Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 65; 2020 Auto Sales Analysis, 2021 Industry Forecast

2021 Industry Forecast

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: 65

Broadcast date: January 24, 2021

Guest: Sam Fiorani

2020 Auto Sales Analysis, 2021 Industry Forecast

Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell kick off the show by discussing the auto industry’s sales results for the 2020 calendar year, and examining a few of the winners and losers. Sam Fiorani, Vice President of Global Vehicle Forecasting for AutoForecast Solutions, joins us to delve deeper into the year that was, and talk about what industry trends are on the horizon for 2021. Tom has a sales-results quiz for Damon and Jill, and Damon runs down the latest articles on the Consumer Guide Daily Drive blog–including a First Spin review of the all-new 2021 Kia Sorento.

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

Discussed this week:

AutoForcast Solutions

AFS Vision YouTube channel

Meet Kia’s New Logo

First Spin: 2021 Kia Sorento

Forgotten Concept: Ford Forty-Nine

Forgotten Concept: Cadillac Voyage

Follow the crew:

The CG Daily Drive Blog

Car Stuff Facebook Page

Consumer Guide on Twitter

Sam Fiorani on Twitter

Tom on Twitter

Damon on Twitter

Jill on Twitter

Drive, She Said (Jill’s blog)

Tom on the radio:

Tom on WGN Radio

Tom on Green Sense Radio

Tom on the Stan Milam Show

The Crew

2021 Industry Forecast,

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 57; 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys

For GREAT deals on a new or used Toyota check out Right Toyota TODAY!

Recent-History Madness! A Gallery of Car Ads from 2002

Car Ads from 2002

2002 Chevrolet Trailblazer

I joined the Consumer Guide team the summer of 2002. That means that, in just a few months, I will have been writing about cars full-time for 20 years. I mention this because I have only recently begun to consider just how much the automotive landscape has changed in the past two decades.

Most obviously, crossovers and SUVs have replaced traditional passenger cars as the general public’s preferred mode of personal transportation. High-technology “driver assistance” features that were barely even considered in 2002 are now commonplace, and often standard equipment. Recall that backup cameras–now a federally mandated safety feature–weren’t even available on new cars back in ’02.

Pickup trucks have changed, too. In some of their high-end trim levels, Ram pickups now rival top luxury-brand vehicles in terms of cabin refinement, and the regular-cab body style is now near extinction.

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It saddens me a little that I am among the few people to recall—let alone care about—a failed attempt to resurrect the Studebaker brand that took place about 15 years ago. I also need to point out that the Kia Sedona minivan now starts around $31,000–considerably more than the $19,000 teased in the ad below.

Collected here are 12 car and truck ads–all but one of them from 2002. (We fudged a bit by including a 2003 Honda Civic Hybrid ad, but since the Civic Hybrid debuted in the spring of 2002 as an early 2003 model, it’s not much of a stretch.) I don’t know how nostalgic you feel yet about the cars of this century, but a close look at the ads below will demonstrate just how much things have changed. Of the dozen cars, seven are no longer in production, and two of the brands seen here are also now defunct. What big changes have you noted over the past 20 years? The place to leave comments is down below.

More classic car ads

A Gallery of Car Ads from 2002

Chevrolet Trailblazer

2020 Chevrolet Trailblazer Ad

2002 Chevrolet Trailblazer Ad

Test Drive: 2021 Chevrolet Trailblazer LT

Chrysler PT Cruiser

2020 Chrysler PT Cruiseer Ad

2002 Chrysler PT Cruiser Ad

Review Flashback! 2007 Chrysler PT Cruiser

Ford Escape

2020 Ford Escape Print Ad

2002 Ford Escape Ad

Test Drive: 2020 Ford Escape Hybrid

Honda Civic Hybrid

2020 Honda Civic Hybrid Ad

2003 Honda Civic Hybrid Ad

Honda Civic Growth Curve: 1986 Versus 2016

Jeep Liberty

2002 Jeep Liberty Ad

2002 Jeep Liberty Ad

Jeep Liberty: A Lesson in “Old Skool”

