Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 76; How COVID-19 Changed Car Buyers; EV Sales Uptick

EV Sales

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

Episode: 76

Broadcast date: April 12, 2021

Guest: Jenni Newman

How COVID-19 Changed Car Buyers; EV Sales Uptick

Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell kick off the show by discussing the upcoming GMC Hummer SUV and pure-electric Chevrolet Silverado, as well as the uptick in EV sales. Cars.com Editor-in-Chief Jenni Newman joins us to talk about the effect COVID-19 has had on car shoppers, based on Cars.com’s internal data and survey results. Tom has a “sales-per-dealer” quiz for Damon and Jill, and Damon runs down the latest articles on the Consumer Guide Daily Drive blog, including a Test Drive review of the 2021 Hyundai Elantra SEL and a gallery of currently available new vehicles powered by 3-cylinder engines.

The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST.

Discussed this week:

Cars.com Pandemic Study

Test Drive: 2021 Hyundai Elantra SEL (with photo gallery)

Missing Pistons? A Gallery of 3-Cylinder Vehicles

Making Six Out Of Four: Watch England’s Allen Millyard Create A Set Of Kawasaki Z1 Six Cylinder Jugs!


Making Six Out Of Four: Watch England’s Allen Millyard Create A Set Of Kawasaki Z1 Six Cylinder Jugs!

We have been showing you some cool videos recently shot by a guy named Allen Millyard in England. This dude creates wild, factory-looking custom motorcycles in his little garage and shed and he does it all basically by hand. In this video we see him take a couple sets of Kawasaki Z1 four cylinder jugs and make a six cylinder set for an engine he is custom creating. The process is fascinating, cool, and something that he makes look really easy but certainly isn’t.

Millyard is a hot rodder of the highest level and his medium is motorcycles. From building a 5-liter V-twin engine and riding it around on a custom chassis to doing stuff like this, he always has neat ideas and has the time, the guile, and the knowledge to make them all work. It’s all so simple on paper, right? Cut some stuff up, weld it back together, and just go ahead and make it perfect so that they fit onto a block you also modified. No sweat! We love his videos because they are really step by step trips through the process of his many, many builds.

We’re going to keep following this one and frankly, having seen this part of the process we should probably show you how he modified the block, tomorrow. Right? Smart guy with basic tools and a really awesome approach. What’s not to love here?

Press play below to watch more magic from Allen Millyard –

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The Caddy Build Gets A ProCharger! Boosted Caddy Power For The Win!


The Caddy Build Gets A ProCharger! Boosted Caddy Power For The Win!

Man this thing is awesome! Remember how we said the 500 inch Caddy was going to get boost from a ProCharger? Yeah, well here it is and it rules and we love it and want it. If you missed the first part of this series, here’s the low down on what is going on. Watch the video and you’ll love what you see.

Our friend Richard Holdener has been hanging out in New Mexico with Courtney and the guys at Cad Company, doing some killer dyno testing on a 500 cubic inch Cadillac recently. They put together a stock rebuild and then started putting more and more power parts on it to see just how much power it would make. At 500 cubic inches, these are not little engines, but they were made for cruising but not big horsepower. With that said, they  do make amazing torque and very respectable horsepower. But in the previous videos you saw that a camshaft, bolts ons, and testing proved there could be some real gains in power on this thing. Well what if we told you that there was more to be done?

Did you know that there are big valve aluminum heads available for the 472 and 500 inch Caddy?  Well there are, and they can support a lot more power. The kind of power the ProCharger will be encouraging the Caddy to make.

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First Look: 2021 Kia K5

 First Look: 2021 Kia K5

2021 Kia K5

Kia unveiled an all-new version of its mainline midsize sedan today, and with it a new model name. “Out” is the Optima nameplate, replaced by a badge that Kia uses for this car in global markets: K5. “In” is dramatic new styling, available all-wheel drive, a choice of two turbocharged 4-cylinder engines, and fresh technology features.

2021 Kia K5

The 2021 Kia K5 is built on an all-new “N3” platform, which is a bit lower, wider, and longer in both wheelbase and overall length than the previous-generation Optima’s architecture. Kia says the N3 platform is stronger and quieter too.

First Look: 2021 Kia K5

2021 Kia K5

Kia says the K5’s striking exterior design incorporates DNA from its high-performance Stinger hatchback sedan, while expanding the brand’s future design language. Highlights of the new look include a “shark-skin” mesh grille, daytime running lights and taillights with a “heartbeat” shape inspired by an EKG pulse monitor, a gloss black applique on the rear trunk that emphasizes the fastback-esque profile, and a striking chrome accent strip that flows from the tops of the side windows to the forward edge of the trunk lid. The interior design is similarly sporty, with a cockpit-like horizontal layout, aircraft-style shift lever, and available flat-bottom steering wheel.

First Look: 2021 Ford F-150

 First Look: 2021 Kia K5The base engine, which comes in LX, LXS, GT-Line, and EX models, is a turbo 1.6-liter 4-cylinder that makes 180 horsepower and is paired with an 8-speed automatic transmission. Optional on LXS and GT-Line is all-wheel drive in place of the standard front-wheel drive. The AWD system (the first offered in Kia’s midsize sedan) comes with a snow mode for better all-weather performance.

Test Drive: 2019 Kia Optima SX Turbo

The performance-oriented K5 GT gets a turbo 2.5-liter 4-cylinder that makes 290 horsepower and is paired with a new dual-clutch 8-speed transmission; Kia claims a 0-60-mph time of 5.8 seconds. The GT also gets a sport-tuned suspension, 19-inch wheels on Pirelli P-Zero tires, and a Sport + setting on the drive-mode control system.

The Kia Drive Wise suite of safety features is standard on all K5s. Available technology features include natural-language voice-command software, wireless smartphone charging, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto functionality, hands-free Smart Trunk, remote engine start, Bose 12-speaker sound system, and a 10.25-inch high-resolution touchscreen in place of the standard 8-inch touchscreen.

The 2021 Kia K5 is built in Kia’s West Point, Georgia, assembly facility alongside the Telluride midsize SUV. The K5 goes on sale this summer, with GT and all-wheel-drive versions following later in the fall.

First Look: 2021 Lexus IS

First Look: 2021 Kia K5

2021 Kia K5

CG Says:

Domestic manufacturers may be turning away from traditional sedans as of late, but import brands are remaining committed to this declining, but still vital, market segment. Kia’s press presentation for the K5 noted that there were 1.5 million midsize cars sold in America last year. With crossover SUVs taking over as the default family vehicles of choice, we’ve seen the latest iterations of traditional midsize sedans get more style-forward and performance-focused. The 2021 Kia K5 is in keeping with that trend. The K5 shares is basic architecture with the redesigned-for-2020 Hyundai Sonata, but there are significant differences in powertrain/feature availability between the two, and the interior and exterior styling is likewise completely different. The K5 strikes us as the sportier, more driver-oriented choice.

We’re not quite sold on Kia’s decision to ashcan the Optima name in favor of K5. Though the change better aligns with Kia’s global presence with this car, there was nothing wrong with the Optima name, and alphanumeric monikers have had a spotty success rate in the U.S. market. Names aside, the K5 strikes us as a winner overall.

First Look: 2021 Nissan Rogue

First Look: 2021 Kia K5

2021 Kia K5

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