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2023 Kia Telluride SX-Prestige X-Pro AWD

Kia just keeps improving its luxurious, stylish SUV …

Even perfection can be improved upon, but often it’ll cost you.

In Covid-crushing 2020 I selected Kia’s magnificent new mid-size SUV, the Telluride, as my Zoomie Vehicle of the Year. The tested top-level SX AWD version hit roughly $44,000 at the time and was as near perfect as I could imagine.

Telluride was, and is, luxurious, comfortable, stylish and powerful, the perfect family hauler. While excelling at all that, a low $30 grand starting price made it more attractive than many of its long-time mid-size SUV counterparts. Even loaded it was economical and touted such a finely styled interior that many luxury utes were put to shame.

Now Kia has 10 Telluride trims (up from four) and the starting price has crept up to $37,255, including delivery, with AWD adding another $2,000. That’s not horrible, considering the average SUV now goes for $50 grand or more. But in expanding its trim levels Kia has decided to challenge the luxury utes on price in addition to features. Note too, the Telluride has been named to many Best Of lists, and is rated No. 1 in its segment by Kelly Blue Book. So my praise was not singular.

The new SX-Prestige X-Pro AWD (these names!) trim is now the top level Telluride and it has a price tag to match, starting at $54,350, with delivery. That’s entry-level luxury pricing even to the Logan Roys of this world.

But one must be cognizant that luxury sells and luxury pricing drives profits. Kia has adapted to the US auto market game well.

That’s not to say anything at all against the Telluride. It’s still near perfect as a family transport with its adjustable three rows of seating, its powerful 291-horsepower 3.8-liter V6 engine, its bevy of safety equipment and a ride that’ll make you question why anyone buys a bouncy truck-based SUV.

This is so well controlled and cushy that even the most delicate of your relatives will be impressed and ladle on the praise for you having “made it.”

Watch our video review: (130) 2023 Kia Telluride review by Mark Savage and Paul Daniel – YouTube

Handling too is fairly responsive for a large ute with a 114.2-inch wheelbase and nearly 200 inches in length. Usually these types of vehicles require more steering input to keep them centered in a lane. Not Telluride, which also touts an impressive 8.4 inches of ground clearance on this top-end model. Its lower level trims will just clear 8 inches.

This one and the X-Line trim are like so many utes aimed more at off-roading though. Seems the more you spend the more likely you are to rock crawl and scratch up your nice paint job among the brambles and mud fields. Not me!

So for instance this X-Pro loads on 18-inch all-terrain tires (a bit of road noise, but not bad), heavy-duty cooling, 500 more pounds of towing power, self-leveling rear suspension, a 110-volt inverter outlet, and 18-inch black alloy wheels, plus more muscular exterior styling cues.

Another superior dash layout and screen from Kia. Plus the seats are plush!

All fine and dandy, but for those of us who stay on the pavement it’s best to know that the Telluride has upgraded the interior some, although it was outstanding before. The infotainment screen grows to 12.3 inches from 10 and the instrument panel and info screen are joined as one slightly curved unit. That curve really seems to impress riders.

The standard Head-Up Display also grows from 8.5 inches to 10 inches.

Terracotta Nappa leather seats contrast nicely with the black dash and door trim.

All those screens are easy to see and read and the test truck’s Terracotta colored Nappa leather interior is gorgeous, costing just $295 extra. Seats are powered, heated and cooled, wide, and well-shaped while row two’s captain’s chairs are heated and cooled too. They also slide back and forth to allow reasonable legroom for rear passengers in row three. The Kia’s steering wheel also is heated.

Row three folds down to create a huge storage area if only four of you are traveling, but otherwise seven could ride in the Telluride. If you prefer seating for eight, that’s possible too with a second row bench seat.

Oodles of cargo room in Telluride with third row seats down.

Buttons under the power hatch allow quick fold-down of row two seats while row three must be lowered from inside the vehicle. That should be reversed.

Dash and screen controls are simple and should be the pattern for other makes, if only they would follow Kia and Hyundai’s lead. Buttons are big and well labeled and toggles control the heated and cooled seats, no need to play with the info screen. That infotainment system can now be updated over the air too, and WiFi is now standard. Plus you can program your smartphone as a digital key, if you’d like, to fire up the Telluride.

The turn signals activate cameras to show you the lane’s beside and behind you on the dash to avoid blind-spot issues and there’s a wireless phone charger in the bin under the dash’s center stack.

Two sunroofs let in plenty of light and wisely the larger one is for the back rows!

Overhead are two sunroofs, one right over that third row seat to brighten the perspective of row three occupants who often are sentenced to a shadowy atmosphere.

