Category Archives: Hyundai

Hyundai Sonata’s value quotient is impressive

The fight to achieve parity in the fiercely competitive automotive industry has not been an easy one for Korean manufacturer Hyundai.

But the company has slowly and steadily risen from the ashes of the Hyundai Excel, an inexpensive compact that marked the company’s first entry into the United States back in 1985.

The Excel initially received an enthusiastic reception among Americans, but buyers soured on it and the entire Hyundai brand after it turned out that cheap and cheaply made were pretty much the same thing.

Persistence, a significant improvement in product and an industry-leading warranty eventually turned buyers’ heads back in the company’s direction and today Hyundai automobiles enjoy favorable comparisons with the acknowledged industry leaders in a number of market segments.

One of the toughest is the mid-size family sedan market, a segment in which most manufacturers have an entry and Japanese manufacturers Toyota and Honda have been the leaders for a long time.

Hyundai’s entry is the Sonata. The fourth generation model of the front-wheel-drive, four-door sedan was introduced as a 2006 model. For 2009, the Sonata has been given a rather comprehensive freshening, although you would never know it just to watch one pass by.

That’s because exterior changes are minor, consisting mainly of a new front grille, revised bumpers, headlights, taillights and moldings. In addition seven new colors and alloy wheels have been added to the mix.

The heavy lifting was done under the hood and in the passenger cabin, two areas that were in need of upgrading for Hyundai to keep its nose on the tail of the Japanese front-runners.

The base 2.4-liter, four-cylinder engine gets variable valve timing and a power boost from 162 to 175 horsepower. Torque increases from 164 pound-feet to 168. In addition, the automatic transmission is upgraded to five speeds, from four, and accounts for a one-mile-a-gallon increase in fuel mileage to an EPA-rated 22 city/ 32 highway. A five-speed manual shifter is still available for the do-it-yourself types.

The 3.3-liter V-6 engine is rated at 249 horsepower, up from 234. Torque is up three pound-feet, to 229. The engine of choice for about 30 percent of Sonata buyers, it falls 19 horsepower short of the leaders, but is about equal in fuel efficiency with a rating of 19 mpg city/29 highway. A five-speed automatic is the only transmission available with this engine.

Upgrades to the independent suspension improve handling in the entry-level GSL and Limited models, but they still don’t move the Sonata into sporty territory. A third model, the SE, gets even more serious suspension tuning, but I did not have an opportunity to sample it.

Inside, where 121.7 cubic feet of space make it the roomiest sedan in its class, the Sonata has been given a complete makeover.

Trim and fabric materials have been significantly upgraded, the front bucket seats have been improved for additional support and comfort, the center console has been modernized to make room for a touch-screen navigation system and the instrument panel has been revised. In addition, there is Ipod and USB connectivity.

I spent limited time in a V-6-powered Sonata and a whole week with a four-cylinder model. In both cases, the extra power was much appreciated, and made both cars more enjoyable to drive. In the four-cylinder car, I averaged between 18 and 28 miles per gallon of regular unleaded gasoline.

Still, despite the suspension and engine improvements, the mainstream Sonatas have a workman-like demeanor that is devoid of any sporting pretensions.

Family and friends will enjoy the comfortable and compliant ride, but the pilot will find nothing to encourage spirited driving.

More important to the family-transportation mission, all Sonatas come with a comprehensive list of standard safety equipment that includes electronic stability control, active front head restraints, side-curtain airbags and four-wheel disc brakes with emergency-stop assist and electronic brake force distribution.

Perhaps the Sonata’s biggest attraction is its value quotient, which puts it several thousand dollars below of much of the competition. Prices start at $18,700 for a GLS with manual transmission, cruise control, air conditioning, six-speaker am/fm/cd/MP3 sound system and power windows, locks and heated mirrors.

The top-of-the-line Limited with V-6 engine and automatic transmission carries a $26,345 sticker price and adds luxury touches such as leather upholstery, trip computer, upgraded sound system, sunroof and 17-inch wheels.

The navigation system, available only on the Limited, costs an extra $1,250.

The Hyundai Sonata may not have the sporty attributes of a Honda Accord or a Nissan Altima, but it is a solid sedan at an attractive price.

In these days of economic uncertainty and high gas prices, that’s a pretty powerful combination.

Nick Yost SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Complex.com: 2009 Hyundai Genesis Sedan Test Drive

While you were out jockin’ M-B’s, Lexus’s and BMW’s, a little Korean company called Hyundai was creepin’ on the come up. Bet you didn’t know they’re now the 7th best selling automotive brand in the U.S., did you? Turns out a lot of Americans love low priced cars–who knew?

To celebrate, the company best known for econo-boxes is looking to go head to head with the big boys by introducing their new rear-wheel drive Genesis platform. Their first Genesis offering touching down in the states will be the amazingly priced 4.6 and 3.8 Sedan, followed later by the coupe. Hyundai threw Complex the keys and we took this recession special for a ride. Read the full review and check out a gallery below.

PRICE: $37,250

SPECS:
Engine: 375hp, 4.6L V8
MPG: 17 city/25 mpg

RIDE: Hyundai may bill the Genesis as a luxury sport sedan, but once behind the wheel there wasn’t much sportiness to be found. Although the peppy V8 made it easy to go up against any other big body sedan on the road not rocking an “AMG” or “M” badge, whipping it through corners wasn’t very confidence inspiring. The steering was a little unresponsive and numb. But that’s not what the Genesis was made for. If you wanna get your Nurburg’ on, get a sports car. The Genesis aspires to be more luxe than sport. Cruising at any speed feels like you’re floating. Hop in the back and you might think you were in something with a six figure price tag. All that’s missing are curtains. And the Cristal.

