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2016 KIA OPTIMA (EUROPEAN)

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  • Evolutionary design and cutting edge technology for all-new Kia Optima
  • Refined new interiors with higher quality materials
  • More space for every passenger in new cabin
  • 50 per cent stronger body shell and a range of active safety technologies
  • Smooth ride and more agile handling, with optional electronic suspension
  • Choice of petrol and upgraded diesel engines, plug-in hybrid to follow
  • Lower emissions from advanced seven-speed double-clutch transmission
  • New technologies include wireless phone charging and connected services

The all-new Kia Optima, now in its fourth generation, will go on sale across Europe in Q4 2015 and early 2016 in the UK. Unveiled in European specification for the first time at the 2015 Frankfurt International Motor Show, the upgraded Optima boasts a modern, new exterior, a bold interior design with more space for all occupants, an array of new technologies and a wide choice of efficient powertrains.

The new model will offer greater refinement and improved ride and handling over the outgoing model, while retaining the sporty image that has helped Optima become one of Kia’s best-selling models worldwide.

The Kia Optima plays an important role in the product line-up, introducing the brand to an increasing number of new customers. Since the third-generation model launched in 2011, with its distinctive look, high quality interior and high-tech image, the Optima has offered buyers something fresh and different in the D-segment.

Michael Cole, Chief Operating Officer, Kia Motors Europe, commented: “When the current Kia Optima arrived on the global stage in 2010, it acted as the catalyst for the five-year, design-led transformation of Kia’s product range. Its combination of technology, design and refinement added greater depth to our model line-up and fundamentally changed the way that people saw the Kia brand.”

Cole added: “The all-new Optima retains the unique personality of its predecessor, and improvements to every aspect of the car will make it an even more compelling proposition to buyers – private and fleet – across Europe. It truly offers motorists something fresh, in a segment that’s typically among the most conservative.”

Evolutionary design keeps all-new Optima at the cutting edge

The exterior styling of the all-new Kia Optima was a question of balance for Kia’s global design teams. The all-new Optima maintains the athletic identity that made it so popular, while making a confident leap forward to attract car buyers looking for something different.

Conceived under the watchful eye of Peter Schreyer, President and Chief Design Officer of Kia Motors, the all-new Optima offers more road presence than ever, with its contemporary surface detailing, sharp body lines and creases, and a more elongated saloon silhouette.

The all-new Optima’s evolutionary new look was designed to be functional and sporty, with exterior dimensions that are marginally longer, taller and wider. The wheelbase has been extended by 10 mm to 2,805 mm, with the full vehicle length growing 10 mm to 4,855 mm. Meanwhile the new model is 25 mm wider, at 1,860 mm, and 10 mm taller (1,465 mm). These changes enable a roomier and more comfortable cabin, with more head-, shoulder- and rear-seat leg-room and greater cargo capacity. From a styling perspective, the new dimensions afforded Kia’s designers the chance to introduce a more swept-back, dynamic shape.

Instantly recognisable as a Kia, the all-new Optima integrates the brand’s hallmark ‘tiger-nose’ grille with the longer, wider, wrap-around headlamps, pulled taut over the blistered wheel arches. The bumper swells into bold right angles around the front fog lamps, adding greater volume to the lower part of the ‘face’ and giving the car a more stable, wider look.

In profile, the glass area maintains the raked A-pillar and sweeping C-pillar that define the Optima’s sports-saloon appearance, with the rear quarterlight kicking up smartly as the shoulder line extends towards the raised boot lid. The shoulder line itself is an extension of the parallel followed by the front headlamps, forming a clean, straight light that connects front and rear. The deeply-sculptured body panels of the doors curve fluently into slightly extended side sills, again increasing the visual weight around the skirt of the Optima.

The LED halo-style tail lamps wrap around the corners of the rear of the all-new Optima, and give the car a modern, new light signature. The athletic appearance of the car is boosted by a rising, spoiler-shaped boot lid and an expansive rear bumper which houses a sporty-looking air diffuser and oval exhaust.

This attractive new design makes the fourth-generation model the most aerodynamic Optima to date, with drag reduced from 0.3 to 0.29 Cd. The all-new Optima will be available in Europe in a choice of nine paint colours, and will ride on alloy wheels ranging from 16- to 18-inches in diameter.

The all-new Kia Optima range will be developed further in future, with the addition of a new body style, inspired by the Kia SPORTSPACE concept car shown at the 2015 Geneva International Motor Show.

Refined new interior with more modern design and higher quality

Drawing inspiration from Kia’s global range of models, the all-new Optima boasts a more luxurious, driver-focused interior than ever before, with features and technologies typically associated with the class above. The new cabin is crafted with an obsessive attention to detail, and represents the biggest step forward for the new model.

