Category Archives: Vehicle type

Alfa’s stylish powerhouse

Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio

By Bill McCarthy


A beautifully styled saloon with explosive pace, but without the huge spoilers and air scoops associated with with some other hot performers, Alfa’s firecracker Quadrifoglio throws down a huge challenge to its sporty competitors, particularly the Germans in the shape of M Sport, AMG and RS.

Okay, it does have spoilers, air scoops, carbon bits and pieces and bright shiny trim, but in an altogether more subtle manner.

Like many Alfas it is impossibly good looking in its Competizione red livery, dark alloy wheels and familiar Alfa shield grille, with the four tail pipes and the seemingly innocuous four-leaf clover logo, or Quadrifoglio, that gives it its name, a clue to the power lurking under the bonnet. 

 It also features LED rear light clusters with dark lenses plus glossy black front and rear badges, deeper bumpers 

Performance is outrageous from the six-cylinder 2.9 litre beast which delivers 510bhp and an astonishing 600Nm of torque. It can it 60 mph in under four seconds and on to a racetrack-devouring 191mph. True supercar performance.

Startling performance, but there is much to it than that. A full-sized family saloon with superb driving dynamics, a comfortable ride in normal circumstances and practical with a huge boot split folding rear seats to increase the alread spacious 480 litres.

This Quad model has a more heavyweight, muscular look with stunning dark 19-inch alloy wheels with (optional) yellow brake calipers, lowered suspension and deeper bumpers front and rear.

The interior too is a delight, echoing the sport theme with leather/Alcantara powered seats with contrasting stitching, sports pedals and gearshift and with carbon fibre materials to complement the soft touch finish. 

The  finish to doors and dash, leather seats and ambient lighting giving the vehicle a real upmarket feel, with plenty of head and legroom, despite the sloping roofline.

Centrepoint is a resdesigned dash featuring the 8.8-inch Alfa Connect with navigation and Apple CarPlay and Android Auto as standard, plus DAB radio, 3D Nav, MP3, Aux-i and Bluetooth. 

Major controls can also be selected by touch or the rotary controller on the centre console, while he neat multi-function steering wheel which also has a novel touch with the starter button.

But the big appeal of the Quad is performance, taking a smart, large saloon from early £30k price tag to almost double that at around £65k for hair-raising performance.

Mated to a super-slick eight speed dual clutch transmission, the V6 roars into life under hard acceleration. The 60mph sprint is dismissed in under four seconds and its about then you have to start putting the brakes on, before you’ve really got going.

To cope with all the power, the adaptive suspension does what it says on the tin, together with accurate and responsive steering keeping the car straight and true, particularly on sharp bends. It’s a riot to drive and selecting the steering wheel paddles on heightens the thrill. Given that it is rear-wheel drive, which the purists will love, traction and stability are remarkable.

Calm it all down and the V6 roar recedes to a burble and the suspension adapts to new driving conditions for that trip to the supermarket, school gates or lengthy motorway journey.

Considering the power under the bonnet, economy is not too shabby either with around 28mpg.

 Such a powerful car needs plenty of safety kit and it is packed with safety features including ADAS an autonomous driving system which allows the  driver gives to surrender control of the accelerator, brakes and steering under certain conditions.

The idea is the  electronic systems gives greater comfort on long journeys, but the driver must continuously remain in control, always keeping their hands on the steering wheel.

Other kit includes lane keep and active blind spot assist, active cruise control, traffic sign recognition and intelligent speed control, traffic jam and highway assist and driver drowsiness alert.precision of the steering.

This Alfa is a winner in so many ways, power, pace, practicality, packed with standard kit, impossible good looks, and yes, even half decent economy. A real firecracker of an alternative.