INTERIOR: Sleek and sophisticated. Hyundai realized the real indicator of a luxury car is the interior and made sure to pay extra attention to detail, and for the most part they succeeded in providing a high class experience. The leather and wood grain that wrap the steering wheel and dash felt as high grade as any other luxury brand. But the aluminum looking panel around the shifter and entertainment system felt cheap, and an analog clock would have been a better fit than the bargain basement digital joint they put in there.

AUDIO: Our model had the Technology package with a 40 gig hard drive, navigation system, and the Lexicon surround system with 17 speakers and 11 channel digital external amplifier, that knocked pretty well. A little more bass would have been perfect. The iDrive-esque controller worked well too. The tech package is well-rounded and you don’t need to study the instruction manual to use it.

WHIP APPEAL: Take the Hyundai badges off of this and it could be anything from a Lexus to a Mercedes. We’d rather push this than a Chrysler 300 or even a BMW 3 series. Driving it around, you definitely don’t feel like you’re in a Hyundai, and most people on the street didn’t know it either until they get closer.

ONE MORE THING: Of course, for the low-low price tag, somethings are missing. While most luxury brands are implementing next generation safety features, Hyundai just rocks with traction control. The heated and cooled seats are pretty dope and lets not forget Hyundai’s 10 year/100,000 warranty.

SUMMARY: The Genesis accomplishes a lot with a little. There are some hiccups, but for those looking for an entry luxury car, this is it. Rear wheel drive, luxe interior, powerful engine, good looks. It’s all there.

RATING: 4/5

Source: Complex.com

2009 Hyundai Genesis 4.6 – Road Test

New cover, familiar text: The new book of Genesis: Not exactly a page turner, but lots of content.

Before we buckle up, we must first invoke a temporary vocabulary-restraining order: At no time will the term luxury sports sedan be used to describe this car. At least not by us. Luxury, yes, and sedan, obviously. But sports, nope, sorry, we’re putting that appellation on hold.

If you’ve already checked the specifications, you may wonder why we post the proviso. The Genesis looks pretty formidable on paper, particularly with the optional 4.6-liter V-8 engine, and a lot of people in the Hyundai organization think their new car measures up pretty well against sporting stalwarts from BMW, Mercedes, and Audi. A clue to their conviction can be seen in the Genesis promotional literature, which is sprinkled with “sports sedan” references.

There’s no question that, in general, Hyundai’s development team checked the right boxes for their ambitious leap to this high-stakes, high-profit game. However, this isn’t really a huge surprise because, after all, they had a script, written by Toyota for the development of the 1989 Lexus LS400. So the formula is one that’s now familiar: respectable performance, decent quality, and lots of features wrapped in attractive sheetmetal at an even more attractive price.

That last–pricing–has been the key to Hyundai’s remarkable progress since it made its first appearance in the U.S. market in 1985 with the Excel, which was loosely related to the Mitsubishi Mirage and also sold as the Mitsubishi Precis. With a 0-to-60-mph time of 16.3 seconds, our test crew called the Excel “faster than speeding molasses,” [C/D, March 1986]. But thanks to lower Korean labor costs, Hyundai was able to price the Excel considerably below competing small cars.

The Genesis, obviously, shares only a brand name with that primitive ’80s Excel, but the marketing theory is similar. Pricing for this new luxo four-door starts at $33,000, including the $750 destination charge. That’s for the 290-hp, 3.8-liter V-6 version. The 375-hp, 4.6-liter V-8 adds $5000 to the base price–$58.82 per pony. Not all that much, really, when you consider the cars with V-8 power that Hyundai seeks to usurp. The base price for a BMW 550i is $59,625, and the least expensive 5-series, the 528i, starts at $45,425.

Others: Audi A6 4.2, from $57,075; Infiniti M45, from $51,065; Lexus GS460, from $53,785; Mercedes E550, from $60,575. (We should add that with the exception of the Genesis, these are 2008 prices.)

Here’s what you get for your 38-grand base price. In addition to the V-8 and ZF six-speed automatic (the 3.8-liter V-6 is mated to an Aisin B600 six-speed auto), the luxury inventory includes a power tilt/slide sunroof; two-tone leather upholstery and upper dash, stylishly stitched; tasteful wood trim; heated power front seats; a 15-speaker sound system; electroluminescent instruments; Bluetooth hands-free phone connectivity; dual-zone automatic climate control; memory presets for seat position and steering column (power adjustable for rake and reach); a power rear sunshade; and cruise control (Hyundai will add an adaptive feature later).

Our test car had the only option group offered, the $4000 Technology package: 17-speaker audio with an in-dash six-DVD changer, XM satellite radio, an iDrive-style control that’s actually user-friendly, a nav system, HID headlamps, a backup warning camera, driver’s seat cooling, and front and rear park-assist sensors.

You get the idea–lots of the goodies you’d expect of a luxury car, in a handsomely executed interior. Make that handsome and exceptionally roomy. This is a big car by the standards of the class to which it aspires–bigger than any of its target competitors, with interior volume that’s more consistent with cars one size up the scale. Lots of trunk, too–16 cubic feet.

Hyundai has taken pains to make sure the Genesis is as quiet as it is roomy–another page from the Lexus playbook. At a 70-mph cruise, the needle on our sound meter once quivered just below 69 dBA, but we wound up with an average of 70–good but not exceptional. Noise suppression is fine, of course, but how silent should it be? We think a little basso profundo in the exhaust note would enhance the driving experience. To which we’ll return shortly.

