Second Place
2004 Kia Rio Cinco
This is a lovable car. It's arguably the best proportioned, most cleanly styled wagonlet of the bunch. It's also the undisputed hauling hero, with room for two to three times as much stuff behind the rear seat as either of the other cars offers. And its lower lift-over height and wider-opening hatch make loading a breeze. So if one is piling people and gear--and maybe a kegger--in for a pledge-class "walkout" road trip, the Kia is the most accommodating.
Then again, at the end of our 700-mile drive we were asking ourselves whether road-tripping was part of the expected duty cycle in this class. None of these three cars even offers cruise control as a factory option, and the driver's seats in the Korean cars aren't optimized for long-haul comfort. Both offer height adjustment, and the Kia has knobs for tailoring lumbar support and the seat cushion angle. It even boasts a fold-down center armrest. But no amount of knob-twiddling could fix these soft and unsupportive seats.
By contrast, the Scion's firm, well-bolstered chairs offer no ancillary adjustments yet felt sublimely comfortable. The Rio's cockpit is further stymied by a dead pedal situated too far back from the plane of the accelerator and by a steering wheel that feels too close to shorter-stature drivers.
Our Take: 2004 Kia Rio Cinco What's Hot • Cavernous cargo hold • Svelte, nicely resolved styling • Low, low pricingWhat's Not • Rowdy engine, wind, and road noise • Unsupportive seats • Akimbo driving position Don't Miss Mega warranty pays the big bills for 100,000miles, with roadside assistance for five years Bottom Line Most useful package in the prettiest wrapper suffers frightening depreciation |
The amount of engine NVH, wind rush, and road roar that manages to penetrate the Kia's compartment bring to mind a bygone era, especially when the hammer's down. All these shortcomings illustrate the fact that Kia and Daewoo are way down the car-design learning curve from Toyota. That said, we feel the Hyundai/Kia conglomerate is noticeably ahead of Daewoo in 2004.
This bold assertion was largely arrived at while flogging our threesome through Ohio's roller-coaster roadways. Despite wearing the smallest tires, the comparatively low-slung Rio's various chassis bits seemed more coordinated, allowing the car to bite harder in turns, conform to hilly bends, and go exactly where it was pointed with no steering corrections and minimal complaint from the Hankooks.