The Citizen (Gauteng)

If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it

KIA RIO: SUBTLE UPDATES ENSURE HATCH REMAINS STRONG CONTENDER

- Andre de Kock

We were pleasantly surprised after a week with the flagship 1.4 TEC Auto.

Believing statistics can be costly. When – many decades ago – this writer was young, statistics indicated that more than 70% of car crashes happened within 20km of the owners’ places of residence.

Furthermor­e, more than 90% of car hijackings happened within 10km of the owners’ homes.

So, to be safe, I did not go home for months at a time. This played havoc with my finances.

Three wives left, one after the other, because I was never there, causing me huge monetary hardship in divorce settlement­s. Damn. The fourth – deciding she preferred me almost never being around, decided to stay forever. Double damn.

These days, of course, car hijackers are outnumbere­d by tenderpren­eurs, whose profits in a single day of negotiatio­n makes stealing luxury cars look like minor shopliftin­g. And, if caught with their hands in the till, the cadres can rely on the statistic that no South African politician has ever been held accountabl­e for being a liar and a thief.

All of which has turned this writer into an incurable sceptic, unable to believe any statement of improvemen­t. Thus, when tasked with the evaluation of the refreshed and revised Kia Rio, we initially viewed the newcomer with a jaundiced eye.

We have driven a Kia Rio before and found it to be thoroughly competent. Why would enhancemen­ts to its exterior design and increased standard specificat­ion make it even more competent?

We were pleasantly surprised – after a week with the flagship 1.4 TEC Auto as a house guest, we gave it a “competent plus” rating.

The newcomer still boasts the normally aspirated, four-cylinder, 1 396cc petrol engine since its local launch in 2017. It produces 73kW of power at 6 300rpm and 135Nm of torque at 4 200rpm, all sent to the front wheels via a new six-speed automatic transmissi­on.

As familiar as the engine, the new Rio’s exterior updates have been kept low-key, being restricted to a grille redesign, a lower, wider front bumper and a different fog lamp housing.

The test vehicle boasted 17inch alloy wheels in 205/45 R17 rubber, which added much to the car’s looks plus, a huge bonus in our book, a full-sized spare wheel.

The Rio comes with safety features like driver’s, passenger’s, side and curtain airbags, front seatbelt pre-tensioners, side door impact beams front and rear, child locks, and impact sensing door unlocking.

ISOFIX child seat anchors are standard, as are ABS brakes, Electronic Stability Control and Hill-start Assist Control.

Interior enhancemen­ts have been kept to a minimum, with the previous Rio already boasting an impressive­ly user-friendly living space.

If it is not broken, do not fix it. Which means the main update is an upgrade of the colour touchscree­n interface from seven to eight inches.

Good stuff carried over from the prior model include leather upholstery, automatic air-conditioni­ng, rain-sensing windscreen wipers, LED rear combinatio­n lamps, cruise control, a park assistance system with rearview camera, electric windows, electric side mirrors, central locking with an alarm and immobilise­r, six speakers, rake and reach adjustable steering and manual headlight adjustment.

A leather covered steering wheel houses remote audio controls and Bluetooth hands-free telephone connectivi­ty.

Front passengers can benefit from USB and auxiliary-in ports, plus Apple CarPlay and Android Auto capability, while a 12V power socket is available for additional charging devices.

Fuel efficiency was impressive – after being driven mostly in the city, the test vehicle’s average consumptio­n was 7.2l/100km.

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