http://blog.seattlepi.com/topdown/2015/06/08/2015-kia-soul-ev-the-roll-of-a-blue-machine/#33469101=0
2015 Kia Soul EV — the roll of a blue machine
June 8, 2015

[images  / Michael Taylor
http://blog.timesunion.com/carsource/wp-content/blogs.dir/2528/files/2015-kia-soul-ev/img_2953.jpg
  
The 2015 Kia Soul EV costs a little over $36,000 and gets the electric car
equivalent of 109 mpg. It has a range of about 93 miles when fully charged

http://blog.timesunion.com/carsource/wp-content/blogs.dir/2528/files/2015-kia-soul-ev/img_2941.jpg
The Soul EV comes in a base model and a Plus model. Our tester was the Plus
model and had leather seats

http://blog.timesunion.com/carsource/wp-content/blogs.dir/2528/files/2015-kia-soul-ev/img_2943.jpg
Rear seating in the Soul EV is fine, but three passengers might find it a
bit cramped after 50 miles or so

http://blog.timesunion.com/carsource/wp-content/blogs.dir/2528/files/2015-kia-soul-ev/img_2945.jpg
The 2015 Soul EV dashboard and center console

http://blog.timesunion.com/carsource/wp-content/blogs.dir/2528/files/2015-kia-soul-ev/img_2946.jpg
The center screen is replete with information about the car's electrical
systems and performance

http://blog.timesunion.com/carsource/wp-content/blogs.dir/2528/files/2015-kia-soul-ev/img_2948.jpg
The electric motor is rated at 109 horsepower

http://blog.timesunion.com/carsource/wp-content/blogs.dir/2528/files/2015-kia-soul-ev/img_2952.jpg
Rear seats fold down for more cargo space

http://blog.timesunion.com/carsource/wp-content/blogs.dir/2528/files/2015-kia-soul-ev/img_2957.jpg
Front-mounted charging ports

http://blog.timesunion.com/carsource/wp-content/blogs.dir/2528/files/2015-kia-soul-ev/img_2963.jpg
The Soul EV is almost identical to its gasoline-powered soulmate, the Soul

http://blog.timesunion.com/carsource/wp-content/blogs.dir/2528/files/2015-kia-soul-ev/img_2964.jpg
(rear)
]

First, let’s talk about its looks. The Kia Soul EV, an all-electric
four-door, looks the same as its gasoline-powered stablemate, the Kia Soul,
and they both look something like a smiley toy that’s talked its way into a
Pixar movie and will win approving nods from attentive parents. What?

This means that it doesn’t look like a Lamborghini or a Mustang. It looks
like what it is: a box with a hatchback (hatchbox?) that barges its way
through the air and provides good transportation for five people and a
modicum of luggage. It’s the way it’s drawn that is distinctive. It really
does look boxy – intentionally and whimsically so. And it works.

Second, let’s get to the electric portion of all this. A minimum of 14
percent of new cars offered for sale in California by the world’s car makers
must be zero emission vehicles. The most practical way to do that, to get to
zero emissions from the tailpipe, is to offer cars powered only by
electricity; hence, the Kia Soul EV, not to mention Nissan Leaf, Honda Fit,
BMW i3 and a host of others.

The Soul EV, then, turns out to be a pleasant, small car that is eerily
silent (all electrics are pretty quiet) and has that relatively quick pickup
that characterize this sort of car – it’s direct power, from foot to motor.
The Soul EV also has what appears to be a best-in-class range; it’s about 93
miles before it needs a charge.

Which brings us to the bête noire of all electrics: range. We’re so spoiled,
we petrol-driven users. There are more than 120,000 gas stations in the U.S.
and, aside from wandering across U.S. 50 in Nevada (dubbed “the loneliest
road in America”) with a quarter of a tank of gas, it’s doubtful you’ll run
out of fuel unless you simply ignore the gas gauge and the increasingly
insistent bells and lights that tell you you’re about to stop dead in the
middle of nowhere. With the Soul EV and every other electric car (even the
$100,000 Tesla Model S, with its nearly 300-mile range), you are on a leash.

That means you need to charge up the car’s battery whenever you can. The
Soul EV takes 24 hours for a full charge on regular house current (120V) or
four to five hours on 240 volts. Better still is the public charging
station, where you can get an 80 percent charge on the Soul EV in half an
hour. According to the Alternative Fuels Data Center (part of the U.S.
Department of Energy), there are 24,925 public charging outlets in the U.S.
So it’s not as bad as it seems.

And that, in turn, leads us to the real purpose of an electric car. In
addition to saying farewell to gasoline, if you play your commuting cards
right, you should be able to drive to work and drive home on a single
charge. Green Car Reports, citing a 2012 Columbia University study, showed
that “electric cars could meet as much as 95 percent of all daily driving
needs of U.S. citizens.” Given that most commutes are less than 40 miles one
way, you could easily make it to work and back without charging up the car.
As a bonus, many workplaces offer electric-car charging stations.

Then again, there’s the issue of pricing. Our test Soul EV, painted a
brilliant blue, had a sticker price of $36,625. (You can also lease the car
for $249 a month, on a three-year lease). But you can buy a gasoline-powered
Kia Soul Plus for about $19,000 ($17,000 less than the Soul EV) and it will
get 23/31 mpg, city/highway. That $17,000 you’ve saved by getting the Soul
Plus will buy you a lot of gasoline.

In the end, as it does with most electric cars, it comes down to this: if
you’re only going to have one car, it’s difficult to justify an
all-electric, unless you don’t mind being hobbled. So it can be a second
car, sitting alongside your limitless-horizon gas car. Or it can be a
political statement.

If you take a couple of steps back from the planet, it’s fairly certain that
we’re in the Model T age for alternative-energy transportation and, in some
ways, it’s fun to noodle around in a silent car like the Soul EV.

But do you want to do that forever?

For more consumer information on cars, check these Web sites:

Safety data can be found at the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety
(IIHS)  and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).

Reliability information can be seen in the  dependability studies conducted
by J.D. Power; and at Consumer Reports.

Fuel mileage figures are available at this site, maintained by the U.S.
Department of Energy.

For trivia lovers: the sticker you see on the window of every new car for
sale in the United States is known in the auto industry as the “Monroney.”
It is named for U.S. Senator Almer Stilwell (Mike) Monroney, the Oklahoma
Democrat who sponsored the Automobile Information Disclosure Act of 1958,
which required all new cars to have labels that detail the price of the car
and its options.
[© 2015 Hearst Seattle Media]




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