Author: vandeveremarketing

A Look At What The New Kia Minivan (Sedona) May Look Like

 
 
http://www.autoblog.com/2012/07/21/next-kia-minivan-expected-to-pull-cues-from-kv7-concept/
By  Chris Tutor RSS feed
Posted Jul 21st 2012 10:01AM

 

As we reported in May, the Kia Sedona minivan will skip the 2013 model year while its replacement is readied for market. A Kia spokesman tells Edmunds Inside Line that the company still considers the minivan segment important and that the current Sedona should continue to be available through 2012.

Though not confirmed, Inside Line expects the 2014 Sedona to take its overall minivan/crossover shape from Kia’s KV7 concept car first seen at the 2011 North American International Auto Show. That backs up what we theorized last January in Detroit. Kia’s VP of marketing hinted to us then that the KV7 wasn’t purely a styling exercise and that could one day inspire a production vehicle. Don’t, however, hold out for the concept’s fantastical gullwing doors, swiveling seats, LED instrument panel or LED headlights.

“With the KV7 what we see coming eventually is materials on the vehicle that we’d like to see incorporated,” Michael Sprague, Kia’s marketing VP told us then. “Or getting a Kia that’s Wi-Fi enabled, it’s just a question of how soon.”

Look for the new Sedona to bow sometime in 2013.

Kia Quoris (Korean K9) Soon Available In U.S.

Kia Quoris Announced For The Global Market
Wednesday, July 18, 2012 8:34 by Arman Barari
http://www.motorward.com/2012/07/kia-quoris-announced-for-the-global-market/
 
 
What is already on sale in Korea as the Kia K9 luxury sedan will reach the overseas markets from the fourth quarter of 2012 as Kia Quoris. The name’s apparently derived from English words ‘core’ and ‘quality’, and conveys solidity, luxury and technology resonating together as a chorus. There must have been a better word for that, but here we are. Kia says they wanted to separate this car from the pack with this name.

 

Enough with the name. The K9 is Kia’s flagship saloon in Korea, kinda like their own Hyundai Genesis sedan. It doesn’t look all that brilliant, but it’s imposing and impressive, and of course, big. The Quoris is also packed with features, in both safety and convenience departments.

Some of the highlights of the car include Kia’s first radar-based Advanced Smart Cruise Control (ASCC) that can even stop the car completely and then make it accelerate again to reach the preset speed. Mercedes S-Class is offering this since 2004 I think. The Quoris also gets Advanced Vehicle Safety Management (AVSM), which works in tandem with  Electronic Stability Control (ESC), seatbelt mechanisms and multiple warning systems as well as the pre-safe belt system. Again, this is something like Mercedes Pre-Safe system.

This luxurious Kia also gets Head Up Display (HUD), Lane Departure Warning System, radar-based Blind Spot Detection, and Around View Monitor system. It is a fully-loaded car then, and it makes all those technologies available to the masses, because at the end of the day it will be priced like a Kia.