Kia adds Soul EV to the Canadian auto market

http://www.slashgear.com/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-a-new-city-car-star-24347741/
2015 Kia Soul EV First-Drive: A new city-car star
Sep 24, 2014  Chris Davies

[images  
http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-4.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-28.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-27.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-9.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-5.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-18.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-17.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-24.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-23.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-21.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/soul-cap.gif

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-16.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-12.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-13.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-14.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-15.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-0.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-3.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-1.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-26.jpg

http://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-22.jpg
]

Kia’s 2015 Soul EV may look cute, but the company isn’t playing around when
it comes to its first all-electric car for the US market. Based on the hit
Soul city car, but dumping the gas engines for a torquey electric
powertrain, the Soul EV may be following the Leaf, 500e, and Focus EV to
market, but its clearly used that extra time to learn from what they got
right - and how to avoid their mistakes.

Design

The Soul has always been one of the more eye-catching city cars in gas form,
and the Soul EV’s electric tweaks - some for aerodynamics, some in the name
of just looking different - only help that. It’s pseudo-moon-buggy looks and
upright stance have found favor with those who prefer to sit above the rest
of traffic, as well as satisfying a market which might like the styling of a
crossover but not want - or be able to afford - the full-sized thing.

For the electric version, there’ll be four exterior colors, ranging from a
clean white, through a blue with white roof, and all the way to an
aggressive black with red highlights. The grill is larger, though blanked
off unlike the regular Soul, and there’s ECO/Electric badging on the sides
and at the rear.

The projection beam headlights have blue-tinged trim - matching fog lamps
come with the more expensive Soul EV+ model - while at the rear the light
clusters use LEDs. 16-inch wheels with super low rolling resistance tires -
a 10-percent cut in resistance compared to even regular low-resistance
versions, Kia claims - were picked for their slipperiness, but they also
look great with their inset white panels.

Kia’s design has a second, more important factor however. The Soul EV was
designed in parallel with its gas-powered counterpart, rather than having
electric shoehorned in as an afterthought, while the body shape pays
dividends when it comes to hiding all the extra tech.

So, the batteries sit low down, but because of the height of the cabin and
the sills you hardly notice any intrusion into passenger space. The rear
seats are an inch or two higher than usual, and the trunk floor is a little
more raised, but otherwise you could sit in the Soul EV and not realize you
were carrying a sizable Li-Ion Polymer power pack.

What you can’t escape is the extra weight, and so the underlying
architecture carries a few changes from the roughly 300 pound lighter gas
version. Five cross beams support the battery packs, and the pillars are
reinforced too. Underneath there’s a full belly pane, which reduces drag by
5-percent.

EV Powertrain and Performance

Kia calls its car an “Urban EV” and the range reflects that. The official
EPA figures suggest a 93 mile range - second only to a Tesla Model S, Kia
points out, though you’re getting 208+ miles from Elon Musk’s car - from the
27 kWh batteries, sufficient for shuttling around town but probably not
something you’d want to tackle a road-trip with.

That doesn’t mean it’s low-tech, though. Kia’s batteries have been designed
for warm-weather use (sensible, given the Soul EV will go on sale in
California initially, before spreading to cooler states, where it will be
fitted with a heater system) as well as better thermal stability and more
stable degradation over time. That means a more predictable “distance to
empty” reading on the dashboard, rather than the wildly-oscillating figures
some EVs display.

Charging is courtesy of either a regular 240V connection or a 480V CHAdeMO
DC fast-charge port, both hidden behind the pop-open grille. Figure on a
charging time of 4-5 hours if you’re supplying 240V or 33 minutes to go to
80-percent on 480V.

Yes, you can plug into a regular 120V domestic supply too, but figure on
being tethered there for a full 24 hours.

The batteries are linked to an AC synchronous permanent magnet motor, with
liquid cooling, and a single-speed transmission. It’s one of the more
refined EV motors I’ve driven: Kia says it has slapped in extra sound
insulation, but even with the windows open there’s minimal whine under
either acceleration or regenerative braking that you can so often encounter
in an electric vehicle.

With 109 HP the Soul EV is down compared to its gas-powered brethren (which
muster between 130 and 164 HP), but that all-important torque is up
significantly: the electric car musters 210 lb-ft, while the gas Soul tops
out at 151 lb-ft. It’s instantly available, too, just as with any EV, rather
than having to wait for the engine to spool up.