Kia’s design team focused on delivering a thoroughly modern interior look and feel, with the cabin offering a cleaner, more unified design than the previous generation. The dashboard is spread along a more horizontal plane and a wider central console, creating a greater sense of spaciousness.

The material quality of the all-new Optima’s cabin is significantly improved over the outgoing model, with a far higher proportion of soft-touch materials, as well as cloth and leather trim in natural tones. Tasteful metallic accents throughout the cabin add a higher quality ambience to the interior, while greater application of soundproofing ensures refinement is better than ever.

The dashboard is divided into an upper ‘display’ zone and a lower ‘control’ zone, ensuring drivers need never take their eyes off the road in order to see the key information displayed. The central fascia is angled 8.5 degrees towards the driver, with the upper ‘display’ zone housing a new 8.0-inch touchscreen infotainment system and lower ‘control’ zone offering fewer buttons than the outgoing Optima to manage the various cabin functions that aren’t already built into the touchscreen.

The console is finished in gloss black, with a dash of chrome running the length of the dashboard, dividing the display and control zones and lending the interior to single or two-tone colour schemes.

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More space for every passenger in refined new cabin

The larger interior and exterior dimensions of the fourth-generation Optima ensure that the all-new model is the most practical, spacious and comfortable yet.

With the 10 mm growth in the wheelbase of the all-new Optima, and reshaped seats, rear passengers now enjoy 25 mm more legroom than before. The wider body yields more shoulder room for all passengers (20 mm and 17 mm extra in front and rear), while the longer, higher roof results in greater headroom throughout the cabin (+5 mm and +15 mm front and rear)

In reshaping the front and rear seats, the interior design team also paid particular attention to seat comfort. Stiffer seat frames reduce the level of vibrations through the seats while improving seat durability and reducing the weight of each seat by 2.6 kg, while softer foam in the headrests, upper back and under-thigh supports allows occupants to nestle into the seats more comfortably. In the front, deeper side bolsters are made up of denser, more supportive foam.

Rear passengers also get their own heater, while pull-up sun shades built into the rear door trim. Cargo space in the all-new Optima has grown from 505 to 510 litres (VDA), with the under-floor storage area and a wider boot opening adding greater practicality.

50 per cent stronger bodyshell and new active safety technologies

The all-new Optima features a uniquely engineered body which combines more high-strength materials than ever before, resulting in even higher standards of crash safety. While passive safety is improved, the new model is also equipped with a series of high-tech active and autonomous safety features, and Kia’s engineers have targeted a five-star Euro NCAP safety rating throughout the Optima’s development programme.

The bodyshell of the all-new Optima is stronger than ever thanks to the more extensive use of Advanced High-Strength Steel (AHSS). 50 per cent of the body is now made up of AHSS – representing a 150 per cent increase over that of the previous car (20 per cent) – and boasts a 450 per cent increase in the amount of structural adhesive used. The result is that torsional rigidity has been improved by 50 per cent over the model that it replaces, while the body shell is also 8.6 kg lighter. The higher-strength steel alloys have been applied to reinforce the A and B-pillars, side sills, roof, floor, front wheel arches and rear bulkhead, boosting the all-round structural integrity of the body.

Passive safety is further improved for occupants with the total number of airbags increasing to seven. The all-new Optima will be fitted as standard with driver, driver knee, passenger, two front side and two curtain airbags.

The all-new Optima will be a strong performer in global safety tests thanks to its suite of new technologies designed to avoid or mitigate the effects of a collision.

Kia’s Vehicle Stability Management (VSM) is fitted as standard, ensuring stability under braking and cornering by controlling the car’s Electronic Stability Control (ESC) and electric motor-driven power steering if it detects a loss of traction.

The all-new Optima is available with a wide range of optional active hazard-avoidance technologies, depending on market. These will include:

  • Advanced Smart Cruise Control (SCC), which automatically adjusts the Optima’s speed to maintain a safe distance from vehicles in front
  • Autonomous Emergency Braking (AEB)*, which employs a long-range radar detection system to detect a potential collision with another vehicle or pedestrian and help bring the car to a halt
  • Lane Keeping Assist System (LKAS), which detects the Optima’s position in relation to lane markings and takes automatic corrective action if it senses the car starting to draft without the use of indicators
  • High Beam Assist (HBA), which automatically adjusts headlamp range according to other vehicles and road conditions
  • Speed Limit Information Function (SLIF), displaying the speed limit in the driver’s instrument cluster based on cameras detecting roadside signs
  • Blind Spot Detection (BSD), with a visual warning in the door mirror when another car enters the driver’s blind spot
  • Rear Cross Traffic Alert (RCTA), which warns against other cars driving behind the Optima in car parks while reversing.