Exterior design is obviously critical to a company attempting to invade the prestige ranks, and here again it looks as though Hyundai has followed the Lexus script. Created to invade German turf, the original LS400 was a shameless Mercedes derivative that worked. The Genesis can be perceived as derivative, too, but pinpointing the origin of the derivations provokes debate. Mercedes? BMW? Lexus? The S-class-style grille is eye-catching, and the short front overhang suggests athleticism, but the overall look is a little generic.

BY TONY SWAN
Car and Driver

2010 Hyundai Genesis Coupe Gets Some Performance Cred – Courtesy of Brembo

SEOUL, South Korea — Taking a page from performance giant Porsche, Hyundai said it will offer Brembo brakes as an option on its 2010 Genesis Coupe. The Korean automaker said this is the first Hyundai ever to be fitted with Brembo brakes.

It is yet another step forward for Hyundai, as the company attempts to move away from its value leader image.

The high-performance disc brakes from Brembo will be available as part of an optional track-use performance package on the Genesis Coupe. No word yet on pricing for this option. The Genesis Coupe is set to go on sale in September in Korea, followed by a North American launch in spring 2009.

“By specifying Brembo brakes, we are sending a strong message about the performance capabilities of the Genesis Coupe,” said Dr. Hyun-Soon Lee, president of Hyundai’s corporate research and development division. “Among car aficionados, Brembo’s oversized caliper design is recognized as one of the hallmarks of a high-performance car. They grab attention and will force people to take a second, closer look at the Genesis Coupe.”

The Genesis Coupe, Hyundai’s rear-wheel-drive sports car, gets an optional performance-tuned 3.8-liter V6 that delivers an estimated 306 horsepower. The base engine is a turbocharged 2.0-liter inline-4 that makes an estimated 212 hp.

What this means to you: Those signature red Brembo brakes telegraph a powerful performance message about Hyundai’s intent to improve its stature on the street. — Hoseok Park, Correspondent

A $40,000 Hyundai? Luxuriating in the 2009 Genesis Sedan

Hyundai undercuts Lexus, Infiniti and Mercedes with a luxury car that’ll give car buyers another reason to forget the Korean carmaker’s checkered past

The world has turned upside-down. The US government is the hottest ticket on Wall Street, Cadillac builds European sports sedans, Saab markets SUVs, and now Hyundai makes a $42,000 luxury car. Someone e-mail the Bizarro Justice League, stat.

The 2009 Hyundai Genesis has been a long time coming for the South Korean automaker. Years ago, Hyundai introduced to the American market an ignoble range of economy cars that, unadjusted for inflation, cost the equivalent of pocket lint. It’s a different company now. To mangle a Pink Floyd lyric, 20 odd years may have gotten behind Hyundai Motor America, but it didn’t miss the starting gun.

As it enters a new phase of maturity, Hyundai’s digging in for a fight where it hasn’t before (in the US): luxury sedans. The new Genesis seems a million years from the long-discontinued Excel, a car so awful ConsumerGuide once scored it a 3 out of 10 for materials. These days, according to J.D. Power & Associates, Hyundai’s up there with Acura, Audi and Volvo in overall quality. Say the word Excel to a Hyundai executive now, and you’re more likely to get a spreadsheet than a set of keys.

For the past half-decade, industry watchers have seen Hyundai edging its product line upmarket. In 2004 it launched the Azera, a front-wheel-drive, midsize sedan with shades of Buick. In 2006 it introduced the Veracruz crossover SUV, aimed squarely at the pricier Lexus RX300. This year, the rear-drive Genesis sedan arrives in dealerships. Next year, it’ll be a sports coupe producing 300 horsepower. Maybe after that we’ll see a Hyundai that takes off vertically like a Harrier jet. Who knows.

Not quite what you’d call design-forward, the Genesis is attractive in a familiar way, kind of like actress Julie Bowen (Google, if you must). Midway between the Mercedes S-Class and Infiniti M in appearance, the Genesis’s most distinctive bit is that louvered grille, whose wing-like slats assign a curious organic character to the fascia. Inside, the Genesis offers spacial volume equal to that of a Mercedes S-Class. Interior trimmings are tasteful and corporately austere compared to Lexus’s million-button march.

Where the ancient Excel was as technologically advanced as a Bundt pan, the Genesis is a modern luxury car, riding on a new, rear-drive chassis platform. The allocation of drive wheels to the back immediately applies that unmistakable feel of being pushed, not pulled, distinctive of a true executive car. Suspension tuning tends toward the floaty side of the luxury spectrum, closer to the American and Japanese ideal, rather than that hard-soft meatiness characteristic of German sedans. That’s not to say the Genesis is a flaccid ride–it isn’t, quite. The multilink front and rear suspension combines with a shock-absorber system from ZF Sachs called amplitude-selective damping, which the Genesis shares with the Mercedes C-Class. The all-hydraulic system decreases damping over minor “stimulations” like road imperfections, but increases damping during major loading, as in hard cornering. As a result the 4,000-pound sedan keeps fairly flat-ish in corners while retaining composure over rough roadways.

The electro-hydraulic steering is responsive and offers decent feedback, especially in the V6 model. That car uses a slightly different steering setup than the V8 model, whose steering feels overly processed by comparison. Brakes are an exercise in directness and offer plenty of stopping power for all that weight.