The result is a car that can surprise ostensibly meatier vehicles when
pulling away from the lights. Sure, they’ll quickly catch up if the road
stays clear - Kia quotes a top speed of 90 mph and a 0-60 mph dash in 11.2
seconds - but it’s the nippiness at city rates that makes the Soul EV a tiny
urban warrior. Kia says the 18.6-43.5 mph run takes 3.9 seconds, and it’s
that sort of rapidity that makes lane-changes and last minute overtaking so
straightforward.

It’s also more comfortable while doing so than the gas Soul. The extra
weight of the electrics, as well as the cross beams which double as
stiffening, mean the Soul EV flexes less and feels more stable on the road.
Hop between lanes and there’s no wobble or rock as you might predict from an
upright little car with a relatively short wheelbase.

Braking, too, is smooth - you can either put the Soul EV in regular mode, or
notch the transmission selector to “B” and have the accelerator also bring
in more aggressive regenerative action, effectively driving the Soul EV with
a single pedal as you can do with the Model S - and predictable, and it
never felt like the battery heft wanted to keep pushing forward despite my
intention to stop.

The electric power steering won’t win any awards for dynamism, but it’s
accurate even as it subdues road feel. Hit the “Active Eco” button down in
the center console and the Soul EV gets even more miserly, being quicker to
start the regen when you lift your right foot, among other things.

93 miles may not sound like a lot, but there’s a lot to be said for having a
predictable range expectation. One of Kia’s main priorities with the Soul
EV, project manager Steve Kosowski told me, was to make the number you see
on the dashboard as close to what you’ll actually get on the road as
possible.

Without spending longer with the car I can’t say conclusively whether that’s
always the case, but it certainly looks promising. When I hit the Start
button the digital gage told me I had 109 miles of range; after a mixture of
mid-speed highway and stop/start city driving, I compared the distance I’d
actually traveled versus what range the Soul EV claimed I had left. The
initial estimate turned out to only be two miles different to what I’d done
in the real world.

Interior and Infotainment

Kia has two versions of its electric car to choose between, the regular Soul
EV and the Soul EV+. Standard-fit kit levels are high either way: power
windows, an 8-inch touchscreen navigation system, 6-speaker SiriusXM radio
with USB/aux-in, reversing camera, two 12V power outlets, Bluetooth, heated
side mirrors, and push-button keyless start.

The regular upholstery is a soft grey fabric, almost felt-like, with bright
blue piping. It looks and feels great, and the seats themselves are firm and
comfortable, though I can’t help but wish Kia had gone for something other
than grey for the majority of the dashboard. The glossy white plastic trim
around the infotainment system looks good, though.

The Soul EV+ throws in fog lights and power-folding exterior mirrors,
leather seats - perforated, and still with the neat electric-blue piping -
with an extra level of heating control in the front and heated rear outboard
seats, ventilated front seats, and park-assist for the front and rear.

You might not realize it, but the drivetrain isn’t the only place where Kia
has gone to some effort to lessen its petroleum footprint. A combination of
corn and sugar based plastics, as well as thermoplastic elastomer fabric,
means that around 53 pounds of interior trim is actually eco-friendly, the
company says, rather than using traditional plastics made from fossil fuels.

The headliner, carpet, A-pillar trim, center console, and most of the cargo
area trim all use the new fabrics and plastics, and Kosowski says that’s
just the start of it. “You’ll see in the future fewer and fewer petroleum
materials used,” he explained, as Kia experiments with non-traditional and
renewable options.

Behind the wheel, you get gages for power status - including an indicator to
remind you when you’re driving economically, and when you’re regenerating
power - and speed, flanking a low-power 3.5-inch OLED for trip data. There’s
more information to be found on the EV drivetrain through the center
touchscreen, however.

For instance, you can see an map estimate of how far you could travel on
your remaining charge, though it’s only a simple circle spreading out from
your current position rather than taking into account different types of
road. Kia taps into SiriusXM’s charging point database, too - the Soul EV
has a built-in 3G connection for feeding data to the companion UVO
EVServices smartphone app, as well as passing location and accident data to
roadside assistance or 911, but the satellite connection means you’ll still
get charger details even if you don’t have a data signal from Verizon’s
baked-in modem.