The all-new Kia Optima’s AEB system is unique in its segment in Europe for offering not just a short-range radar, but also a longer-range unit which is able to identify cars and pedestrians further away and at higher speeds than many competitors. The short-range ‘City’ radar helps drivers to avoid or mitigate the effects of front collisions when travelling under 50 kph, while the longer-range ‘Urban’ radar enables the Optima to detect and respond to obstacles at speeds between 30 and 80 kph. The AEB system’s pedestrian-detection function is designed to identify pedestrians when travelling up to 60 kph and reduce the risk of a collision.

*The Autonomous Emergency Braking System (AEBS) is an assistance system and does not relieve the driver from his/her responsibility to safely operate the vehicle at any time. The driver still has to adapt his/her driving behavior to his/her personal driving capabilities, to the legal requirements and to the overall road and traffic conditions. AEBS is not designed to drive the vehicle autonomously. For further information, please refer to the owner’s manual.

Greater overall refinement as development teams reduce NVH

Reinforcing the need to provide a calm and relaxing driving environment, the all-new Optima boasts greater refinement than ever before, with considerable efforts made by development teams to reduce noise, vibration and harshness (NVH).

Some of the most important innovations to reduce NVH include a larger under-floor cover and more effective windshield seals, each of which help to reduce wind noise by two per cent while aiding aerodynamics and, ultimately, fuel efficiency. Increased dashboard insulation helps to reduce the level of engine noise in the cabin by around four per cent, aided by general improvements to the acoustic refinement of most engines in the range. Larger cross-member bushings, front and rear, also isolate road noise, while reducing the level of vibration through the floor and steering wheel.

The new body, with the increased application of high-strength steel alloys, plays a major part in raising refinement levels. With a more rigid frame and stiffer body panels and engine mounts, the Optima successfully reduces the level of vibration through the cabin. 83 per cent stiffer alloy wheels further cut vibrations resulting from contact with poor road surfaces. In turn, the stiffer body and wheels have enabled Kia engineers to make subtle changes to the car’s suspension geometry to further isolate vibrations and road noise without compromising the car’s dynamic abilities.

Smoother ride, more agile handling, and optional electronic suspension system

Improving ride and handling was a top priority for Kia’s dynamic development teams, with a focus on delivering the ride comfort and stability that customers expect from a D-segment saloon, while achieving the level of agility promised by the car’s sportier appearance. With a lighter, stiffer chassis, the suspension is better able to isolate vibrations and bumps from poor road surfaces, while a series of upgrades to the suspension set-up helps to blend agile handling with an improvement in ride comfort.

With fully-independent suspension all-round, Kia’s engineers have moved the front and rear subframe mounting points further out towards the edge of the vehicle for a smoother ride over uneven surfaces. The front suspension has been upgraded from two bushing mounts to four to increase lateral stiffness, with more robust wheel bearings completing the front suspension changes. The result is improved responses to steering inputs and greater traction around corners, while further reducing the time it takes for the suspension to settle after a more significant jolt in the road.

At the rear, the all-new Optima receives larger dual lower arms – the previous generation Optima’s suspension was connected to the chassis with single links on each side – mounted with thicker, more absorbent bushings. Further defining the Optima’s ride and handling characteristics, these changes have helped engineers achieve greater stability for the all-new model, and improved bump absorption. These upgrades are aided in part by the small increase to the all-new Optima’s wheelbase.

The all-new Optima is fitted with a new rack-mounted electric motor-driven power steering system (R-MDPS), available as standard for European models fitted with the 1.7-litre CRDi engine. Mounted directly on the steering rack, rather than on the column, the new R-MDPS provides greater steering feel and quicker, more linear responses to driver inputs – particularly around the centre. This upgrade to the steering results in sharper handling characteristics, placing it among the most agile cars in the D-segment.

For the all-new Optima, customers can also specify an optional electronic controlled suspension system with internal valves (ECS), to deliver ride and handling tailored exclusively to the tastes of European drivers. ECS employs internal valves for each of the four dampers, and is connected to a G-force sensor in the ECU and two G-force sensors built into the front wheels. Using these sensors, ECS detects steering inputs and accelerator pedal position, and monitors road conditions, to adapt the suspension for a firmer, sportier ride or for greater comfort – drivers can choose from ‘sport’ and ‘normal’ modes accordingly. The system provides individualised damping force for each wheel more quickly than ever before. ECS will be available from launch on models fitted with the 1.7-litre CRDi diesel engine.

