Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Kia K3 is a subcompact car manufactured by Kia since 2023 as a successor to the Rio. Developed under the codename BL7, [ 2 ] the K3 is available in hatchback and sedan body styles. The K3 nameplate was previously used by the Chinese and South Korean market Forte/Cerato , which was succeeded by the K4 in 2024 as Kia is realigning their ...
The K3 will offer 1.6- and 2.0-liter engines and be built in Mexico, suggesting it could replace the subcompact Rio and the compact Forte in Kia's U.S. lineup. 2025 Kia K3 Small Sedan Revealed ...
The Kia Forte (Korean: 기아 포르테), known as the K3 in Asia, the Forte K3 or Shuma in China and Cerato in South America, Australia, New Zealand and Russia, is a compact car manufactured by South Korean automaker Kia from mid-2008 until 2024, replacing the Kia Spectra. Throughout its production, it was available in two-door coupe, four ...
Introduced in 2020, the K3 platform is an all-new platform for C-segment vehicles as the successor to J platform series.Dubbed as the third-generation platform, [20] Hyundai claimed the platform allowed engineers to lower the center of gravity for more agile handling.
The Kia Cerato (also known as the Kia Forte in North America, K3 in South Korea or the Forte K3 or Shuma in China) is a compact car produced by the South Korean manufacturer Kia since 2003. In 2008, the Cerato nameplate was replaced by the Forte nameplate in the North American market and the K3 nameplate in South Korea .
Kia Motors America (KMA), now known as Kia America, Inc., was incorporated in California on October 21, 1992, and became the American sales, marketing, and distribution arm of Kia Corporation. Kia America is based in Irvine, California , and currently offers a complete line of vehicles through more than 755 dealers throughout the United States.
Kia K3 may refer to: Kia Forte, a compact car known as the K3 in Asia; Kia K3 (BL7), a subcompact car manufactured since 2023; Kia Forte. Kia K3 (BL7)
The FF platform is the first city car platform developed by Hyundai for its first A-segment city car, the Hyundai Atos. Introduced in 1997, production continued until 2014, when the Hyundai Santro Xing was discontinued.