Kia Sedona

2002 Kia Sedona Ad

2002 Kia Sedona Ad

Forgotten People-Movers: More than 30 Minivans You Don’t Remember

Lexus RX 300

2002 Lexus RX 300 Ad. Coach Edition, Lexus RX 300 Coach Edition,

2002 Lexus RX 300 Ad

The 4 Most Important Vehicles of the Past 30 Years

Mercury Mountaineer

2002 Mercury Mountaineer Ad

2002 Mercury Mountaineer Ad

5 Discontinued Trucks You’ve Totally Forgotten About

Pontiac Grand Prix GTP

2002 Pontiac Grand Prix Ad

2002 Pontiac Grand Prix GTP Ad

Cheap Wheels: 2000 Pontiac Grand Prix GTP Daytona 500 Pace Car Replica

Subaru Outback

2002 Subaru Outback Ad

2002 Subaru Outback Ad

Review Flashback! 2006 Subaru Baja

Toyota Celica

2002 Toyota Celica Ad

2002 Toyota Celica Ad

5 Cheap Coupes You’ve Completely Forgotten

Volvo Cross Country

2002 Volvo Cross Country Ad

2002 Volvo Cross Country Ad

Click below for enlarged images

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Listen to the very entertaining Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2002-Model-Year Ads Gallery

Car Ads from 2002

Test Drive: 2020 Kia Forte GT

2020 Kia Forte GT

2020 Kia Forte GT in Fire Orange

VW Golf2020 Kia Forte GT

Class: Compact Car

Miles driven: 177

Fuel used: 5.8 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 30.5 mpg

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B
Power and Performance A-
Fit and Finish B
Fuel Economy B
Value A-
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy B+
Tall Guy B
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 201-hp 1.6L
Engine Type 4-cyl
Transmission 7-speed automatic
Drive Wheels Front-wheel drive

Driving mix: 60% city, 40% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 27/35/30 (city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Regular gas

Base price: $22,290 (not including $925 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Automatic Climate Control Package ($200), GT2 Package ($2200), GT 18-inch summer tires ($200), cargo mat ($95), carpeted floor mats ($135), cargo net ($50), auto-dimming mirror with HomeLink and compass ($350)

Price as tested: $26,445

Quick Hits

The great: Zippy acceleration from turbocharged engine; nicely balanced ride and handling; excellent level of performance and features for the money

The good: Decently spacious, nicely finished interior

The not so good: Occasionally quirky behavior from dual-clutch automatic transmission; folded rear seatbacks rest above trunk floor, which can complicate the loading of large items

More Forte price and availability information

John Biel

So now everyone at Kia is a hot-rodder all of a sudden? The folks behind the ballyhooed Stinger from a few years ago targeted the 2021 model year for a new midsize K5 sedan including a GT model. Before that happened, though, even the inexpensive Forte was gifted with a sports model.

A year after the compact sedan was fully redesigned, it adds a GT version as a 2020 line extender. It has a multi-link rear suspension and a 201-horsepower turbocharged 1.6-liter 4-cylinder paired with a 6-speed manual or 7-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission. At $23,215 with delivery to start, the GT is priced up in “luxury” Forte EX territory. Throw in a set of high-performance summer tires, a tech and audio package, and a few other stand-alone goodies and you’ll wind up with a $26,445 job like the one that Consumer Guide tested.

2020 Kia Forte GT

The sporty GT model is a new addition to the Forte lineup for 2020–it comes standard with a turbocharged engine, fully independent rear suspension, larger front brakes, and dual exhaust tips.

The GT should not be confused with the GT-Line, another new-for-’20 Forte. The latter appropriates some of the GT’s interior and exterior cosmetic touches but sticks with the 147-horse 2.0-liter 4-cylinder engine found in all other Fortes, and its automatic-trans option is a continuously variable unit without stepped gears. In addition to its engine, 7-speed autobox, and rear suspension, the GT also has a distinct sport-tuned dual-exhaust system (that terminates in bright tips), slightly bigger front brakes, and 18-inch alloy wheels with a machined finish. LED projection headlights with high-beam assist, an interior with ambient lighting and red accent stitching, and Kia’s UVO eServices telematics are other GT standard features. Note that the costlier manual-transmission GT includes a few more standard items, some of which were contained in the $2200 GT2 option package that was applied to the 7-speed car CG tested.