Kia Connected Services and wireless phone charging among new technologies

The all-new Optima debuts a number of new, advanced on-board technologies to improve usability, comfort and convenience. The new technologies featured in the all-new Optima make it the one of the most innovative cars in the D-segment.

Kia’s latest audio-visual navigation (AVN) system introduces a more modern appearance at the centre of the dashboard. Buyers can choose between 7.0- or 8.0-inch touchscreen infotainment and satellite navigation systems, each supporting the addition of DAB digital radio, which is available across a number of European markets.

At the heart of the AVN system is the new Kia Connected Services package, offering a wide range of up-to-date, driver-oriented information. Provided by technology company TomTom, the new connectivity features include live traffic updates, speed camera alerts, local search and weather forecasts. Providing useful real-time information, Kia Connected Services will enhance the safety, comfort and enjoyment of every journey. In Europe, the system will be available to Optima buyers free of charge for seven years after the car’s purchase.

The touchscreen infotainment system is paired with a six-speaker audio system as standard. A powerful 590 watt Harman Kardon Premium Sound system, featuring 10 speakers, an external amplifier and Clari-Fi MP3 restoration technology, is also available as an option. This new Harman Kardon surround sound option will allow music lovers to transform the cabin of their all-new Optima into their own personal concert hall.

A first for any car in the D-segment, the all-new Optima is available with a new wireless charger for mobile devices, allowing the new model to meet the increasing demand from car buyers – particularly in this class – for new convenience technologies. Located at the base of the central console, the wireless charger lets users charge their phone on the move, without a wire connection. With ‘foreign object detection’, the 5W charging system activates when a compatible device is placed on the pad, and warns car security-conscious owners when they’ve left a phone on the charger as they leave the vehicle. The system displays the phone’s charging condition on the instrument cluster, and features a safety system to prevent overheating while in use.

The all-new Optima also features two USB charging points, one in the front and one in the rear, to allow passengers to charge mobile devices, depending on trim level.

Depending on market, other new available features will include: 360-degree Around View Monitor, with four cameras helping the driver to manoeuvre when parking by displaying a birds-eye view of the Optima on the touchscreen; Smart Parking Assist System (SPAS), which parks the car automatically in parallel and perpendicular spaces and helps drivers safely leave a parking space; and Dynamic Bending Headlamps, which sweep the road ahead in line with the steering wheel for greater visibility and improved safety at night.

Choice of petrol and upgraded diesel engines, and plug-in hybrid to follow

The all-new Optima will be available with a range of engines when it goes on sale across Europe in Q4 this year, striking a balance between performance and efficiency. Driving the front wheels, every engine in the range is compliant with the latest Euro 6 emission standard, resulting in cleaner emissions. The all-new Optima is popular among both private and fleet buyers, and the fourth-generation model offers the choice of either a diesel or gasoline engine, each engineered to meet the varying needs of all types of customers.

The upgraded 1.7-litre CRDi diesel engine is expected to account for the majority of European sales from launch. Carried over from the existing model, it receives a range of modifications for its application in the all-new Optima, resulting in greater power output and torque, and reduced emissions.

Now producing 141 ps (up from 136 ps) and 340 Nm torque (increased from 325 Nm), the upgraded 1.7-litre diesel engine offers an improvement to engine response, low end torque, efficiency and NVH. The upgraded engine boasts far lower CO2 emissions, reduced by 14 per cent to 110 g/km (when fitted with manual transmission and Kia’s Idle Stop/Go fuel-saving technology).

A new electronically-controlled variable-geometry turbocharger actuator results in more efficient turbocharging for improved accelerator response and greater low-end torque. Maximum torque is now available from 1,750-2,500 rpm, offering greater drivability over a broader range of engine speeds – peak torque in the outgoing Optima was accessible from 2,000-2,500 rpm. A new piston coating reduces friction throughout the four cylinders, while a new timing chain crank sprocket reduces engine noise, in line with the additional soundproofing throughout the car.

The all-new Optima is also available with the same 2.0-litre CVVL engine as the outgoing model, featuring continuously variable valve lift technology for smooth delivery of its 163 ps power output and accelerative response.

A wider range of powertrains are currently under development by Kia, which will lead to the 2016 launch of a high-efficiency plug-in hybrid electric Optima, as well as Kia Motors Europe’s first high performance saloon.

