2016
Hyundai Elantra
After
all the official teasers and spyshots, this is it for real. The 2016 Hyundai
Elantra has been unveiled for the first time in South Korea. In its home
market, it’s called the Avante.
The
C-segment sedan rival to the Civic and Corolla is fronted by a bold hexagonal
grille and headlights which has been lowered and positioned a little further
outwards. Sporting the company’s Fluidic Sculpture design, the rear lights are
also less curvaceous than before while the rear bumper has been entirely
redesigned.
It
might not look significantly smoother than the outgoing Elantra MD, but this
new AD’s aerodynamic drag has been reduced; its 0.27 Cd is the best in class,
Hyundai says. Contributing to this are the Wheel Air Curtains (minimises air
rotation around the wheels) alongside “Bumper Ribs” and an “Undercover”. We
presume that the latter means a flat underbody.
The
new sedan is 20 mm longer and 25 mm wider than the outgoing car – measuring
4,570 mm long, 1,800 mm wide and 1,440 mm high, with an unchanged wheelbase of
2,700 mm. Boot capacity is 458 litres. Hyundai says that the use of Advanced
High Strength Steel has been upped to 53%, or 32% more than before, thereby
increasing the car’s stiffness.
Hyundai
claims that noise, vibration and harshness (NVH) has been improved
significantly thanks to repositioned windscreen wipers, thickened glass windows
and a rear-wheel guard which is made from new materials. The Elantra also has
an improved Motor Driven Power Steering (MPDS, electric power steering) that is
said to provide better response at different speeds.
Inside,
highlights include hints of the Genesis and Sonata in design, soft-touch
materials, dash buttons grouped according to functions, and a centre stack that
tilted 6.9 degrees towards the driver. There are also rear air-con vents,
Integrated Memory Seat (IMS), Smart Trunk (pops open the boot automatically
when key is near after three seconds) and an available eight-speaker Harman
audio system with amplifier.
Tech-wise
the new Elantra gets active Autonomous Emergency Braking (uses radar and
camera, acoustic warning first, followed by a visual display and auto braking),
High Beam Assist, Blind Spot Detector with Lane Change Assist and Rear Cross
Traffic Alert.
Lastly,
what’s under the hood. There’s a choice of two petrols – a 1.6 GDi (gasoline
direct injection) with 132 PS/164 Nm or a Nu 2.0 MPi with Atkinson cycle, 149
PS and 183 Nm of torque. The sole diesel is a 1.6 VGT with 136 PS and 306 Nm.
Buyers can choose from a six-speed manual or a six-speed conventional
automatic. The seven-speed dual-clutch automatic is reserved for the diesel
variant.