Meet the 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys

2020 Kia Forte GT

The Forte’s dashboard layout is excellent, and the GT gets a number of trim features, such as a flat-bottomed sport steering wheel and contrast-stitching accents, that lend a sportier ambiance. A wireless charging pad is included in the extensive GT2 Package, which also adds a Harmon Kardon audio system and several active safety features.

Thanks to its 201 horsepower at 6000 rpm and 195 lb-ft of torque at a fairly immediate 1500 rpm, the Forte GT likes to get away with some spring in its step, even if it won’t throw you back in your seat. The ostensibly sportier exhaust setup does not raise an objectionable racket. The dual-clutch automatic, which can be shifted manually via steering-wheel paddle shifters, knocked out prompt downshifts for merging and passing on the highway—but getting off said roadway in “Sport” driving mode induced slurred downshifts as the car adjusted to slower surface-street speeds. EPA fuel-economy estimates for the GT automatic’s powerteam are 27 mpg in city use, 35 mpg on the highway, and 30 combined. When this driver went 66 miles, with 50 percent of that in city conditions, he logged 28.9 mpg.

Test Drive: 2021 Toyota Corolla SE Apex Edition

2020 Kia Forte GT

Also included in the GT2 Package are heated and ventilated front seats (the driver’s side is power adjustable) and “SOFINO” premium leatherette seat trim. The Forte’s rear-seat space is respectable for the compact-car class.

With a rear suspension that’s more sophisticated than the torsion-beam axle found on other Fortes, the GT provides a good balance of ride and handling characteristics. While the 18-inch wheels are the largest available and the 225/40R18 tires have the lowest profile in the vehicle line, ride comfort wasn’t dramatically different from what we saw from a 2019 Forte EX with a 17-inch wheel/tire package. Steering is easier than it is precise but roll control in turns is perhaps a little better than you might assume for a mass-market car. The 12-inch-diameter front brake rotors are one inch bigger than the discs used on other Fortes. Braking is responsive and predictable.

First Spin: 2021 Mazda 3 2.5 Turbo

2020 Kia Forte GT

There’s 15.3 cubic feet of cargo space in the Forte’s trunk–on par with most class rivals. Pull handles at the top edge of the trunk release the seat backs.

GT and GT-Line cars share a distinct leather-wrapped flat-bottom steering wheel and standard cloth-and-leatherette seats (though the test car had optional full-leatherette upholstery), but are much like any other Forte from a passenger’s perspective. Good rear-seat legroom is one of its bonuses, and a minimal floor hump makes possible three-adult occupancy of the back seat. Even the optional sunroof doesn’t detract too much from the fine headroom in both rows. Soft surfaces are distributed on the upper half of the instrument panel, the tops and centers of the front doors, the console lid, and all armrests.

Controls, be they for driving or operating comfort features, are legible and accessible. We like that the 8-inch touchscreen is accompanied by external tuning and volume knobs for the audio system, even with the Harman Kardon premium outfit that was added to the tester. Both the manual single-zone and automatic dual-zone climate units use handy rotating dials to make temperature settings, and the simpler unit also has dials for fan speed and mode.

There’s useful space to the glove box but the console cubby box is on the small side, and some of its space is given to a USB port. An open area ahead of the console contains USB, auxiliary, and power outlets on a bottom level, with a top level available for the optional wireless device charger. Front-door pockets each house a bottle holder, and two open cup holders are found in the console. Rear storage consists of a net pouch on the back of the front-passenger seat, bottle holders in the doors, and cup holders in the pull-down center armrest.

The trunk holds 15.3 cubic feet of cargo, and it’s useful space on a well-shaped, flat-floored load area. A little additional space resides around the spare tire under the trunk floor. For more capacity, the 60/40-split rear seats fold almost flat, but they rest a little above the level of the trunk floor, which may complicate loading. Also, a bulkhead between the trunk and cabin slightly limits the size of items that can be loaded onto the folded seats.

First Spin: 2021 Hyundai Elantra

2020 Kia Forte GT

The Forte GT’s turbocharged 1.6-liter 4-cylinder puts out 201 horsepower and 195 lb-ft of torque. Eighteen-inch machine-finished alloy wheels are standard; Michelin Pilot Sport summer performance tires are a $200 option.