Lower emissions from advanced new seven-speed DCT

The all-new Optima features the brand’s advanced new seven-speed double-clutch transmission (DCT), recently launched in the enhanced Kia cee’d and available exclusively on models fitted with the best-selling 1.7-litre CRDi diesel. Kia’s new DCT is capable of handling the higher torque outputs of the turbodiesel engine and has been engineered to offer a sportier driving experience with instant gear changes.

Kia’s new DCT has been developed in-house, engineered for low fuel consumption and a sporty driving feel when in manual mode, and with comfort and smoothness when left in automatic mode.

Drivers specifying the new DCT will benefit from faster gear changes than a traditional automatic transmission, as well as lower running costs. When equipped with the new DCT, the 1.7-litre CRDi engine sees its CO2 emissions drop to 116 g/km, a 40 g/km improvement over the outgoing Optima fitted with a six-speed automatic transmission. This 25 per cent improvement to the car’s CO2 output ensures best-in-class emissions for a diesel automatic.

The 1.7-litre CRDi is also available with a six-speed manual transmission, while the 2.0-litre CVVL engine can be specified with either six-speed manual or automatic transmissions.

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ALL-NEW KIA OPTIMA ON SALE FROM £21,495

  • More modern, bolder exterior styling
  • Luxurious cabin with new horizontal layout
  • Cutting-edge technologies include wireless phone charging
  • New powertrains slash emissions by up to 25 per cent
  • Major improvements in comfort, refinement, space and safety
  • GT and GT-Line versions to come for first time
  • Four models on sale from £21,495

Sleeker, plusher, loaded with class-leading technologies, more refined yet more engaging to drive and up to 25 per cent more fuel-efficient…the list of superlatives for the all-new Kia Optima is almost never-ending. The all-new Optima, Kia’s contender in the all-important UK fleet and business saloon market, goes on sale from 5 January priced from £21,495.

Four versions are available, all powered by an upgraded EU6 version of Kia’s efficient 1.7-litre CRDi turbodiesel engine, now paired with either a six-speed manual or a new seven-speed (7DCT) dual-clutch auto transmission.

Fully connected to enhance comfort, convenience and safety

The all-new Optima is the first car in its class with a wireless charger for mobile devices, located in the base of the centre console.

The Optima is also available with a 360-degree Around View Monitor which, through four strategically mounted cameras, gives the driver a bird’s-eye view when manoeuvring, while a Smart Park Assist System automatically steers the car in and out of parallel or perpendicular parking slots.

There is the option of Autonomous Emergency Braking and Bi-Xenon Dynamic Bending Headlights, which sweep the road in line with steering wheel movements, plus High Beam Assist to switch the lamps between full and dipped beam automatically.

Lane Keep Assist, Speed Limit Information Function, Blind Spot Detection and Rear Cross Traffic Alert, which warns drivers about to pull out of a perpendicular parking space into the path of a vehicle approaching from the side, are also available.

Up to 25 per cent lower CO2 emissions with improved economy

The Optima’s 1.7-litre CRDi turbodiesel engine now develops an improved 139bhp and increased torque of 340Nm, starting at a lower 1,750rpm. This represents increases of 5bhp and 15Nm over the previous version. The engine meets EU6 emissions regulations and delivers outstanding performance for its capacity with effortless driveability. It was engineered at Kia’s European research and development centre in Germany.

With the Idle Stop & Go (ISG) engine stop/start system as standard, CO2 emissions of manual models are 14 per cent lower at 110g/km, while fuel economy improves to a highly impressive 67.3mpg. An even bigger improvement is apparent with the new 7DCT dual-clutch auto gearbox, which replaces the previous six-speed torque converter unit. Emissions tumble by 25 per cent, to 116g/km, while fuel economy is now 64.2mpg.

As a result, benefit-in-kind taxation in manuals falls by three tax bands, while for the 7DCT the reduction is an even more dramatic 42g/km and eight tax bands. Meanwhile, with fuel consumption improved by almost 10mpg for manual models and more than 17mpg for the 7DCT automatics, fleet running costs will be dramatically lower – an attractive proposition for fleet customers.

For private owners there are significant benefits, too. The standard rate of Vehicle Excise Duty, or road tax, falls by £90 per year with manual versions and by £150 with the 7DCT after the initial registration payment.

The seven-speed (7DCT) dual-clutch auto transmission was developed in-house at Kia’s research and development centre in Korea with the aim of delivering the comfort and smoothness of a torque converter transmission in automatic mode with the sportiness of a manual when the driver chooses to take control of gearchanging via the steering wheel-mounted paddle shifters.

A plug-in hybrid (PHEV) Optima, offering a commuter-friendly all-electric drive range with even lower emissions and greater taxation advantages, will be added later in 2016.