From the phone app, you can check current charge status, remotely start or
stop charging, and see where the car is. Kia is bundling five years of UVO
EVServices with each Soul EV; pricing after that hasn’t been decided yet,
and there are sadly no current plans to turn the car into a mobile hotspot,
GM-style, head of connected cars Henry Bzeih told me.

It’s all easy to use, and I was pleased to see that Kia hadn’t done away
with physical buttons entirely, keeping a mixture of touch and hard
controls. Navigation and multimedia can share a split-screen view.

Interestingly - and relatively unusually in my experience - Bzeih told me
that, while the Soul EV won’t support either Apple CarPlay or Android Auto
initially, the car’s infotainment system would support an update to one or
both down the line. Kia hasn’t decided on whether it’ll actually go through
with retrofitting existing cars that way, but simply the fact that it’s a
possibility is a differentiator from most other car companies that have
committed to the smartphone hook-ups but are yet to actually deliver them.

The other cabin changes are predominantly eco-focused. The Soul EV uses an
HVAC heat pump, combining the AC and heating circuits into one - 27-percent
more efficient, so Kia tells me, than what you’d get in a traditional EV -
and there’s clever air sampling which checks how close exterior temperatures
are to the driver’s settings, and can scale back the air-conditioning pump
if the difference is minor.

Hit the “Driver Only” button, meanwhile, and all the vents not directly
pointed at whoever’s behind the wheel shut off, also cutting the amount of
work the HVAC needs to do.

Pricing and Value

Sticker to sticker, the Soul EV carries quite a premium over its gas
siblings. Whereas you can pick up a regular Soul from $15,100, the Soul EV
is $33,700, and the Soul EV+ comes in at $35,700.

That’s before rebates and incentives, of course, and when the Soul EV lands
in California in October it’ll benefit from $7,500 of federal tax rebate and
a further $2,500 from the state. That brings the cost of entry to an
altogether more reasonable $23,700, and leaves the Soul EV looking
competitive against the electric alternatives.

Nissan’s Leaf - probably the most obvious alternative - can be had a little
cheaper, from $21,510 after incentives, but has less range and less standard
kit. Kia will also be offering a three year, 36k mile lease option for $249
a month.

As for charging, Soul EV drivers will get a Kia ChargeUp card powered by
greenlots, which will grant access to the network of public chargers, while
the car will work with Bosche, Leviton, and Aerovironment domestic 240V
chargers too. Meanwhile, Kia is putting multiple 240V and 480V chargers in
its own dealerships, to try to flesh out the number of places a Soul EV can
top-up. It’s not quite Tesla’s Supercharger network, but it’s a good start.

Wrap-Up

As is the case with most electric cars, Kia’s launch plans are conservative.
The Soul EV will arrive in California first, followed by Oregon, and then
the company plans to look at the east coast and EV hotspots such as
metropolitan Atlanta and Austin. Nobody would tell me how many it hopes to
sell, or even how many Kia will be making.

2015-kia-soul-ev-first-drive-sg-3

It deserves to succeed, however. The Soul EV keeps what I like about the
regular Soul - its chunky, playful looks; great interior space; and
comfortable driving style - but throws in the torquey fun of electric drive
and an even more grounded feel on the road, without much in the way of
compromise.

Sure, 93 miles isn’t close to what you’d get from a full tank of gas in the
regular car, but if Kia can really deliver on its range accuracy commitment,
that’ll go a long way toward assuaging the anxieties of the city dwellers
the Soul EV seems perfect for.

Those with longer range demands (and lacking the funds to scratch their itch
for a Tesla) should probably look to something like a Prius or Volt, but for
the city the Soul EV hits the spot. More personality than a Leaf, a cabin
that doesn’t feel compromised in either design or equipment, and lashings of
usable space all add up to making the 2015 Soul EV my pick of the more
affordable all-electric cars.
[© 2014 SlashGear]



http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-drive/reviews/new-cars/kia-adds-soul-to-the-electric-vehicle-market/article20803076/
Kia adds Soul to the electric vehicle market
by TOM MALONEY, a guest of the auto maker   Sep. 26 2014

Add one more product choice to Canada’s so-far hesitant electric vehicle
market. Kia’s funky Soul will be available as an all-electric car for the
2015 model year, in addition to the gasoline model that’s sold in North
America since 2009.

