Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Kia Niro 1.6 GDi 4 Hybrid

- By MIKE TORPEY

MPG figures are official EU test figures for comparativ­e purposes and may not reflect real driving results. Fuel consumptio­n is tested using WLTP and CO2 emissions are NEDC equivalent. Only compare fuel consumptio­n, CO2 and electric range figures with other cars tested to the same technical procedures. For more informatio­n about WLTP please refer to kia.com/uk.Model shown: Picanto '1' 1.0 66bhp 5-speed manual at £10,195 including standard Blue Breeze paint. 0% APR only available on retail orders of a new Kia Picanto on 24-month Personal Contract Purchase with a 20% minimum deposit between 08.02.2020 and 31.03.2020. Offer available to private customers only, excluding Personal Contract Hire. 0% APR offer not available in conjunctio­n with Scrappage saving. Kia Picanto payment shown is based on a 24-month PCP agreement with £2,469.76 customer deposit and £4,389.24 GFV. Excess miles over contracted mileage of 8,000 miles per annum charged at 9 pence per mile. Finance T&Cs apply. Subject to status. 18s or over. Guarantee may be required. Kia Finance, RH2 9AQ. 7 year / 100,000 mile manufactur­er’s warranty. For full terms and exclusions visit kia.com/uk.

Longley Park Motors Ltd trading as Longley Park Motors are a credit broker (not a lender) for the purposes of this financial promotion and can introduce you to a limited number of carefully selected finance providers and may receive a commission from them for the introducti­on.

THE electric revolution may be gaining momentum by the day but for now the automotive buzzword begins with the letter H.

Hybrids are serious players in the new car arena – and when you pair these petrol/ electric powertrain­s with an SUV bodystyle you’re onto a winner.

Korean brand Kia launched its stylish Niro model as a hybrid-only variant, based on a platform which will only ever be used for electrifie­d vehicles.

That was in 2016 and the interim period has seen hybrid sales not only double but also be expected to hit 700,000 annually this year.

It has also seen the arrival of both the all-electric e-Niro and a Plug-in Hybrid variant.

It’s the Niro ‘self-charging’ hybrid that dominates though and a new improved Niro hit the streets featuring the same 1.6-litre petrol engine as the original car boosted by a 32kW electric motor, which is concealed beneath the rear seats.

Together they generate 139bhp of power, low emissions of 99g/km and the potential for an average fuel return of 58.9 miles per gallon, though our own figure was slightly less at 54mpg.

What buyers of revamped versions also get is a new, sharper, exterior design with a fresh ‘tiger nose’ grille, new bumpers front and rear, re-designed ‘ice-cube’ headlamps and more wheel choices.

The cabin has also been upgraded with a gloss black trim and a larger 10.25-inch TFT widescreen for the main display on higher grade models.

This complement­s a simple, effective wide dash layout, high quality fit and finish with soft touch materials, lots of connectivi­ty gizmos and safety features plus ample space for five.

And the Niro now has an electric park brake in place of the previous foot-operated parking brake to release more room for oddments, and comes with a tyre mobility kit rather than a spare wheel to reduce weight and expand boot space.

As a five-door, five-seater the Kia could be described as fun, flexible and for the family. That’s the intention anyway, and in the most part it works smoothly with a good all round view for passengers, easy access to all seats including ample room for child seats and a total carrying capacity of 1,380 litres with the seats folded.

Out on the road the Niro hybrid feels comfortabl­e and well damped in urban conditions, though the sixspeed DCT (dual clutch) gearbox could be slicker, and copes adequately with faster roads. That said this is not meant to be a performanc­e car, and errs much more on the side of efficiency. And to that end you get a digital readout showing battery info and electric motor use.

Prices start at £24,590 and there are three trim grades – ‘2,’ ‘3’ and ‘4’ - the base level running on 16-inch alloy wheels, the latter pair on 18-inchers, and all cars have the DCT automatic transmissi­on.

Even the entry level ‘2’ grade gets the likes of auto air-con, electric windows, privacy glass, reversing camera, six-speaker DAB radio, Android Auto and Apple CarPlay, and all have Kia’s fully transferab­le seven year/100,000-mile warranty.

Move up to ‘3’ trim and stuff like LED front fog lights, black leather upholstery, heated front seats and an eight-way power adjustable driver’s seat enter the equation.

This model, at £26,770, is £2,500 cheaper than our tested ‘4’ version, though this model has the benefit of an electric sunroof, heated rear outer seats, an eight speaker sound system and extra safety gear like Intelligen­t Speed Limit Warning and Blind Spot Detection.

 ??  ?? Fuel consumptio­n in mpg (l/100km) for the model shown: Combined 53.3 (5.3), CO2 emissions 121g/km.
Fuel consumptio­n in mpg (l/100km) for the model shown: Combined 53.3 (5.3), CO2 emissions 121g/km.
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