And it will not stop there. Kia has already announced that it plans to offer sporty GT-Line and GT versions later in 2016, while the SPORTSPACE concept from the 2015 Geneva Motor Show hints at an estate version to come – another first for the company.

Sharper appearance and greater cabin quality

Kia has taken an evolutionary approach to the all-new Optima’s exterior design, maintaining the identity of a car which still looks as smart today as it did when launched, while introducing greater modernity and boldness.

The all-new Optima has an even greater road presence thanks to a 10mm increase in wheelbase and overall length, a similar increase in height and a 25mm wider body. At the same time, sharper body lines and greater surface detailing make the all-new Optima stand out from the crowd even more.

The increase in overall length to 4,855mm creates space for an even more swept-back and dynamic side profile. A shoulder line extending all the way from the front light units creates a clean, straight link from front and rear. The door panels are deeply sculpted and curve into slightly extended side sills.

The car’s athletic appearance is reinforced at the rear, where a rising boot lid and an expansive rear bumper flow into a diffuser section which houses the chrome-tipped oval exhaust tailpipe.

The new body is more aerodynamically efficient as well as more stylish, reducing the drag co-efficient (Cd) from 0.3 to 0.29. Each tiny improvement in Cd has a significant impact on fuel economy, particularly at higher speeds.

The all-new Optima has a more modern interior layout with a horizontal dash structure and far higher-quality materials. The dash is now angled at 8.5 degrees towards the driver. The standard central 7.0- or 8.0-inch navigation touch-screen is set at exactly the same height as the instruments.

The fascia is divided into an upper display zone and a lower control zone, while the number of buttons and switches has been reduced because more functions are now accessed via the touch-screen, giving the cabin a less cluttered look.

The impressive quality is apparent in the soft-touch materials, interior lighting – LED at the top of the range – and, on the road, greater refinement as a result of increased sound-proofing.

All of this is supported by increased passenger and luggage space and improved practicality thanks to the car’s enlarged dimensions, while the boot capacity has risen from 505 to 510 litres, and there is a wider opening.

Four versions, with more to come

There are initially three trim levels – badged 2, 3 and 4 – with GT-Line and GT versions to be added later in 2016. All versions are extensively equipped. ISG, Kia’s fuel-saving, emissions-reducing engine stop/start system, is standard.

The entry-level grade 2 version is manual only, grade 3 offers both transmissions while grade 4 is DCT only.

Even the entry-level 2 grade comes as standard with a 7.0-inch satellite navigation system with European mapping and a reversing camera, steering wheel-mounted controls, dual automatic air conditioning, cruise control with a speed limiter, electrically heated folding mirrors, a six-speaker DAB radio with MP3 compatibility and Bluetooth. It has 17-inch alloy wheels, body-coloured door handles and mirrors, dual projection headlights with static cornering lights and LED daytime running lights, powered two-way driver’s seat lumbar adjustment and remote central locking with a fold-away key, while the comprehensive safety provisions include Electronic Stability Control and Vehicle Stability Management, Hill-start Assist Control, Tyre Pressure Monitoring and an electronic parking brake.

Grade 3 upgrades the navigation screen to 8.0 inches, has an eight-way power-adjustable driver’s seat with four-way electronic lumbar adjustment, heated front seats and xenon dual projection headlights. The exterior is distinguished by 18-inch alloy wheels, chrome and body colour exterior door handles, LED front foglights and rear combination lamps and chrome-coloured side sill mouldings. The black cloth seats have faux leather sections, there are satin chrome highlights on the touch-screen bezel, the rear electric windows have an auto up and down function with an anti-trap safety feature, a premium vision instrument cluster, satin chrome interior door handles and gloss black window switch panels. An harman kardon™ Premium Sound System is also standard, while the 7DCT version has paddle shifters for manual control and a Drive Mode Select function.

Grade 4 further supplements this with a wireless mobile phone charger, 360-degree Around View Monitor, Smart Park Assist System, Blind Spot Detection with Rear Cross Traffic Alert and Lane Keep Assist, High Beam Assist, Speed Limit Information and Autonomous Emergency Braking. It has a tilting and sliding panoramic sunroof, bi-xenon headlights with automatic levelling and washers, Dynamic Bending Lights, black high-gloss door frames, black leather upholstery with ventilated front seats and heated outer rear seats, alloy pedals, stainless steel door scuff plates, rear window blinds, Adaptive Smart Cruise Control, a smart key with illuminated start/stop button, LED front map lights and rear reading lights and ambient interior lighting.

