Ok, so here it goes:
I scheduled some test drives at a few different places yesterday in the quest for a new car. The goal was to find something for right around $20k-under, and get as much as possible for the 3. Had a 2018 3 Grand Touring 6MT hatch and a 2019 Jetta GLI lined up, but the Kia dealer was literally on the way there, so we popped in there first. I had wanted to take out a 2020 Civic Si as well, but the last one at the local dealer sold last week. Bummer.
Anyway, I took the car out, and was pleasantly surprised with it. The benchmark being my own Mazda 3, the car was faster, handled better, and felt good to drive. Honestly, the car reminded me A LOT of my friend's old 2009 Civic Si sedan, replacing the high-winding Vtec mill with a turbo engine with some low-end grunt, and that is a very good thing. The seats are great; supportive, not over-bolstered, and fat guy friendly. Clutch is light, but feels good, brakes are fantastic, and the shifter is "good enough"; not quite as "snickety" as the Mazda's was, but it feels good with slightly longer throws. Unexpectedly, the car's exhaust is a little rowdy. It crackles and pops a bit and makes turbo sounds.
After that drive, I never made it to the other dealers. This was the one.
So, we started the dance of negotiating on the car, and we came to a fair deal, although it took literally all day. Got there at 9:30AM and didn't get home until almost 6PM, maybe later. In the middle of that, I had to go home and clean out the Mazda.
That's me, all sad, like I'm losing my best friend. This car got me through some tough times and did everything I ever asked it to with a smile. I feel like I failed it by letting it go, but cars come and go and you gotta do what ya gotta do. I'll do a post-mortem in my Mazda 3 thread.
But we're here to talk about this.
This is a 2020 Kia Forte GT in Aurora Black Pearl.
Wheels are 18x7.5, with 225/40/18 tires. You can get summer rubber for $200 more, but I am fine with all seasons. Behind the fronts are 12" discs, which are upgraded over whatever the stock Fortes have.
Inside, you get pleather/cloth seating with red piping and GT embroidery, a flat bottom steering wheel that's similar to the one in the Stinger, machined aluminum pedals, and a whole lotta black plastic and "soft touch" stuff.
Under the hood lives the 1.6L GDI Turbo 4-cylinder, good for 201hp/195tq. My Mazda was almost identical under the hood, save for the turbo stuff. I know a lot of modern 4's are, but I already know where everything is!
Under that small engine cover is all of this. Everything looks like it makes sense; nothing weird here. Nice.
And the other stuff:
-Infotainment is decent. 8" touchscreen, but they do encourage some touching while driving, which is a surprise. Kinda odd. Some stuff can be done with the steering wheel and some buttons under the radio, but not everything.
-Android Auto works really well here. It's integrated nicely. You do have to have it plugged in via USB to use it.
-Stereo sounds good. It "bumps" and "slaps", as my 18 year old nephew says.
-Lots-o-trip computer stuff, logging of various data, and more. I still have to figure it all out.
-It has a wireless charging shelf. Cool.
-The console lid doesn't slide forward. I liked that on the Mazda. The lesser Fortes can get that as an option, so I'll swap one in later.
-Lots of other small thoughtful touches. You can turn on/off any of the driving nannies at any time, which is cool.
And then there's "Sport Mode". Pressing the Sport button on the console brings up a pic of the car, and it turns red, because RED MEANS FAST. The steering immediately tightens up, the already burbly exhaust gets burblier (pretty sure it's simulated, but whatever, I'm 16 inside and it's awesome) and most importantly, throttle response gets better and the car does seem to go faster. I briefly read somewhere that someone dyno'ed their car with and without Sport Mode on and it made more power/boost with it on. I'm not sure about that, but the Butt Dyno definitely says there's a difference. I do wish it had a LSD, but I don't plan on tracking/autox with this car, so that's ok. It still gets off the line quick enough.
I had time to drive it all over the place today, and it's a lot more fun than I ever imagined a Kia would be. With mixed driving, I am averaging about 30mpg. Not too bad, and it keeps going up as I drive it more. It's comfortable, although it does have a firm ride and not "bank vault quiet" like the 2020 Mazda 3 I drove. This may sound weird, but this car feels like what the Mazda 3 used to be: a low-priced, fun car that handles well and is sporty enough to be an interesting daily driver. It has that edge that the 3 no longer has. It's like a 2/3's Mazdaspeed 3 in sedan form. I dig it.
I'll post up a maintenance/driving log/build thread soon.