Buyers of the entry-level Genesis model are eligible for the company’s smooth 3.8-liter Lambda V6, producing 290-horsepower, although the company expects 20 percent of buyers to opt for Hyundai’s 4.6-liter Tau V8. The V8, a requirement in the luxury segment, cost Hyundai $260 million to develop and produces a substantial 375 horsepower on premium fuel (368 on regular). Each engine links up with a separate six-speed automatic transmission, the V6’s from Aisin, and the V8’s from ZF. Both serve up- and downshifts as smoothly as warm sour-cream frosting. Maybe not exactly that, but we’ve gone a few sentences without inelegant hyperbole, so there you go.

But luxury cars are about the extra stuff you get, and the Genesis comes with the most requested kit. The Genesis 3.8 V6–starting at $33,000 with $750 freight charge–comes with a raft of expected accouterments: automatic headlights, cruise control, power front seats–eight-way driver and four-way passenger; power tilt and telescoping steering wheel; dual-zone climate control; sunroof; seven-speaker audio system with CD player, XM satellite radio and iPod and auxiliary input jacks; leather; Bluetooth capability; heated front seats, and 17-inch alloys. The Genesis 3.8 turns in EPA mileage figures of 18 mpg city, 27 mpg highway.

The Genesis 4.6 V8–starting at $38,000 with $750 freight charge–adds rain-sensing wipers with auto-defogger windshield; eight-way power passenger seat and driver memory settings; a wood and leather interior trim package; auto-dimming rear view mirror, 15-speaker Lexicon audio system with six-disc CD changer (shared with the Rolls Royce Phantom), power rear sunshade, 18-inch alloys and chrome exterior accents. The Genesis 4.6 is EPA rated at 17 mpg city, 25 mpg highway.

Buyers of the V6 can opt for the same features as the V8 by optioning the Premium Package. A Technology Package offered on both models includes cooled driver’s seat; adaptive headlights with auto leveling; front and rear park assist, Lexicon 17-speaker audio system, 6-disc in-dash DVD changer navigation system, XM NavTraffic real-time traffic service; multimedia controller, and a backup camera.

Although brand-conscious buyers will likely steer clear of the Hyundai lot for now, the economic woes of late may work in the company’s favor, bringing in new buyers looking to scale back their free-spending ways. And of course, any Wall Streeter whose paycheck is now signed by Uncle Sam should get a thumbs-up from We the People if they ditch their German iron and show up at work in one.

Cars.com Review: 2009 Hyundai Genesis

Hyundai’s all-new Genesis is unlike any car the Korean automaker has brought to the U.S. before. It’s a rear-wheel-drive full-size sedan that’s available with Hyundai’s first V-8 engine in a passenger car. After driving the car extensively in and around Santa Barbara, Calif., it’s clear to me that Hyundai got most of the important elements right: The driving experience and the cabin’s ambience and amenities are all there.

What’s less certain is whether buyers will be accepting of a Hyundai — a brand better known for small, affordable cars — with a starting price of $32,250, even though that price includes a number of standard safety and convenience features. It’s going to be difficult, but it helps that Hyundai has a remarkable first effort on its hands in the Genesis.

Styling
Most of Hyundai’s models fall on the bland side of things where styling is concerned, but the automaker has taken a couple chances with its new flagship sedan. The first of these is the lack of Hyundai’s “H” badge on the grille, which instead features a winged design not seen on other Hyundais in the U.S. Though the symbol’s absence here (there is one on the trunklid) misses an opportunity to tell onlookers that the Genesis is a Hyundai, the flip side is that it might intrigue large-sedan shoppers and prompt them to take a closer look. Based on the car’s sleek, stylish appearance overall, I suspect many who investigate further will be impressed with what they see.

Though the Genesis doesn’t blaze any new trails in terms of design, it does possess an athletic look for a large car, and it’s also well-proportioned, which seems like one of those basic design qualities that can get left behind sometimes. The Genesis has a timeless elegance.

Ride & Handling
Hyundai positions the Genesis as a performance sedan, and I admit I was skeptical as to whether or not the automaker was willing to do what it takes to truly deliver a sport-sedan experience. Having driven the sedan on a variety of roads, I’m now able to report that Hyundai has backed up its talk with a true performer.

Giving the Genesis a rear-wheel-drive platform — as opposed to a front-wheel-drive one like the full-size Hyundai Azera and Toyota Avalon — was one of the first right moves Hyundai made; the superior dynamics afforded by RWD were eminently apparent on winding mountain roads. The Genesis navigates tight corners like a much smaller car — body roll is well checked and the balanced chassis encourages you to push it harder. The Azera, in comparison, offers softer responses when traveling on undulating roads; it’s more of a cruiser, whereas the Genesis is a carver.

Along with this sporty performance comes a ride that’s definitely more taut than most Hyundais. The four-wheel independent suspension, which features a five-link setup in front and back, is sensitive to pavement imperfections, transmitting the pockmarks of the road up to the cabin. This was on mostly smooth California roads, too, which were in much better shape than the ones I normally drive in Chicago.

Where the Genesis differs from a number of other performance sedans is that its steering effort is fairly light; it doesn’t take much exertion to turn the wheel. It spins with impressive smoothness and has a consistency across its range of motion that lets you follow a curve with precision. Personally, I would have liked a little less power assistance in the steering, but many people will buy the Genesis more for its value-oriented luxury than for its handling prowess, so I can understand why Hyundai tuned it the way it did.

V-8 Performance
Hyundai’s first production V-8, which goes in Genesis 4.6 trim levels, is a powerful engine, much like the 380-horsepower, 4.6-liter V-8 in the Lexus LS 460. It has the same displacement as that Lexus V-8 and makes nearly as much power: 375 hp when using premium gas (368 hp on regular). The V-8 powers effortlessly up hills and allows the car to build speed quickly; I looked down at the speedometer one time and was surprised to find I was going almost 90 mph. All this power wouldn’t be worth much if accompanied by any harshness or vibration, but the V-8 is impressively smooth and refined, just like the Lexus V-8.

