2003 Kia Sorento Sport Utility Vehicle Reviews & Ratings

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2003 Kia Sorento Reviews

 

Welcome to the car reviews section of UsedCarsChannel.com, where you can search for consumer 2003 Kia Sorento car reviews for all trims! How does this car handle? What kind of 2003 Kia Sorento 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 2003 Kia Sorento reviews at UsedCarsChannel.com.

 
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Kia Sorento Interior Review

The Kia Sorento is a roomy vehicle, offering slightly more headroom and equal front shoulder room to that of the Jeep Grand Cherokee. Three adults will fit in the back seat, with generous leg room and four cup holders.

The Sorento is built to a price, and this is most evident in the interior. The EX has splashes of "woodgrain" trim, which is plastic doing a poor job imitating wood. The woodgrain surrounds the center stack on the dash and splashes of it are on the door panels. The steering wheel rim on the Luxury package Sorento is half leather, half woodgrain, where a full-leather wheel would be nicer to grip.

The interior of the Kia Sorento is loaded with features, however. An overhead console offers sunglasses storage, map lights and a garage door opener pocket. A display provides readouts for outside temperature, compass, altitude, and, for weather buffs, barometric pressure. (We can think of no other car in history that has offered a barometer.) The center console has double bins, and there are useful cubbies, including a soft-touch slide out storage bin and a tip-out coin bin, both felt lined. A storage bin under front seat is standard, and the big lockable glove box has a map shelf plus the usual room. There are two power points up front, one for the second row and another in the cargo area.

The shifter is easy to reach and has a straight fore-and-back pattern. The control for four-wheel drive is a twist knob on the dash to the left of the steering wheel; the part-time 4wd in the LX includes a low range. The ignition key is on the dash, easier than fumbling to find a column-mounted keyhole behind the steering wheel.

The cargo area is accessible through the hatch, or through the rear glass window. There's another storage area under the cargo area floor. A cargo cover comes standard. The full-size spare tire is mounted under the vehicle and, if the model has alloy wheels, the spare is mounted on an alloy wheel as well. The rear seat flips and folds 60/40 to form a flat floor with a cargo capacity of 66.4 cubic feet with the rear seat folded. With the seat raised, there's 31.4 cubic feet of cargo room.



Kia Sorento Road Test

The Kia Sorento is quite capable off road, but you don't have to be a budding Daniel Boone to appreciate its driving capabilities. The engine is smooth and powerful, barely perceptible at idle but producing a velvety roar at full throttle. Wind noise can be heard around the A-pillars, but it's not oppressive and certainly quieter than the old Jeep Cherokee, the nadir of noise.

The Sorento needs all of its 192 horsepower and 217 pounds-feet of torque to move its 4255 pounds. The Jeep Grand Cherokee, in comparison, weighs 3989 with the base in-line six that produces 195 hp and 230 lb-ft of torque, or 4081 lbs with the top V8 producing 265 hp and 325 lb-ft of torque. Unless you're going to the SUV drags, or have a heavy trailer to pull, you'll never notice, however. The Sorento has the oats to merge with freeway traffic and motor quietly once there, and with a 3500-lb. towing capacity, the Sorento will be able to pull camping trailers or dirt bike or personal watercraft trailers with ease. The Sorento loses out to the six-cylinder Grand Cherokee in highway mileage, at a 18 mpg versus 20 mpg Highway, but both 4x4 models are rated at 15 mpg around town. In real world driving, the difference should be slight.

The Sorento's wide track does give a sense of stability in corners. Ride quality is acceptable, adequate around town and at lower speeds, but it could use some improvement at higher speeds. On the interstate, longer motions, such as an undulating transitioning off an overpass, induces odd motions. It never threatens vehicle control, but on a rolling roadway it would be annoying. The long suspension motions are too soft, and perhaps rebound could be tightened up for a more controlled feel.

The Sorento comes standard with four-wheel disc brakes, and the large diameter vented discs will be hard to fade, even heavily loaded down long mountain passes. ABS is a standalone option, however, not included even on the EX with the luxury package.

Although most SUV drivers never take their mounts off-road, if an SUV has four-wheel drive (or even if it doesn't), it needs to have the ruggedness to go afield. The Kia Sorento does. It has sturdy body-on-frame construction and just how sturdy is apparent when one goes seriously off road, which we did to test the Sorento in extreme conditions. And despite crawling over body-twisting trails, the Sorento didn't creak, groan or rattle, suggesting that the frame is sturdy indeed.

The Sorento's excellent approach and departure angles are a benefit of short front and rear overhangs that make climbing abruptly steep hills possible without dragging a front or rear bumper in the dirt. Its nimble turning radius makes navigation in the woods less difficult as well. That 36.4 foot turning radius will help you in the parking lot, too.



Kia Sorento Lineup

The 2003 Kia Sorento is available in two trim levels: LX and EX. Pricing had not been announced when this was written, but we're guessing $18,500 for an LX and $22,500 for an EX with four-wheel drive adding about $1500 to each.

LX comes loaded with standard features. A 3.5-liter 24-valve double overhead-cam V6 is standard, and comes with an electronically-controlled four-speed automatic with overdrive. Other standard features include air conditioning, central locking, power windows with driver-side express down, dual heated power mirrors, cruise control (with steering wheel-mounted controls), tilt wheel, AM/FM/CD sound system with eight speakers, and a rear cargo cover; these features are often extra cost on other SUVs.

EX is powered by the same V6, but replaces the LX's engine-speed sensitive power rack & pinion steering with electronic vehicle speed sensing power. Also added are floor mats, standard alloy wheels, a power sunroof, 8-way power driver's seat, remote keyless entry, a "multimeter" in the overhead console, electrochromatic inside rearview mirror, Homelink, and a Delphi premium CD/cassette stereo with steering wheel audio controls.

A Luxury package optional on the EX includes a sophisticated Torque on Demand full-time all-wheel drive system (that also includes a "low range"), automatic headlamps, heated front seats, automatic air conditioning, and a six-disc in-dash CD changer. A self-leveling rear suspension and a rear spoiler are options for the EX. Leather upholstery is available as an option.

Four-wheel anti-lock brakes (ABS) is a standalone option on all models.



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