Having secured the 2020 World Car of the Year title with its biggest SUV, the Telluride (built in the US in left-hand-drive guise only, which is why it's not available to markets such as ours), Kia has set its sights on consolidating a robust and reimagined SUV line-up. Kia Motors SArecently expanded its Seltos line-up with turbodiesel derivatives, willlaunch the Sonet compact family car soonandthe new Sorento 7-seater next year.
Kia Sorento (2021) International Launch Review
As the next step in thebrand's capability-focused product strategy (more about this later), the new Sorento is "poised to bring customers a new level of trail-ready toughness not yet seen from the brand", Kia says. To this end, Kia Motors America has unveiled a pair of custom-built Sorentos– the Yosemite Edition and the Zion Edition, which are based on the Sorento X-Line package, which features 20-inch wheels, increased ride height to 210 mm, improved approach/departure angles, more advanced AWD with snow-mode, and more heavy-duty roof rails than the current model.
The Yosemite Edition, which has a matte“Pine Green” finish with gloss and matte black accents, is meant for "elevation adventuring and mountain living", while the Zion Edition (with a gloss “Desert Sand” finish with gloss black accents) is "a desert escape vehicle made for stomping dunes".
Both concepts feature custom fender flares that cup20-inch wheels shod with 32-inch all-terrain tyres. Exterior accoutrements includecustom skid plates and brush guards in a satin chrome finish. The Yosemite Edition has a beefed-uproof rack and the Zion Edition afull-length cargo top.
Suffice to say Kia Motors America (KMA) has no plans to put the Yosemite and Zion Editionsinto production, although they are undoubtedly idealrolling advertisements for LGE-CTE Motorsports of San Dimas, California, which builtthe vehiclesfor KMA. Kia will, however, offer a range ofdealer-installed accessories, such asroof rack crossbars, tow hitches for trailersand side steps for the new model, in North America anyway.
For Hyundai Kia to truly break into the ruggedoff-roader market, its current crop of unibody SUVs, of which the Venue and Sonet are the smallest and Hyundai Palisade and Telluride, the largest, is just the starting point. To grow its off-roader portfolio,the Korean firmwould need to produce vehicles with ladder-frame architecturesbecause chassis-based SUVs deliverexcellent durability and robustness in off-road conditions. Although cornering dynamics and high-speed stability are the debits, there is no question that a great manySUV customerssee this as a fair trade-off.
Cheaper to engineer and assemble than monocoque SUVs, Toyota'sladder-frame vehicles, such as the Fortuner, Land Cruiser Prado and Land Cruiser 200 arehandsomely profitable. It's well known that Hyundai Kia is currently developing a body-on-frame pick-upto take on the Toyota Hilux, Ford Ranger, Isuzu D-Max and Nissan Navara(and a rumouredCruiser-rivalling off-roader)in whichits new 6-cylinder turbodiesel might work well.
Whereas some other brands would struggle with the issue of launching "rudimentary vehicles" to rival Toyota’sLand Cruiser business, in terms of marketing legacy, Hyundai Kia has no such issue. Both Hyundai and Kia have produced and sold authentic ladder-frame SUVsin thepast. Just last year, Kia unveiled the Mohave Masterpiece concept, which was based on a ladder-frame chassis, so something's undoubtedly in the pipeline!
Kia Sorento (2021) International Launch Review
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