Joining Hyundai’s V-8 is an equally good six-speed automatic transmission. It’s manufactured by ZF, which also supplies BMW, and includes a clutchless-manual mode for driver-controlled shifts.

The automatic shifts smoothly and feels well-matched to the V-8. It’s also easy to control downshifts using your right foot — depressing the gas pedal will make the transmission kick down for a quick pass around a slower-moving car.

V-6 Performance
Though the new V-8 is big news for Hyundai, the automaker expects 80 percent of Genesis sedans sold to have the standard 3.8-liter V-6, which goes in 3.8 models. This V-6 isn’t new (it’s optional in the Azera), but it produces more power in the Genesis than it does in other Hyundais: 290 hp.

The V-6 feels plenty strong, if not quite as powerful as the potent V-8, and like the larger engine it can power the sedan to excessive speeds before you know it. The V-6 also works with a six-speed automatic, though this one is manufactured by Aisin. Like the automatic in the V-8 sedan, it’s responsive and smooth.

When it comes to gas mileage, the V-6 has a slight advantage over the V-8; it’s rated at 18/27 mpg city/highway while the V-8 gets 17/25 mpg.

The Inside
Genesis occupants are treated to an upscale cabin that features premium materials, like an optional leather dashboard, and a high level of fit and finish. I prefer the look of the base dashboard and its simulated wood trim, but regardless of which way you go it’s clear Hyundai looked to the standard in the luxury segment — the Mercedes-Benz S-Class. The similarities between the dashboards are undeniable. When cruising, it’s also very quiet inside.

Like the S-Class, the Genesis is available with a multifunction control knob that operates the audio and navigation systems. BMW started this trend with its iDrive system, and Audi and Mercedes latched onto the concept, introducing their own systems. Even though they offer varying degrees of user-friendliness — with BMW’s iDrive near the bottom and Mercedes’ Comand near the top — all of them are supplied by Harman/Becker, according to Roger Shively, a chief engineer with the supplier. Fortunately, Hyundai’s system is like Mercedes’ in that its menus are more intuitive. The graphics are also very crisp.

The Genesis’ front bucket seats are finished in standard leather upholstery, and I found them to be quite comfortable for a day of driving. They offer good thigh support and enough side bolstering to keep you situated during aggressive driving without being restrictive. Three-stage heated front seats are standard, and a cooled driver’s seat is optional. Backseat passengers also enjoy spacious accommodations, particularly when it comes to legroom. Even taller adults might be pleasantly surprised by how much room there is.

Cargo
The Genesis’ trunk measures 15.9 cubic feet. This is slightly smaller than the Hyundai Sonata’s 16.3-cubic-foot trunk, but it’s larger than the Avalon’s 14.4-cubic-foot trunk and the Chrysler 300’s 15.6-cubic-foot cargo area. Unlike the 300, the Genesis doesn’t have a split-folding backseat, but it does come with a trunk pass-thru for carrying long items inside the car.

Safety
The long list of standard safety features includes antilock brakes, side-impact airbags for the front and outboard rear seats, side curtain airbags, an electronic stability system and active front head restraints.

Crash-test results for the Genesis weren’t available at time of publication but will be added here when the sedan has been tested.

Features
The base 3.8 trim is priced at $32,250 and features 17-inch alloy wheels, dual-zone automatic air conditioning, cruise control, power front seats, keyless entry and starting, a leather-covered steering wheel, and a seven-speaker audio system with both a USB port for controlling an iPod through the system as well as an auxiliary input jack for plugging in any type of portable music player.

Besides the V-8 engine, 4.6 models, which are listed at $37,250, gain 18-inch alloy wheels, rain-sensing wipers, a leather-covered dash, a power rear sunshade, a moonroof, a power tilt/telescoping steering wheel, a memory feature for the driver, higher-grade leather seats and a six-CD Lexicon stereo with 14 speakers.

Greater levels of content are available in option packages. For $2,000, the Premium Package for the 3.8 trim level adds all of the 4.6 features mentioned above except the upgraded leather seats and 18-inch wheels. For $3,000, the Premium Package Plus builds on the Premium Package by adding 18-inch wheels to the list of features.

The Technology Package is a $4,000 option that’s available for both models, though it requires the selection of the Premium Package Plus group with the 3.8. It includes a Lexicon surround-sound system with 17 speakers, a knob-controlled navigation system, a backup camera, front and rear parking sensors, adaptive xenon headlights and a cooled driver’s seat.

Genesis in the Market
You’ll pay a little more for the Genesis, but it outpaces mainstream competitors like the 300 and Avalon in many respects. However, it should also put more expensive competitors like the Mercedes-Benz E-Class and BMW 5 Series — models Hyundai said it benchmarked when developing the Genesis — on notice because it can keep up with them in some areas, too. In the end, the Genesis is yet another example of Hyundai doing what it does best: bringing value to a segment of the market, in this case the luxury sedan segment.

By Mike Hanley
Cars.com

Sunday Driver: Hyundai Sonata offers good value in a large sedan

Model tested: 2009 Hyundai Sonata Limited V6

Basics: Four-door, five-passenger, front-wheel-drive sedan

Price: $27,685, including options and destination charges

What’s new: Hyundai made some major changes to its popular Sonata model for 2009. The car arrived at dealers earlier this year.

Changes include improved power and fuel economy for its 3.3-liter V-6 engine, a firmer ride for Limited models, standard iPod auxiliary ports, seven new colors, and increased steering response and feedback for all models.

