What's the news?
An all-new Kia Sedona has been launched at the New York Auto Show. It's rather more stylish than its predecessor, but may not be destined for sale in this part of the world.
Exterior
Kia claims that the reinvented Sedona has 'European-inspired styling' and you can clearly see the riffs it lifts from the likes of the smaller Carens, as well as the cee'd and newly refreshed Optima. It is a bit bulkier and brasher though, as befits the fact that the US will be the car's primary market.
Interior
Inside there are seats for up to eight, depending on how you tip, side and fold all the chairs, while the 40mm wheelbase stretch compared to the old Sedona should help to make it spacious enough for all those bodies.
Mechanicals
All Kia is prepared to talk about for now is the 3.3-litre V6 petrol unit. It replaces Kia's old 3.5-litre engine and features a dual-step variable induction system, as well as variable valve timing and low-friction components to improve efficiency. It's still going to be a thirsty bugger though, especially as Kia is fitting it with a six-speed automatic when most rivals are moving on to eight-speeders.
All Sedonas come as standard with active safety features such as Electronic Stability Control, traction control, Brake Assist System, Hill-start Assist Control, Electronic Brake Force Distribution and anti-lock brakes. Additional technologies such as Roll Over Mitigation and Cornering Brake Control have been added as standard equipment for improved safety.
Additional driver technologies, including Vehicle Stability Management, Forward Collision Warning System, Smart Cruise Control, Blind Spot Detection and Rear Cross Traffic Alert are available but they'll be on the options list.
The Sedona is built on an all-new platform that Kia claims has far better torsional stiffness than any rival. Three quarters of the body is made from either Ultra High Strength Steel or High Strength Steel, which helps to keep safety up but weight down. Kia has also upped the use of sound-deadening material and clever acoustic panels to try and keep refinement to a high level.
Anything else?
Kia is claiming a market lead in the development of a new telematics system that includes such functions as Geo-Fencing, Speed Alert, Curfew Alert and Driving Score. Clearly these functions are aimed at the anxious parents market and respectively mean This Far and No Further, Not So Fast Son, What Are You Doing out at This Hour and You Were Going How Fast? There's also a new Kia App store for downloading additional apps and full hands-free integration for both Apple and Android smartphones.
Neil Briscoe - 24 Apr 2014