Oh, and if you find your kids in row three not normally able to hear your parental instructions, well, Kia offers Driver Talk, which directs the driver’s voice into the fancy Harman-Kardon stereo speakers so they pipe up in back to enable easy conversation with wee ones or digitally engaged teens.

Like to ask Alexa questions? Well, that’s available here too. Telluride is Google Assistant capable.

Basically, you name it, the Telluride has it at this level. Plus the Kia comes with a 10-year, 100,000-mile powertrain warranty. And to address the elephant in the room, because this is push-button start is has anti-theft protection. So no worries there.

On the driving safety front all is standard here from smart cruise with Stop & Go, to parking collision avoidance when backing up, parking sensors front and rear, blind-spot warning, forward collision avoidance with cyclist detection, rear cross-traffic collision avoidance and safe exit assist so you won’t open a door into oncoming traffic.

Naturally AWD comes on this model, but it’s optional at all trim levels.

As equipped this Georgia-built X-Pro ended at $55,120 including an extra $495 for its Midnight Lake Blue paint job. I’d call it a blue-gray that is pleasant, but not an eye-catcher. Remember you can still get the LX model with front-wheel drive at the sub-$40,000 price mentioned above and there are nine models at price points below this luxury model.

Gas mileage remains decent for a mid-size SUV. I got 20.3 miles per gallon in about 70% highway driving while the EPA rates this at 18 mpg city and 24 mpg highway.

Near perfection? Yes, to be perfect the Telluride would offer a standard hybrid system to help boost gas mileage, or better yet, a plug-in hybrid model so those runs to the grocery store and to shuttle the kids to their school events would be mostly gas- and pollution-free.

Not sold? Well there are numerous competitors. Top of that list is likely the Hyundai Palisade, a sister vehicle to Telluride with similar features and performance. Other strong competitors include Nissan’s Pathfinder, Toyota’s Highlander, Honda’s Pilot and then the Subaru Ascent, VW Atlas and Chevy Traverse.

Drive and compare, Kia is pretty sure it knows which one you’ll choose!

FAST STATS: 2023 Kia Telluride SX-Prestige X-Pro AWD

Hits: Sharp looking SUV inside and out, good power, ride and handling, plus AWD and 5 drive modes. Loaded with Harman/Kardon stereo, super center stack/console design, big screens, heated steering wheel, heated/cooled front seats, heated/cooled second row seats, turn-signal activated cameras, power hatch, useful third row seats, wireless charger, solid safety suite.

Misses: No hybrid model yet and price now reaches entry-level luxury level.

Made in: West Point, Georgia

Engine: 3.8-liter V6, 291hp/262 torque

Transmission: 8-speed automatic

Weight: 4,522 lbs.

Wheelbase: 114.2 in.

Length: 196.9 in.

Cargo: 21, 46, 87 cu.ft.

Tow: 5,500 lbs.

MPG: 18/24

MPG: 20.3 (tested)

Base Price: $54,350 (includes delivery)

Invoice: $51,966

Major Options:

Carpeted floor mats, $210

Midnight Lake Blue paint, $495

Terracotta interior color package, $295

Test vehicle: $55,120

Sources: Kia, www.kbb.com

Photos: Mark Savage

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2021 BMW M440i Convertible

Gray Bimmer convertible easy on the eyes, not the wallet …

The M440i is sleek, sexy and fast, a primo luxury drop-top.

Not much is certain these days, but for cars it is certain that gray is as hot today as a Kardashian bootie video.

Dull gray leads the way, appearing on Toyota pickups and now Ford’s Mustang Mach 1 and Dodge’s Durango Hellcat with names like Jet Fighter Gray and Destroyer Gray. Now comes BMW’s sleek M440i Convertible in Dravit Gray Metallic. No one seems sure what the name means, although an internet search shows that dravit derives from Hindu meaning malted or soft.

In any case, BMW’s Dravit Gray is a dark metallic chameleon color with green and gold flakes generously mixed into its deep gray finish. So the car can look gray, green or a bit greenish gold like a brilliant autumn afternoon. I warmed to the color, which is a $1,950 spiff to the $64,995 4 Series convertible.

The taillights are subtly stylish, like the rest of the Bimmer!

The color is unique, as is the M440i. This four-seater is a driver’s car, a joy on the road, a hoot on the highway and as beautifully designed and assembled as a Rolex watch. Everything about the luxury sports convertible feels right and fits tight.

First, BMW moved away from its powered hard-top convertible to this even more attractive soft-top. Miraculously the canvass top folds and stows away in about 18 seconds and even retracts at speeds up to 31 mph. It works. This allows one to roll through the neighborhood and drop the top at a whim if you decide the summer’s heat and humidity aren’t going to ruin your ride.