Interior improvements include refinements to the center console, new heating/air conditioning controls and a new instrument panel with blue illumination.

Exterior changes include new headlights, taillights, foglights, bumpers, grille, body side moldings and alloy wheels.

Pricing starts at $18,795, including destination charges, for the Sonata with a 4-cylinder engine.

Hyundai’s excellent warranty remains a key selling point, with five years or 60,000 miles of bumper-to-bumper coverage and powertrain coverage for 10 years or 100,000 miles. Powertrain: For 2009, the Sonata’s V-6 engine added 15 horsepower — for a total of 249 — and 3 ft-lbs. of torque for a total of 229. The engine features all-aluminum construction, four valves per cylinder, dual overhead camshafts and variable valve timing.

The engine, linked to a 5-speed automatic with a manual shift mode, provides smooth operation and quick acceleration.

The EPA rates the car’s mileage at 19 mpg city and 29 mpg highway. In a week of mixed city and highway driving that covered 340 miles and included jaunts through the Oregon Coast Range, the Sonata averaged 26 mpg. Interior: While the Sonata competes against midsized cars such as the Toyota Camry and Ford Fusion, its interior is so big that it is classified as a large car by the EPA. The interior is roomy in both the front and back seats and in all dimensions. Even headroom is not affected by the standard moonroof. The front seats are quite comfortable, even after a day behind the wheel.

The test car, a top-of-the-line Limited model, had seats covered in soft leather upholstery.

The trunk is also good-sized, at 16.3 cubic feet.

Hyundai designers revamped the cockpit to simplify the controls and to create a more upscale look. They succeeded admirably. The two-tone dashboard and center console are covered in plush materials, and the controls are large, well-marked and easy to operate.

The test car came with the optional ($1,250) GPS navigation system, a new offering for the Sonata. Safety: Hyundai says the Sonata is the only car with pricing that starts under $20,000 that offers a standard stability control system. Other standard safety equipment includes ABS, tire-pressure monitoring and six airbags, including side curtains. Ride and handling: The ride was smooth and comfortable, while steering response has become more precise compared to previous Sonata models. Hyundai said the rear spring rates have been increased by 5 percent, shocks revalved and the rear sway bar thickened. All this combines to provide better control of ride motions. Most liked features: The comfortable, roomy interior with its upscale styling Needs improvement: The car’s exterior styling needs more pizzazz. Rating (1 to 10): 9.5

BOB HILL DRIVETIME EDITOR
The Oregonian

A New Challenger in the Premium Luxury Segment

Hyundai (rhymes with Sunday, by the way) is all about building cars in a given segment with the quality and content of its competitors but with a lower price. They’ve not always managed to match that quality and content, particularly in their early days in the US market. But with each new model in each segment they get a little better at it.

Introducing the new Hyundai Genesis. We had our first good look and test drive this afternoon from Ann Arbor out into the countryside along the beautiful ridge of end moraines that define the area around the little settlement known as Hell, Michigan. These glacial hills make for some very nice driving roads, though Livingston County has badly neglected Patterson Lake road making it a good test of the Genesis’ rough-road manners. We were impressed on just about all levels.

The confident folks at Hyundai have the audacity to compare the Genesis with the likes of Mercedes E-Class, BMW 5-Series, Lexus GS and LS 460 and Infiniti M. Pretty auspicious company, eh?

The new Genesis, at dealers now in the V6 version and within a few months in V8 form, is a rear-wheel drive, premium luxury, or perhaps sport, sedan. A remarkably sexy coupe version, revealed at the New York Auto Show, will follow in the first quarter of ’09 and will offer a 2-liter turbo 4-cylinder. The Genesis’ size is comparable to the listed competitors and, I must say, the appearance, performance and overall ambiance is damn close as well.

While our Hyundai hosts insist that the styling and design are conservative and non-polarizing yet distinctive and unlike the competitors, I must disagree. Conservative and non-polarizing – yes, and I might add quite attractive. But it would be hard to not see a distinct resemblance from the front to the Mercedes and an unmistakable hint of BMW’s rear deck treatment commonly referred to as “Bangle-butt” in reference to BMW design chief Chris Bangle’s bold rear look.

Inside we find an interior with seats softer than the German competitors but clad in high-quality brown leather. A wide strip of matching leather gracefully crosses the stylish dash giving an unusual and luxurious feel. Technology and electronics are up to par for this class of automobile including connectivity for your electronic devises and the tactile qualities of all the touchy parts are excellent. The styling of the interior is less conservative than the exterior and I found it intriguing and artful.

My driving partner and I drove the V8 version this afternoon and we were both impressed. They spent more than half the $500 million development costs for the vehicle on this 4.6-liter, 375-horsepower high content engine using premium fuel – a tad less if you choose regular. At higher rpms it sings like a diva with all the sophisticated sounds of the best of its competitors. Zero-to-60 times are impressive at 5.7 seconds. Mated to a slick, quick-shifting ZF 6-speed automatic transmission it still gets 17-mpg in the city and 25-mpg on the highway.

The V6 version of this car pumps out 290 horsepower with a 6-speed Aisin B600 transmission – plenty for most of us – while getting just one-mpg better than the V8. It will cost about 6-grand less to buy in the first place but the car includes a bit less content.

Hyundai thinks of this car as “efficient” in all its qualities. Aerodynamically it’s at the top of its class at 0.27 coefficient of drag. That’s better than most sports cars. Interior dimensions and packaging contribute to the efficiency claim as well. No dispute here. The rear seat feels generous and the trunk is plenty big.

