash of all variants. Kia’s ‘‘Vehicle to Load’’ system is also fitted across the range, enabling the car to serve as power source for a range of electrical appliances and power tools.

Even the standard EV6 is well equipped with items such as keyless entry and start, sat nav, a poweropera­ted driver’s seat, plugin points front and rear, and wireless phone charging and connectivi­ty.

Both AWDs take remote selfparkin­g functional­ity, a headup display, a heated steering wheel, and heated front sports seats. The GTLine goes further with suede upholstery, seat chillers, a premium 14speaker Meridian sound system, a heat pump system, alloy pedals, interior mood lighting, and dual adaptive LED headlights.

Hightech is the name of the game here, for the most part brilliantl­y executed. However, advanced systems can sometimes be too clever for their own good. For example, the test car’s ‘‘smart opening’’ function for the tailgate automatica­lly activated on test as I walked past the hatch to the driver’s door. That would have been fine, but for the fact the EV6 was parked in a garage at the time. Thus, for the first time in my roadtestin­g life, a vehicle selfharmed, in this case by bashing its tailgate into the raised garage door.

What’s it like to look at?

Technicall­y the EV6 is classified as an SUV, and in terms of size and heft that tag is justified. However, like Jaguar’s iPace, the EV6 blurs convention­al boundaries in being styled more as a large sports hatchback.

Sitting on 20inch alloys, and finished in Runway Red paint, the test car attracted plenty of attention on a test, which included, by chance, a brief encounter in Waihola with what I understand is the only other red EV6 in this part of the country.

What’s it like inside?

A striking and practical freefloati­ng centre console, laseretche­d highlighti­ng panels, and the twinscreen digital display, are some of the more eyecatchin­g features in a cabin that combines an innovative and contempora­ry look with everyday practicali­ty.

The dash and dualscreen­s are curved towards the driver. This gives a wraparound feel to the cabin from the driver’s seat.

Many of the trim surfaces are formed from reconstitu­ted plastic bottles, with Kia’s official blurb saying that recycled plastics equivalent to 107,500ml water bottles are used on each EV6 interior.

The back seat setup is very good, with sufficient room to carry three adults in reasonable comfort, and ample space for two.

What’s it like to drive?

The EV6’s drive modes — eco, normal, sport and snow — are selectable via a button on the steering wheel, and deliver contrastin­g experience­s.

Thanks to the ability of electric motors to deliver maximum power instantly, without any need to ‘‘spool up’’, even eco mode endows the EV6 GTLine with reasonable pep for effortless round town and highway motoring. Normal mode ups the anti noticeably, while sport mode provides kickinthep­ants accelerati­on, including a 0100kmh sprint time of 5.2sec.

There is ample steering heft, but while the helm is precise in action, it lacks feel. On the other hand, the ability to control regenerati­ve braking through four levels of intensity via the paddle shift toggles opens the way for very engaging and efficiency­maximising singlepeda­l driving.

An absence of mechanical noise comes as no surprise on an EV, but what impressed me most about the test car’s aural refinement was the banishment of wind roar and excellent suppressio­n of tyre rumble.

The location of the car’s heaviest item, the battery pack, very low on the chassis and between the wheels pays dividends in enabling the EV6 to corner flat, and maintain impressive­ly neutral balance even when pressed to corner hard.

The EV6’s suspension setup feels sharper and more dynamicall­y resolved than its Hyundai counterpar­t.

Ease of EV motoring?

Drivesouth relied on a convention­al threepin plug for home charging on test, but this is a very slow way to charge a 77.4kWh battery pack. Owners should install a highercapa­city wall box for economical homebased overnight charging at up to 11kW per hour.

Commercial charging is fussfree on the 50kW rapid chargers that are common in southern New Zealand. The EV6 is also compatible with the nextgenera­tion 800volt 300kW ‘‘hypercharg­ers’’, which can add 100km of range in five minutes of charging and take an EV6 battery from 10% to 80% of charge in under 20 minutes. New Zealand’s first hypercharg­ers are already operating in the upper North Island, and installati­ons in Christchur­ch, Dunedin and Queenstown are scheduled for the coming months.

Rangewise, the EV6 GTLine is rated at 484km on the WLTP test. An extended highway run from Dunedin inland in reasonable weather and with four adults on board produced a 22.5kWh/100km, which points to a fine realworld open road range of 300350km.

Verdict

It has taken Drivesouth nine months to award its first fivestar overall road test rating for 2022, and the EV6 GTLine has earned that rare accolade with relative ease. An exceptiona­l addition to Kia’s range, it sets a formidable benchmark for the Korean company as its rollout of electric vehicles gathers strength.

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 ?? PHOTOS: DAVID THOMSON ??
PHOTOS: DAVID THOMSON
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