The advantage to the softer top is that it weighs 40% less than a hardtop, and to be honest, it’s so well lined that noise levels in the cockpit are only mildly affected. Naturally with the top down it’s noisy as all get-out and drowns out the fine Harmon Kardon surround sound stereo, an $895 extra.

Even with the top up the M440i is handsome, plus this top has a silvery sheen.

Further distinguishing the test car was its Moonlight Black soft top instead of the full-on black roof that’s standard. This is just $150 extra and adds a bit of glitz as the top looks somewhat reflective with a silvery sheen. I liked it.

Watch Mark’s review: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Rx0nLs7y3Q

Yet it’s the power, handling and ride that sells any BMW, that and its kidney-shaped grilles. This new 4 Series is getting bashed all over the internet for what some are calling its garish grille, the two protuberances seeming to be more in-your-face than past iterations. So what? It’s stylish, it’s fun and it certainly shouts BMW. Besides, if car watchers haven’t noticed, all the grilles are getting bigger, brasher and display giant brand logos. More disturbing here is how ugly the license plate looks covering the grilles.

Is this too much grille for ya? Many luxury makes are going bonkers on grille size now!

Power freaks will enjoy the M440i. Under that sculpted hood is a 3.0-liter twin-turbo I6 that pulsates with 382 horsepower and delivers 364 lb.-ft. of torque. Distinguishing itself from, say a Mustang Mach 1, this twin-turbo bounds to 100 mph with a sweetly tuned exhaust whine that assures speed, but doesn’t menace or trumpet its accomplishments. Speed comes smoothly with the precision of the proverbial Swiss watch via a well-mated 8-speed automatic.

Additionally BMW uses a 48-volt mild hybrid electric motor to direct some of the electrical current away from the powertrain while also delivering a silky stop/start function when the car is at rest. Some stop/start systems feel a bit clunky as they re-engage once the driver’s foot moves off the brake pedal at a stoplight. Not here. This one is so quiet and smooth you soon forget it’s working.

Ride and handling are aces. Some sporty coupes and convertibles ride like solid-axle wagons of old, creating a ride that seems torturous. But the M440i is well controlled enough that you feel totally in tune with the road without it bruising your bum.

Vroom with a view!

Handling is precise and somewhere between racer and sportster. Turn into a corner with confidence and a moderately heavy steering feel. No body lean, no chirping of tires even in high speed turns from the rear-drive BMW.

I was quickly spoiled too by the four-wheel disc brakes, ventilated of course, for better long-term performance under racy conditions. But my do these stop the 4 Series in a hurry and with great confidence. Front discs get 4-piston calipers too.

Adding to the fun are the multiple drive modes, easily accessed via buttons on the console. Sport tweaks the engine revs for more low-end power and firms the steering. Comfort is perfect for normal city driving and there are Eco and Adaptive modes too.

The test car added a $1,300 dynamic handling package with 19-inch sport wheels, which further aids grip and handling control.

No dull gray or black interior here. This one is Tacora Red leather.

Inside, the M440i goes all sexy with a Tacora Red Vernasca leather interior. Can you say Corinthian leather? Well this is a highly grained leather that doesn’t seem to heat up too much when exposed directly to sunlight. I left the top down during errands on some steamy sunny days and was pleasantly surprised not to roast my buns on return.

That red leather used on the seats also decorates the door panels, which feature black leather-feel tops. Likewise the dash is black. All trim is satin chrome from dash, to doors and door releases for a high-end look. An open-pore wood-like grain covers the console face. Ritzy!

BMW’s seats are well-shaped with pleasant hip and lower back support and are powered. Plus they will power forward with the flip of a handle on the seat backs for easier loading of passengers to the rear seat. Bottom seat cushions also can be extended for the comfort of long-legged drivers.

There are neck warmers in the seat head rests here, just $500 extra!

Front seats are heated, as is the steering wheel, the control button at the center of the steering wheel’s hub. I’d think cooled seats would be called for here too, a benefit in summer driving, plus I’d like to see a flat-bottom steering wheel to free up a little knee room and also reflect the convertible’s sporty nature.

Note, this test car DID have neck warmers in the seats to keep the chill from necks during top-down drives in spring and fall when temps could be chilly. Those cost $500 extra. So why not add cooled seats too?

Another add-on is a wireless phone charger for $500, which seems steep for something lesser priced cars are starting to include as standard or a slight option fee.

No bad angles on the BMW M440i, but luxury demands a full checkbook.

Dash layout is fine and works well for the driver, plus the test car had a head-up display. I found the 8 radio station pre-set buttons rather small, but at least they are available so you don’t have to play with the console knob to tune. In fact, a roller knob on the steering wheel allows the driver to scroll up and down the radio station list with ease.