Previously the Optima trim levels started at the 1 spec, topping out at 3 for the top of range vehicle. With the all-new Optima the trim levels start at 2, due to the significant level of standard equipment which now comes with the vehicle, equivalent to competitor mid-grades. In addition, having a 4 grade in the Optima line-up aligns it with Kia’s other premium models, such as the Sorento and Sportage, it also means Kia can look to introducing a 1 grade in the future should demand rise.

Greater agility with premium-class refinement

A far stiffer body structure plus major revisions to the suspension and steering combine to give the all-new Optima sharper, sportier driving characteristics with even greater comfort and refinement, aided by extensive new measures to reduce noise, vibration and harshness (NVH).

The body shell of the all-new Optima is 50 per cent stiffer than that of the previous model yet also 8.6kg lighter. This is largely down to a 150 per cent increase in the use of Advanced High-Strength Steel and a 450 per cent increase in the amount of structural adhesive to bond body panels together.

The stiffer body shell provides an ideal platform for the uprated suspension and steering to work without having to compensate for torsional flex. The all-new Optima is therefore better able to isolate vibrations and bumps on poor road surfaces and deliver improved ride comfort with greater agility.

The all-new Optima also features Kia’s latest rack-mounted motor-driven power assisted steering system (R-MDPS). By mounting the power steering system directly on the rack rather than the column, the engineers have been able to provide quicker and more linear responses to driver inputs with greater feel. The all-new Optima is now one of the most agile cars in its class. As an added benefit, R-MDPS gives approximately three per cent fuel savings because it draws on engine power only when the car is turning.

Comprehensive new measures to counter NVH ensure that the all-new Optima has the refinement to match its more upmarket appearance, quality and technology features.

Innovations to help towards this include a larger under-floor cover and more effective windscreen seals. Increased dashboard insulation lowers the amount of engine noise, and the acoustic refinement of the 1.7-litre CRDi engine has been improved. Larger cross-member bushings front and rear eliminate a greater proportion of road noise while reducing vibrations transmitted through the floor and steering wheel.

Safety firsts

The all-new Optima is available with a number of advanced active safety features, some of which are firsts for Kia including one that is unique in the car’s market segment. These augment the comprehensive active and passive safety technologies which are standard.

The all-new Optima’s safety begins with its far stiffer body shell with programmed front, side and rear crumple zones. For further crash protection, all versions have twin front and side airbags for the driver and front passenger, and two full-length side curtain airbags.

Kia’s policy has always been that the best way to survive an accident is not to have one, and with that in mind the all-new Optima is available with advanced active collision-avoidance systems.

The top-of-the-range grade 4 version is fitted with Autonomous Emergency Braking which, uniquely in class, employs both short- and long-range radar systems so that it can detect vehicles and pedestrians at greater distances and higher speeds. The short-range radar operates at typical city speeds of up to 31mph. Between 19mph and 50mph the longer-range radar also comes into play. The pedestrian detection function operates at up to 37mph.

The Optima 4 also has Blind Spot Detection, Lane Keep Assist and Rear Cross Traffic Alert. It has High Beam Assist and a Speed Limit Information function within the instrument cluster. A reversing camera integrated with the 7.0- or 8.0-inch navigation touch-screen and reversing sensors are standard, helping to minimise the chance of annoying parking dents, and Optima 4 has the Smart Park Assist System and 360-degree around-view monitor linked to four cameras.

Warranty and servicing

The all-new Optima comes with Kia’s industry-leading seven-year or 100,000-mile warranty, subject to conditions covering wear and tear items. The warranty is fully transferable to subsequent owners as long as the age or mileage limits have not been exceeded.

It is also available with Kia’s Care-3 and Care-3 Plus servicing packages, offering fleet and retail customers fixed-cost, inflation-proof servicing for the first three or five years. All packages cover the car, not the owner.

UK model line-up

Version Power
bhp
Torque
Nm
0-60
sec
Top Speed
mph
Comb.
mpg
CO2 Insurance
Group
1.7 CRDi 6-speed manual ISG 2 139 340 9.7 121 67.3 110 19A
1.7 CRDi 6-speed manual ISG 3 139 340 9.7 121 67.3 110 20A
1.7 CRDi 7-speed DCT ISG 3 139 340 10.6 126 64.2 116 20A
1.7 CRDi 7-speed DCT ISG 4 139 340 10.6 126 64.2 116 20A

UK pricing

Version OTR price
1.7 CRDi 6-speed manual ISG 2 £21,495
1.7 CRDi 6-speed manual ISG 3 £23,495
1.7 CRDi 7-speed DCT ISG 3 £24,895
1.7 CRDi 7-speed DCT ISG 4 £28,895

 

2016 Kia Optima on-sale from Q4 2015

The all-new Kia Optima will go on sale across Europe in Q4 2015 and from January 2016 in the UK, offering the company’s unique seven-Year, 100,000 mile warranty as standard. The all-new Optima for Europe will be built at Kia’s plant in Hwasung, Korea.

