2025 Kia Sportage Road Test and Review
By Brady Holt
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The first autoshow of the 2010/2011 season starts off with a bang!
Bienvenue à Paris! Every fall, the Paris Auto Show kicks off the major auto show season. Automakers come out in full force to show off their best wares for the 2011 and beyond model years, and set a tone for the rest of the auto show season. We followed the debuts closely, and built a list of vehicles you just have to see from the 2010 Paris Auto Show.
What it is: The first redesign of Bently's "entry-level" luxo-wonder. Cool Features: You mean aside from the 567-horsepower 6.0-liter W12? How about an 8" touch screen with Google Maps, all new styling and a price tag that rivals many people's mortgages. Bottom Line: There's nothing finer when you're looking to treat yourself.
What it is: Kia envisions commuting on batteries Cool Features: Designed to sit three passengers (no double dates), the all-electric POP concept is intended to drive up to 100 miles with a top speed of 87 mph. Bottom Line: One of those futuristic concepts you'll never see on the street.
What it is: Lotus' featherweight street-legal go kart with more go and less kart. Cool Features: Designed for the driver, the Elise concept packs all-new styling and a 320 horsepower turbocharged 2.0-liter 4-cylinder engine, 6-speed manual or automatic transmission, all under 2,500 lbs. Bottom Line: The future of Lotus looks bright.
What it is: A Porsche 911 convertible with a cover over the rear seats and improved performance. Cool Features: It pays homage to the classic 1950's 356, so naturally only 356 2011 Porsche 911 Speedsters will be produced. Hope you got your order in on time. Bottom Line: It's fitting that Porsche would unveil its hunchback so close to Notre Dame.
What it is: The 911 you buy if you're between the Carrera S and the GT3. Cool Features: The Coupe starts at $103,100 while the convertible starts at $112,900. Better start saving your pennies now, it goes on sale early next year. Bottom Line: Coupe or convertible, automatic or manual, the rear-wheel-drive only Carrera GTS fills a tiny spot in the 911 line-up.
What it is: The likely sequel to BMW's current long-in-the-tooth 6 Series. Cool Features: While technically a concept, it would be safe to assume we'll be seeing something almost identical to this as the 2012 6 Series. It's completely redesigned inside and out, but expect it to feature power plants similar to those currently employed in the 5 Series. Bottom Line: Long live the 6 Series.
What it is: A regular Saab 9-3 SportCombi with an electric motor and a bunch of lithium-ion batteries. Cool Features: Seventy of these are being given to families to test in Sweden. Saab plans to take what it learns with this program and apply it to a high-performance electric vehicle. Yes, please. Bottom Line: The beginning of electric vehicles for Saab.
What it is: A hopped-up version of Volvo's S60. Cool Features: As if the regular S60 wasn't gorgeous enough, the R-design adds aggressive front fascia, larger wheels (18's), and more new sport seats. It isn't all cosmetic, as suspension upgrades are intended to drive the sport home. Bottom Line: Somehow Volvo managed to make the sexy S60 look even better.
What it is: The global version of Ford's hot hatch Cool Features: The all-new ST packs a 247 horsepower turbocharged 2.0 4-cylinder engine under the hood. Best of all, it's going to be available stateside in early 2012. Bottom Line: We finally get the Focus we should have gotten from the start.
What it is: A four-door concept design exercise. Cool Features: An evolution of the "Nagare" design that brought us the uber-happy MAZDA3. Mazda claims this concept is a glimpse of future Mazda styling. The new styling has a name: Kodo. Bottom Line: An example of the design Mazda should have used in the first place.
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