Other add-ons included a $700 parking assistance package with active park distance control, a surround view camera with 3D view (amazing on a convertible), plus BMW’s park assistance plus system.

A $3,700 executive package added the heated seats and wheel, plus offered the head-up display, ambient lighting, adaptive LED headlights and Live Cockpit Plus with navigation system.

Gas mileage was good for a powerful convertible too. I got 26.2 mpg in about 70% highway driving. The EPA rates the car at 23 mpg city and 31 mpg highway. No crossover or SUV can approach that, nor the fun and precision of this drive.

On the down side, you get a small 9 cu.ft. trunk, up 1.2 cu.ft. from the previous power hardtop model. Plus this speedster prefers premium (93) octane fuel, now approaching $4 a gallon.

Pretty sure one could confuse this styling for a six-figure supercar’s nose!

Which leads us to price, another drawback but understandable for such a fine convertible. I mentioned its $60+ grand starting price above. Well, the test car settled at $74,670.

Considering this is based on the BMW’s small 3 Series that’s rich for my blood. Still, other options remain, including the BMW M430i coupe for $46,595 with its 255-horse I4 turbo. As with all the 4 Series models an all-wheel-drive system can be added for $2,000 and the 430 can be had as a convertible for an additional $7,500.

Folks needing more power can move up to the M4 Competition Coupe at $75,695 for starters, but it packs an amazing 503 horses and does 0-60 mph in 3.8 seconds. Wow. A 6-speed manual is available on the “base” M4 Coupe ($57,495) with just 473 horses, if you prefer shifting for yourself.

Blue calipers are a nice change, but red ones also are available.

Choices are vast with the 4 Series featuring everything from AWD coupes to convertibles ready for the track. The cost is high, but the performance is near priceless.

FAST STATS: 2021 BMW M440i Convertible

Hits: Sharp styling, super acceleration, excellent sporty handling and good ride. Easy lowering top, heated wheel and seats, multiple drive modes, wireless charger and neck warmers

Misses: Tiny trunk, prefers premium unleaded, price. Plus needs flat-bottom wheel and cooled seats.

Made in: Dingolfing, Germany

Engine: 3.0-liter twin turbo I6, 382 hp

Transmission: 8-speed automatic

Weight: 3,578 lbs.

Wheelbase: 112.2 in.

Length: 187.9 in.

Cargo: 9.0 cu.ft.

MPG: 23/31

MPG: 26.2 (tested)

Base Price: $64,995 (includes delivery)

Invoice: N.A.

Options:

Dravit Gray Metallic paint, $1,950

Dynamic handling package (19-inch 797M wheels), $1,300

Parking assistance package (parking assistance plus, active park distance control, rearview camera, surround view w/3D view), $700

Executive package (heated steering wheel, heated front seats, ambient lighting, Icon Adaptive LED w/Laserlight, head-up display, Live Cockpit Plus w/nav), $3,700

Moonlight black soft top, $150

Neck warmer, $500

Wireless charging, $500

Harman Kardon surround sound, $875

Test vehicle: $74,670

Sources: BMW, www.kbb.com

Photos: Mark Savage

2018 BMW 530e xDrive iPerformance

BMW 530e hybrid defines ‘ultimate driving machine’ … 2018 BMW 530e xDrive

The 530e sedan defines why BMW can justifiably lay claim to building the “ultimate driving machine.”

This plug-in hybrid exudes everything one would want from a luxury car, with the added benefit of a hybrid system. Continue reading 2018 BMW 530e xDrive iPerformance

2017 Volvo XC60 T6 AWD Inscription

Volvo’s new XC60 sporty, powerful2017 Volvo XC60

Hey, this newfound idea of putting some sport into small sport-utility vehicles, or crossovers, is getting to be a trend.

Now Volvo joins the sportster market with its 2017 XC60, a compact ute crossover that handles like a sports sedan and kicks some booty with 302 horsepower. And get this, that boost of power hits quickly, no long lag as so many turbo I4s exhibit, even when they’re trying to be sporty.

First, the XC60 is crisply styled so it looks elegant, with tall Volvo taillights to distinguish its looks. But the combo supercharged and turbocharged 2.0-liter I4 gets your attention in a hurry. Linked up with an 8-speed automatic, it gives the Volvo instant power when you want it. I admit it was a happy surprise.

But equally surprising was how well the XC60 handled. I know this has 20-inch tires, but I fully expected some squish in the steering wheel feel and typical lazy crossover handling.

No siree! The Volvo delivers good feedback via the power-assisted rack and pinion steering and with a  precise feel and handling. Put the XC60 into a turn at speed and there’s no ute-like lean. Cornering is like a sport sedan and feels much the same on winding roads.2017 Volvo XC60

Continue reading 2017 Volvo XC60 T6 AWD Inscription