In sync with the Canadian market, Kia is rolling out the Soul EV carefully
through 11 dealerships in five cities – Victoria, Vancouver, Toronto,
Ottawa, Montreal and Quebec City. EVs sell better in Quebec than other
provinces.

Powered by a lithium-ion polymer battery, the motor delivers 109 horsepower
and maximum speed of more than 140 km/h. Range is stated as a
government-tested 149 kilometres city/highway on a single charge, similar to
others in the price range. A full recharge takes 24 hours on household
current, less than five hours with a 240-volt charger, 33 minutes with a
480v/50-kW system (24 minutes with 100-kW). There are three charging
portals.

The retail price in Canada is $34,995 for the base model and $37,995 for the
luxury trim, the latter coming with heated and cooled leather front seats,
and heated back seats. The big difference between the trims is a heat pump
that reduces energy consumption by a company-estimated 27 per cent. At a
presentation here on Friday, Kia introduced a
heating/air-conditioning/ventilation system that was tested in harsh winter
conditions in Sweden; it purportedly mitigates the toll on the battery in
cold weather.

The base model is well-equipped with power windows, cruise control,
Bluetooth, an onboard charger, navigation system, heated front seats and a
climate-control system designed to minimize draw from the battery. The
temperature inside the vehicle can be established while the vehicle is
charging, meaning less draw on the battery once the car is on the road. Both
trims come with low-resistance 16-inch tires. In the United States, an app
enables drivers to monitor battery usage and search for charging stations.
The app is not available in Canada.

Quebec ($8,000) and Ontario ($8,500) residents are eligible for provincial
EV rebates. Kia announced Friday that the 240-volt charger will be provided
free, leaving customers only to worry about the cost of a charger
installation. Ontario and Quebec offer up to $1,000 rebates for
installation, the price of which can vary significantly with the age of a
home's infrastructure.

The Soul, its boxy shape mitigated by smoothly curved panels, is in a class
of its own among EVs in Canada as a compact crossover utility vehicle.
Present owners will scantly notice the space difference between gas and EV
editions. The 27-kWh battery, stowed under the floor in an air-cooled
compartment, takes 7.6 centimetres of space from the rear seats compared
with the gasoline Leaf.

There’s enough space behind the back seats to fit a couple of filled paper
yard-waste bags (though for stuffed hockey bags, you’re looking at seats
folded down). The Fiat 500L is the one EV in the price range with similar
dimensions, but is sold only in California. To test capacity, Car & Driver
creatively fit an IKEA furniture package in the back of each vehicle with
seats folded down.

The Soul EV comes in three colours: pearl white with blue trim, electric
blue with white, and onyx black with red. The aggressive front grill on the
gas Soul disappears on the EV version, replace by a plastic plate to house
the port (the plastic is made from environmentally friendly materials such
as sugar cane).

Finally, the answer to the big question: Yes, the hamsters return in the
marketing and, with buyers expected to skew heavily male, the female
versions posture provocatively in the video clip.
[© theglobeandmail.com]
...
http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2014/09/28/kia-rolls-out-soul-ev-electric-car-in-bid-to-change-image-in-us/
Kia rolls out Soul EV electric car in bid to change image in U.S.
September 28, 2014





For EVLN posts use:
http://www.evdl.org/archive/index.html#nabble+template%2FNamlServlet.jtp%3Fmacro%3Dsearch_page%26node%3D413529%26query%3Devln%26sort%3Ddate

http://www.express.co.uk/travel/activity/513960/Best-Autumn-days-out
Twizy EV to enjoy Narrowboats, a cuckoo trail and candlelit gardens

http://www.auto123.com/en/news/tesla-model-x-could-be-revealed-in-detroit?artid=171407
Tesla Model X could be revealed in Detroit

http://www.northcountrygazette.org/2014/09/22/climate_week/
500 Public EVSE Prepars NY For The New Extreme-Weather Reality
+
EVLN: BMW C Evolution ecycle is a pricey proposition that makes sense


{brucedp.150m.com}



--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-Kia-Soul-EV-isn-t-playing-around-what-they-got-right-r-93-110mi-tp4671882.html
Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at 
Nabble.com.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
For EV drag racing discussion, please use NEDRA 
(http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to