ALL NEW KIA OPTIMA – TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS (EUROPE)

Body and chassis

Four-door, five-seater saloon, with all-steel unitary construction bodyshell. Choice of diesel and gasoline four-cylinder engines driving the front wheels via manual or automatic transmission – depending on model.

Engines

2.0-litre / 163 ps CVVL Gasoline
Type
Capacity
Bore and stroke
Compression ratio
Max power
Max torque
Valves
Fuel system
Emissions class
Four cylinder in-line, naturally aspirated
2.0-litres, 1,999 cc
81.0 x 97.0 mm
10.3:1
163 ps (120 kW) @ 6,500 rpm
196 Nm (145 lb ft) @ 4,800 rpm
16 (four per cylinder)
Continuously variable valve lift
Euro Stage 6b
1.7-litre / 141 ps CRDi Diesel
Type
Capacity
Bore and stroke
Compression ratio
Max power
Max torque
Valves
Fuel system
Emissions class
DOHC, four cylinder in-line, turbocharged
1.7-litres, 1,685 cc
77.2 x 90.0 mm
15.7:1
141 ps (104 kW) @ 4,000 rpm
340 Nm (251 lb ft) @ 1,750-2,500 rpm
16 (four per cylinder)
Common-rail direct injection
Euro Stage 6b
Transmissions 2.0 CVVL 1.7 CRDi
Manual
Automatic
6-sp
6-sp
6-sp
7DCT
Gear ratios
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Reverse
Final Drive 1
2.0 CVVL
MT     AT
3.615  4.400
2.080  2.726
1.387  1.834
1.079  1.392
0.884  1.000
0.744  0.774
—       —
3.000  3.440
4.533  3.383
1.7 CRDi
MT     AT
3.615  3.786
1.931  2.261
1.696  1.957
1.241  1.023
0.921  0.778
.780  0.837
—       0.681
3.731  5.074
3.765  3.158
Suspension and damping
Front Fully-independent by subframe-mounted MacPherson struts, coil springs and gas-filled shock absorbers, with anti-roll stabiliser bar
Rear Fully-independent by subframe-mounted double wishbones, coil springs and gas-filled shock absorbers, with anti-roll stabiliser bar
Steering
Gearing
Turns, lock-to-lock
Turning circle
2.0 CVVL
14.34:1
2.78
5.45 metres
1.7 CRDi
13.29:1
2.6
Type
2.0 CVVL
1.7 CRDi
Electric motor-driven rack-and-pinion power steering
Column-mounted electric motor (C-MDPS)
Rack-mounted electric motor (R-MDPS)
Brakes
Front
Rear
280~300 mm ventilated discs
262 mm solid discs
Wheels and tyres
Standard
OptionalSpare
Alloy 16-inch, 215/60 R16 tyres
Alloy 17-inch, 215/55 R17 tyres
Alloy 18-inch, 235/45 R18 tyres
Tyre mobility kit
Dimensions (mm)
Exterior
Overall length           4,855
Overall height           1,465
Front track               1,607
Front overhang         965
Ground clearance    135
*excluding door mirrors
**on 16-inch wheels
Overall width*
Wheelbase
Rear track
Rear overhang
1,860
2,805
1,614
1,085
Interior
1st row 2nd row
Head room
Leg room
Shoulder room
Hip room
1,020
1,155
1,475
1,423
970
905
1,432
1,422
Capacities
Fuel tank
Luggage (VDA)
70 litres
510 litres
Weights (kg)
2.0 CVVL 1.7 CRDi
MT     AT MT     AT
Curb weight
Gross weight
Tow capacity, braked
Tow capacity, unbraked
1,455  1,470
2,000  2,020
1,700  1,300
750     650
1,515  1,530
2,070  2,080
1,800  1,500
750     750
Performance
2.0 CVVL 1.7 CRDi
MT     AT MT     AT
Top speed (kph)
0-100 kph (secs)
210     208
9.4     10.5
203     203
10.0    11.0
Economy (litres / 100 km)*
2.0 CVVL 1.7 CRDi
MT     AT MT     MT**  AT
Combined
Extra-urban
Urban
CO2 (g/km)
7.4     7.5
5.9     5.7
10.0    10.6
173     175
4.6     4.2     4.4
4.1     3.7     4.1
5.6     5.1     5.1
121     110     116
*on 16-inch wheels
**with Idle Stop/Go package

 

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