On the road we immediately notice a distinct on-center feel to the firm electro-hydrolic steering. The suspension, 5-link systems front and rear, is firm but not harsh – perhaps more compliant than the German competitors but about the same as the Japanese. We hear only the quiet whoosh of cruising down the road – no wind noise, no tire echo, no unpleasant noise of any kind. Along the rough sections of Patterson Lake Road the Genesis felt balanced, stable and unflustered.

Safety is top notch with 8 airbags, standard electronic stability control, electronically controlled active head restraint system and full 5-Star NHTSA crash test ratings.

The V6 starts at $36,000 and the V8 at $42,000. Only a few options and packages will boost that price. You’re looking at about $46,000 for a top-of-the-line V8 model.

After spending an afternoon with the Genesis I’m impressed. We’ll have a more thorough test report once we’ve been able to score one for a bit more time.

So, in the meantime, if you’re thinking about one of the premium German or Japanese sedans at 55-grand and up, you might want to put the Genesis on your shopping list.

© Steve Purdy, Shunpiker Productions
TheAutoChannel.com
Detroit Bureau

In The Autoblog Garage: 2008 Hyundai Accent SE

Dismal little car. That’s what you’d hear 20 years ago when the conversation turned to Hyundai. The Excel wasn’t as terrible as a Yugo, or even as horrifically unreliable as sneering Peugeots, but it wasn’t exactly welcomed with open arms. Back then, even Japanese brands were still targets of xenophobia; who was this Korean company trying to fool?

Hyundai persevered, and now the South Korean industrial giant is making vehicles that garner good recommendations and carry one of the best warranties in the business. Hyundai’s Accent could be considered a spiritual successor to the unloved Excel, and it carries on that car’s basic formula of delivering a comparable car for less money than the competition. What do you give up to get a car that’s not stripped, yet still cheaper?

Recent history has seen Hyundais roll off dealer lots as well-equipped, attractively anonymous cars that lack engaging driving dynamics. That’s not so much the case anymore, as our time with the Accent has proven. The first check mark in the Accent’s plus column is styling that’s normal. It’s even dull, and that’s fine when faced with the ugly visages of any Scion, the ungainly proportions of a Versa, or the outright confusion of a Focus.

Deliciously conventional, the Accent has clean flanks broken by a strong stroke carved across its middle and a mildly sporting hatch profile. The 3-door we sampled carried the top SE trim level, coming with body color mirrors and door handles, a rear spoiler, foglamps, and handsome 16-inch alloy wheels as highlights among the nearly all-inclusive package of goodies. It’s base price was $15,280 with the only option being sporty floormats.

The Accent SE runs with a pack of cars that includes the Toyota Yaris, Honda Fit, and Suzuki SX4 wagon. All are less conventionally styled than the Accent, and on virtually every measure, the Hyundai is competitive. Measuring tape doesn’t tell the whole story, though.

Like the exterior, Hyundai’s not stretching to break new ground with the interior. Spend some time in the hell-box interior of an xB and you’ll cry tears of joy the first time you plant your tukas in the Accent. Rather than be different for the sake of it, Hyundai delivers a clean, simply operated human-car interface rendered in decent materials. The radio sits up high, easily reached, and just below it are three knobs for the HVAC – no fiddly rocker controls here. Because we’re lazy auto journos, we missed audio controls on the leather wrapped steering wheel, but the stereo is right there.

The seats are econo-car fare, though bolstered halfway decently and supportive in the right spots. Cloth upholstery in two tasteful patterns should endure at least until the warranty runs out in a decade. There are touches of bargain bin inside, however. The seat brackets, especially for the rears, are right out in the open, not dressed in like on some other cars, which adds a touch of cheap. The door panels are made of a plastic that will quickly become marred with scratches, too. Our sampler was already showing signs of wear in this area. Overall, materials are midpack for the class, with low-luster coverings on the dash and upper door panels, non-flimsy controls, and faultless ergonomics. It’s a richer feeling cockpit than you’d expect, and the simple gauge package is thankfully where it belongs, right in front of the driver.

Hyundai’s 1.6-liter four-cylinder kicks it with a DOHC 16-valve layout and a slightly gravel voice that’ll happily bellow all day. 110 horsepower and 106 lb-ft of torque have 2,500 lbs to bear, and when channeled through the five-speed transaxle, the Accent can even be mildly entertaining. The shifter isn’t a model of precision, but the startlingly chunky setup OEM’d by B&M feels good in the hand and the ridiculously oversized machined aluminum lockout ring is a conversation piece. Our favorite powertrain feature by far was the honest-to-goodness throttle cable. No drive by wire actuation here; press the pedal and you get a response without latency.

A sporty suspension tune is also part of the SE up-rating. MacStruts up front and a torsion beam out back are time honored ingredients for the sporty hatch recipe. Hyundai stuffed plenty of rubber under the Accent SE, wrapping the 16-inch alloys with 205s for plenty of stiction. SE-specific springs and shocks keep body motions in check while you’re flinging the Accent SE around by the scruff of its neck, exercising the model’s specific steering rack and stabilizer bar. Even with a disc/drum combo platter, the brake pedal is firm and confident. And while the Accent ultimately understeers, it’s got the moves and the traction to keep you grinning. The ride winds up being firm without being harsh, though the Accent can’t manage the supple chassis dynamics of a Volkswagen Rabbit.

Sharp responses aren’t everything, and the Accent works just dandy as a daily driver, too. Adults will fit in the rear seats, though the Accent will likely not be the staff car of an NBA franchise. Hatchbacks have winning flexibility, and the Accent happily hauled plenty of bulky items, construction materials or whatever for us. One disappointment during the Accent’s stay was fuel economy. While the EPA rates the Accent SE at 27 mpg city and 33 mpg highway when equipped with the 5-speed, we only acheived 27.5 mpg with a highway-heavy commute.

