2000 Kia Spectra Compact Car Reviews & Ratings

  Read this 2000 Kia Spectra review at UsedCarsChannel.com. These professional and consumer 2000 Kia Spectra reviews include car comparisons, road tests, interior and exterior options and features, safety information, specs, and more.
Car Classifieds Car Dealers Car Prices Car Reviews
 

2000 Kia Spectra Reviews

 

Welcome to the car reviews section of UsedCarsChannel.com, where you can search for consumer 2000 Kia Spectra car reviews for all trims! How does this car handle? What kind of 2000 Kia Spectra ratings did the car receive? How large is in the interior? Is it comfortable to drive? Learn all of this and more in each of the consumer 2000 Kia Spectra reviews at UsedCarsChannel.com.

 
Find this 2000 Kia Spectra in your area

Kia Spectra Interior Review

The Spectra is an inexpensive car, and this point is reflected in its interior. The dash design is generic and inoffensive, and could have come from one of many Asian sedans. The controls are easy to use, however. Kia has responded to earlier complaints about tiny radio controls. As a result, even ham-fingered auto writers can operate the Spectra's radio without much distraction. The base GS has a standard tachometer and AM/FM/cassette stereo.

Door panels on less-expensive cars are often plain plastic, but both the GS and GSX have cloth door-panel inserts. The GSX upholstery is upgraded to sport cloth. The seat bottoms on the front buckets, however, are short on support for longer legs. Overall, the quality of the plastic parts in the interior is below the standards for the class. The GSX is enhanced by a leather-wrapped steering wheel and gearshift knob.

The rear seat will accommodate three, but not if they're adult males who plan to be there for a while. The seat folds 60/40 for cargo flexibility that challenges a small wagon and, with the Spectra's hatch design, is even easier access. Seats up, the official trunk has 11.6 cubic feet of luggage room, which is excellent for a small car.



Kia Spectra Road Test

The Spectra GSX is not blindingly fast, but if the driver is willing to rev the engine it produces spunky acceleration performance with the five-speed manual transmission. The engine revs with abandon and seems happy to do so.

The gearshift lever has a rubbery feel, but we never missed a shift. Clutch take-up is smooth and light. We suspect the optional automatic transmission would sap a good deal of the engine's vigor; comparing the ratios of both transmissions seconds that impression. Anyone at all interested in acceleration in a Spectra should learn how to drive a stick. Nonetheless, the automatic has a tall overdrive ratio (0.70:1). Not only does that mean quieter cruising at freeway speeds, but it also delivers better EPA highway mileage ratings: 32 mpg compared to 29 mpg with the five-speed. The manual edges the automatic in city mileage, however, at 23 mpg vs. 22 mpg.

In cornering, the Spectra offers good balance, as one would expect from Lotus Engineering. Like most front-wheel-drive cars, its handling is predisposed to understeer (the front tires begin losing grip before the rear tires do). Turn-in for corners is a little sluggish: Our impression was that there's something rubbery between the steering wheel and the pavement, with a squishiness that has to be taken up before the Spectra begins to turn. This is particularly noticeable in fast, slalom-type directional changes.

The Spectra is quiet on the highway, with a surprising absence of wind or engine racket. It feels larger than its compact measurements would seem to warrant, even on an extended drive.

We were delighted by the performance of the standard brakes. We checked them out on a closed circuit that had several corners requiring high-speed braking. The Spectra's brakes never whimpered nor showed any signs of fading. That's extraordinary for an economy car.



Kia Spectra Lineup

The Spectra lineup consists of one body style: a hatchback with four passenger doors and a quasi-fastback roofline.

The base trim model is designated the GS and lists at $10,795. At $12,995, the Spectra GSX adds air conditioning, alloy wheels, power windows, central locking and an aggressive-looking body kit.

All Spectras are powered by a 1.8-liter four-cylinder engine rated at 125 horsepower. They come with a 5-speed manual or optional 4-speed automatic transmission ($975) driving the front wheels. Options include antilock brakes ($800) and CD stereo ($295).



  Find Other Used Car Reviews by Make:  
Car Classifieds Car Dealers Car Prices Car Reviews
Copyright 2008 Used Cars Channel.com All Rights Reserved