Additional standard features that help round out the Forte GT are “smart key” entry and push-button starting, forward-collision warning and mitigation, lane-departure warning and lane-keeping assist, driver-attention warning, satellite radio, Android Auto and Apple CarPlay compatibility, a rearview camera with dynamic parking guidance, and LED daytime running lights and taillights. As such, Kia provides a decently equipped and competitively priced car while it scratches a sporty-car itch that it hopes you have, too.

6 Cool Things About the 2020 Nissan Versa

2020 Kia Forte GT

The GT is the priciest model in the Kia Forte lineup, but it still counts as a solid value among similarly powerful class rivals–if you’re looking for a daily-driver compact sedan with some extra spice, it’s well worth a test drive.

(Click below for enlarged images)

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Listen to the very entertaining Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2020 Kia Forte GT Gallery

Meet the 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys


For GREAT deals on a new or used Buick or GMC check out Motor City Buick GMC TODAY!

Best 4 Cars For Beginner Drivers In 2021

 

If you’re a new driver or car owner, there are top best cars for beginner drivers that you must be knowledgeable about.

Choosing vehicle requires knowledge about insurance cost, maintenance cost, safety and ease or driving, affordability, economy of use, and MSRP price, etc.



We have taken the time out to research on the best 4 cars for beginner drivers.


Volkswagen Up

2021 Volkswagen Up
2021 Volkswagen Up

This is one of the best cars for car owners who are just launching into the car driving.  This car appeals to first time drivers in a number of ways with its incredible features. Starting with the price, the Volkswagen Up is offered a price that’s not breaking the bank. When it comes to insurance cost, this car sits quite comfortably in insurance group one or two.

In terms of capacity, the car engine a 1.0-litre three-cylinder that is capable of delivering up to 89 bhp, or something in the range of 59bhp to 74bhp. The lower-powered entry version of the Volkswagen Up promises fuel economy of 54.3mpg. Servicing the car is quite economical because it requires intervals of about 10,000 miles.


Kia-Picanto

2021 Kia Picanto

2021 Kia Picanto

The Kia-Picanto is truly a city car that sportier look and city-worthy appeal to beginner drivers. Offering combination of practicality, great quality, and reliability, the Picanto comes a s a top-quality construction. Thanks to its grand style, this guy is equipped with five doors

Boasting 1.0-litre three-cylinder engine that delivers 66bhp and another 1.2-litre four-cylinder petrol engine that reaches 83bhp, the Kia Picanto is truly a frugal choice. The 1.0 engine can reach 50.4mpg on the WLT combined cycle; while the larger 1.2 version offers a maximum range of 47.9 and 49.6mpg

Ford Fiesta

2021 Ford Fiesta

2021 Ford Fiesta

Regarded as Britain’s best-selling car, the Ford Fiesta is a piece of ride for young drivers who are beginning their foray into driving. Its features speak for it.

The Ford Fiesta is an easy-to-drive car; it also a fun ride, too, thanks to its raft of safety technologies. Beginning with the MyKey system, you can reduce the maximum speed of the car, as well as the volume of the stereo. The system seatbelt reminder alerts so driver doesn’t end up in the hands of the traffic cop.  

Fuel economy is the real deal, especially with the diesel models that feature 1.0 litre 99bhp fuel booster that returns up to 50.4mpg. the lower-powered version incurs very low insurance cost

Hyundai i10

2021 Hyundai i10

2021 Hyundai i10

The Hyundai i10 is best known for its sturdy build, strong performance, safe handling, multiple kit, and reliability. It may not the most stylish car you would love but it remains one reliable vehicle for all time and seasons.

Roomy, confident, the Hyundia i10 boasts 1.0- and 1.2-litre petrol engines which respectively offer 66bhp and 86bhp. It shares some common features with the Picanto, but it boasts higher performance, fuel efficiency, and cheaper maintenance cost. The 1-0 engine is capable of returning 50.4mpg unlike the higher 1.2-liter that only returns 46.3mpg. the entry level belongs to the Insurance group 2.