Factfile

Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio

Price: £64,900

Mechanical: 510bhp, 2891cc, six cylinder bi-turbo charged petrol engine driving rear wheels  via 8 speed auto gearbox

Insurance: 46E

Max speed: 191mph

0-62mph: 3.9 seconds

Combined mpg: 27.2

CO2 emissions: 202g/km

Warranty: 3yrs/unimited miles

Kia on a charge with Niro

Kia Niro Niro 1.6 GDi HEV ‘4’

By Bill McCarthy


The Kia success story keeps rolling on. Note the use of superstar Robert De Niro to promote sales of, guess what, the updated Niro.

The new self-charger here sits alongside the plug-in version and fully electric model and offers excellent economy of nearly 60mpg with the entry model and low carbon emissions from 110g/km.

The petrol-electric hybrid combo is mated with six-speed auto dual-clutch automatic gearbox, so much smoother that the traditional CVT,  with combined power output 139bhp.

With energy recovery via braking, the car can run for a short distance on electric only before engine and battery power start working in parallel again.

Now updated, it only seems to have been on the market for five minutes, the crossover/SUV comes with a three-mode grades, ‘2’, ‘3’ and ‘4’ .

It is based on an all-new platform exclusively for electrified cars with batteries located under the rear seat for low centre of gravity and compactness.

It is a smart looking car, which Kia says overcomes the design limitations of other dedicated hybrids without sacrificing practicality, versatility and aerodynamic efficiency, which delivers a fuel-efficient design with a drag co-efficient (Cd) of 0.29, despite the standard roof rails.

Well, they would say that wouldn’t they? The truth is that most hybrid vehicles nowadays perform this feat, although maybe not as slippery through the air, but the Niro does have an attractive road presence.

It features the signature ‘tiger nose’ grille, new bumpers at the front and new light design to front and rear. The bumper design is finished with a silver-painted skid plate and incorporates new light reflectors and rear fog lamps in the corners.

The revised interior features high-end soft-touch finish to doors and dash, new gloss black trim with satin chrome highlights. 

‘A fine package all round with good economy, decent styling and a brand name that doesn’t deter buyers’

Central is the new 10.25-inch TFT widescreen for the main display on higher grades, which controls navigation, with European Mapping & Traffic Messaging Channel (TMC), connectivity and eight-speaker sound system plus, on this model, a seven-inch information screen behind the multi-function steering wheel.. 

The new UVO Connect Service offers Android and Apple connectivity as standard, giving access to navigation, music, hands-free calls and texts and voice recognition through those smartphone apps.

This range topper is packed with equipment including parking camera, electric sunroof, leather, powered front seats,  a full complement of safety kit.

These include collision avoidance with vehicle, pedestrian and cyclist detection, smart adaptive cruise control and lane assist, blind spot and rear cross traffic warning systems, which makes the sub-£30k price tag seem pretty attractive. The entry level model of just under £25k.

As a crossover, it needs to be practical, and it is with split/folding rear seats, integrated roof rails and various pockets and holders throughout. Boot space is decent despite having the battery to the rear end with easy-to load 373-litre rectangular boot and low loading lip.

On the road, the Niro is a car more designed for comfort and practicality than performance. The power units propel the car to 60mph in a fairly leisurely 11 seconds, via the smooth shifting dual clutch transmission. Switch to the paddles for a bit more fun, but economy is really the watchword with the claimed 54-odd mpg seeming pretty near the mark. However it is an extremely comfortable motorway cruiser.

Despite its relative height, it’s a family car that feels well planted and secure on corners with little evidence of body roll, with the softish suspension giving a comfortable ride for occupants.

A fine package all round with good economy, decent styling and a brand name that doesn’t deter buyers.

Add with that seven-year warranty then what’s not to like?

Factfile

Kia Niro Niro 1.6 GDi HEV ‘4’

Price: £29,600

Mechanical: 139bhp 1580cc petrol engine and electric motor driving front wheels via six-speed dual clutch auto gearbox

Max speed: 101mph

0-60mph: 11.1 seconds

Combined mpg: 54.3

Insurance group: 12E

CO2 emissions: 120g/km

Warranty: 7yrs/100,000 miles