Maybe we were having more fun than we thought with the Accent, and that’s why we didn’t see the type of fuel economy we were expecting. Rare is the small car that can mix it up on a back road at the hands of a competent driver and give fits to the poseurs in sportier cars. We’re not sure we’d be as enthusiastic about the softer GS or GLS Accents, but the SE tickles our automotive enjoyment centers without creating an achy wallet.

©2008 Dan Roth / Weblogs, Inc.

2009 Hyundai Sonata surprisingly stylish

“That’s a nice looking car,” said my friend as she gazed out her window at the silver sedan. “Is it a BMW?”

“Huh, look again,” I replied. “It’s a Hyundai.”

A couple of days later in a parking lot, another friend absent-mindedly started walking toward a silver 7 Series parked across from the Sonata. “Wrong car,” I said. “We came in the silver Hyundai.”

Once upon a time, it seemed inconceivable that any conscious person would mistake a Hyundai for a BMW. That was especially true of the Sonata. The last-generation of Hyundai’s middle child — the Sonata slots above the Accent and Elantra and below the Azera and new Genesis in the Korean automaker’s model line-up — was decidedly homely. But the latest-generation Sonata has contemporary styling that looks not at all out of place beside one of the German wunderwagens.

For 2009, Hyundai’s designers refined the car’s look even further, with new bumpers, headlamps, wheels and grille. And on Limited models such as my test car, they’ve added chrome side and bumper strips to match the chrome grille and door handles.

The designers paid even more attention to the ’09 Sonata’s interior. There’s an entirely new center console and instrument cluster, though the gauges retain Hyundai’s handsome, signature-blue backlighting. The materials in my Limited test car belied the Sonata’s moderate price and included chrome accents, wood trim and leather upholstery. The new Sonata’s interior also has standard auxiliary input jacks (a 3.5 mm mini-jack and a USB input) to accommodate iPods. When an iPod or flash drive is connected through the USB port, located in the center storage compartment, not only does it play music through the vehicle’s six-speaker audio system, but it also charges the iPod and allows the driver to access tracks with the steering wheel audio controls.

Hyundai has given the Sonata the unenviable duty of competing mano-a-mano with the two most popular cars in land, Toyota’s Camry and Honda’s Accord. But the Sonata has a roomier interior than the Camry (though it’s a bit less roomy than the Accord) and a larger trunk than either the Camry or Accord. Indeed, the cabin is spacious — even in the rear seat.

The Sonata’s 2.4-liter, 175-horsepower four-cylinder engine is reworked for 2009, delivering more power and quicker acceleration, with better fuel economy to boot. That’s quite a trick. The all-aluminum, 16-valve engine now features Continuously Variable Valve Timing on both camshafts and a Variable Induction System for better engine breathing. My test car with an automatic transmission carried EPA ratings of 22 mpg in the city and an impressive 32 mpg on the highway, with a 25-mpg combined rating — not bad for a such a roomy car.

Though I wouldn’t call it neck-snapping, acceleration seemed entirely adequate, whether accelerating up a freeway onramp or passing traffic at highway speeds. The five-speed automatic shifted smoothly and had controls that allowed me to upshift or downshift manually.

Hyundai also offers the Sonata with a 3.3-liter V-6 engine that pumps out 249 horsepower, 15 more than last year. Fuel economy figures for the V-6 are 19 mpg city/29 mpg highway — not a great deal less than those for the four-banger engine.

Hyundai engineers tweaked the Sonata’s handling and steering for ’09. The big change is a new multi-link system for the rear suspension. Sonatas also now have quicker ratio steering. Still, the Sonata is more cruzin’ sedan than sport sedan, though its handling is on par with other cars in its class, including the Camry and Accord as well the Chevy Malibu and Ford Fusion. It’s not an exciting car to drive as there is a fair amount of body lean in the corners and the steering feels rather numb, despite the quicker ratio.

But the latest Sonata is comfy. Not only does the suspension smooth out most of the bumps in the road, the car’s low interior noise levels make for a relaxing drive.

In recent years, Hyundai has made a determined effort to earn high safety ratings with all its cars. It’s certainly paid off with the Sonata; 2008 Sonatas have straight five-star ratings in front and side crash tests from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. And there’s no reason to think that the ’09 model won’t earn them too when NHTSA completes its tests. All Sonatas come standard with six airbags, anti-lock brakes and an electronic stability control system.

Good as all this stuff is, value is what drives car buyers to Hyundai dealers. And the least expensive Sonata — the GLS with the four-cylinder engine and a five-speed manual transmission — is just under $19,000. Hyundai also is offering some hefty rebates. The least expensive Camry is about $1,000 more, while Hyundai undercuts the least expensive Accord by more than $2,000. Air conditioning, cruise control, keyless entry and power windows are standard even on the base GLS. My four-cylinder Limited model test car, with all the trimmings, came in close to 25 grand.

No, the Sonata isn’t a BMW. But then, it costs about half the price.

2009 HYUNDAI SONATA

BASE PRICE: $18,795

BASE ENGINE: 2.4-liter, 175-horsepower inline-4

LAYOUT: Front engine/front-wheel drive

BODY/SEATS: Four-door sedan/five

CURB WEIGHT: 3,292 pounds

OVERALL LENGTH: 188.9 inches

FUEL ECONOMY: 22 mpg city/32 mpg highway

By PETER BOHR
The Press-Enterprise