Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Future of Asian luxury cars, electric vehicles at auto show

- By Youkyung Lee

GOYANG, SOUTH KOREA >> South Korea’s largest auto show provides a look at the future of Asian premium cars and electric vehicles, as well as efforts by Asian auto and tech companies to catch up in the field of autonomous driving.

The biennial Seoul Motor Show opens Friday in Goyang, north of Seoul, for a 10day run. There are 243 vehicles on display. Two are making their world premieres: Hyundai Motor’s Grandeur hybrid electric vehicle and Ssangyong Motor’s G4 Rexton sports utility vehicle. Eighteen others are making their Asian debuts.

Although usually smaller than auto shows in Frankfurt, Detroit or Shanghai, the Seoul Motor Show is nonetheles­s a place to read auto trends and consumer tastes among trend-setting, tech-savvy consumers in the world’s most populous continent.

This year’s highlight is Kia Motor’s first luxury sports sedan, Stinger, which launches a new era for premium sports cars built in South Korea, home to the world’s fifth-largest automotive group. Growing interest in environmen­tally friendly cars among South Koreans will be in the spotlight as well.

The show is missing Volkswagen and Audi, after South Korea halted sales last summer of dozens of their diesel car models for using software to cheat emission tests. Here are some highlights of the show.

KIA STINGER

The star of the show is the Stinger, Kia’s five-passenger sports sedan. It is Kia’s first premium sports car and the first fastback sedan made by any South Korean carmaker. Many see the Stinger as a game changer for Kia, which is seeking to challenge European sports cars and expand in Western markets. Designed in Frankfurt, the rear-wheel-drive sedan is based on its GT concept in 2011. Kia is displaying the Stinger at a booth near Ferrari and Maserati, an expression of the youthful car maker’s self-confidence. Of the three Stinger lines, the top tier employs a turbocharg­ed 3.3 liter engine that produces 370 horsepower with a 0-to-62 mph speed of 4.9 seconds. The Stinger goes on sale in South Korea in the spring and will be released overseas during the second half of the year. Pricing hasn’t been announced. Kia plans another premium sedan early next year, a large-size sedan.

HYUNDAI

Hyundai Motor is putting its electric vehicles at the forefront. It is revealing the hybrid electric version of its steady-selling Grandeur sedan which boasts a claimed fuel efficiency of 16.2 kilometers per liter (38.2 miles per gallon). It also is giving a first look at a fuel cell concept car. Hyundai plans to release its second-generation fuel cell electric vehicle early next year.

An executive demonstrat­ed how in the future humans will be able to speak to a device to summon a driverless car to one’s door. In 2019, Hyundai, South Korea’s largest automaker, plans cars that will allow drivers to remotely turn on the lights or set the temperatur­e inside a house.

 ?? LEE JIN-MAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kia Motors President Park Han-woo, second from left, and Peter Schreyer, chief design officer at Hyundai Motor Group, third from left, pose with Kia Motors’ Stinger sedan during a media preview of the 2017 Seoul Motor Show in Goyang, South Korea,...
LEE JIN-MAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kia Motors President Park Han-woo, second from left, and Peter Schreyer, chief design officer at Hyundai Motor Group, third from left, pose with Kia Motors’ Stinger sedan during a media preview of the 2017 Seoul Motor Show in Goyang, South Korea,...

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