The driver's seat is more supportive than the front passenger seat, with a deeper seat bottom, although both are comfortable, with good upper side bolsters and modestly cupped bottom cushions. The rear seat is contoured more than many in the segment, which is fine for the two sitting closest to the doors, but not so fine for the occasional third person buckled into the center position. The Cloth upholstery feels durable, the not-quite-glove-soft leather equally so. Lights for the vanity mirrors are recessed in the headliner, instead of looking you straight in the eye from the visor.
Space? Rear seat legroom is up by fully an inch and a half over the 2006 Optima. It's better by an inch or so than the Accord and Fusion, but shy of the Malibu and Camry by a half-inch or more. In headroom, front and rear, the Optima tops all but the Accord, and loses here by only half an inch. In rear seat hiproom, the Optima reigns supreme, by at least an inch. Finally, while the 2007 Optima offers 1.2 cubic feet more trunk space than its predecessor, total volume of 14.8 cubic feet ranks near the bottom of the class. It betters only the Accord's 14 cubic feet, giving up a fraction of a cubic foot to the Malibu and Camry and a full cubic foot to the Fusion. On the positive side, articulated, gas-strut hinges leave the trunk opening clear and free of package-crushing goosenecks.
Other storage is respectable, with a glove box easily large enough to accommodate gloves plus the owner's manual, a cell phone and a radar detector; magazine pouches on the back sides of the front seatbacks; two cupholders in front and two in the fold-down rear center armrest, all with spring-loaded clips to brace a variety of sizes and shapes; a covered slot in the center stack good for garage door remotes and such; a smallish bin forward of the shift lever that'll likely collect as much dust as any truly necessary tidbits; fixed, hard-plastic map pockets in the front doors; and a deep center console with auxiliary power point and a groove to accommodate a cord with the top latched. On the EX, this console bin is capped with a bi-level lid, thoughtfully fitted with a pass-through between levels for power cords. One feature that looks promising but falls short is the little fold-out clip on the front passenger's side of the center stack. About knee level, it's not high enough off the floor for either those ubiquitous plastic grocery bags or a handbag with anything more than a wrist strap. Next Page