Times Colonist

Flat out at Laguna Seca in Hyundai’s electric track rat

- HENRY PAYNE Zot!

LAGUNA SECA, California — Out of slow, 90-degree Turn 11 onto the Laguna Seca Raceway’s pit straight, my 2025 Hyundai Ioniq 5 N performanc­e SUV instantly put down 545 pounds of torque and 601 horsepower to all four fat Pirelli P Zero performanc­e tires. No downshift to second gear. No turbo lag. Just pure thrust. Zot! Seconds later, the EV crested the hill into Turn One at 160 km/h.

Welcome to the electric track car.

The Ioniq 5 N hot hatch is the first track-focused EV from a major manufactur­er, and it is a marvel. Despite its 4,900pound girth — 60% more than a Volkswagen Golf R hot hatch — Hyundai pro test drivers here were recording 1 minute, 35 second laps. That is on par with a 640-horsepower, all-wheel-drive Porsche 911 Turbo S. That’s crazy.

That’s what instant torque, extensive body bracing and suspension stiffening will do for you. It’s what BMW does to make its M-badged cyborgs quicker than the average Bimmer sedan. Indeed, at the world’s greatest racetrack, the formidable 22 kilometre Nürburgrin­g (Ioniq N’s namesake) in Germany, the Ioniq 5 N nearly matched the time of BMW’s premier driver’s car, the M2 CS, at 7 minutes, 45 seconds. Craaaazy.

Crazier still, we’re comparing a ute with a coupe thoroughbr­ed. Like the M2, the 5 N has been screwed to the ground with chassis performanc­e enhancemen­ts and sticky Pirelli P Zero tires. But it still exhibits the inherent high centre of gravity of an SUV and its tall seating position. Over Laguna’s signature Corkscrew turn, I managed the throttle as the top-heavy ute navigated the turn’s extreme, downhill switchback. So how is it possible this shoebox’s lap times are on par with Porsche’s finest?

“It maximizes the tire,” deadpanned engineer Robin Shute, the accomplish­ed Pike’s Peak and off-road rally ace who I chased around Laguna at obscene speeds. “The electric motors are feeding maximum torque all the time.”

So whatever the shoebox loses to the Porsche in the corners, it makes up with Thor’s Hammer accelerati­on off every turn. I’ve experience­d this shocking performanc­e before — albeit from the passenger seat of Ford CEO Jim Farley’s Transit SuperVan 4.0 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, another e-Kong in a box. Imagine what these drivetrain­s could do in a proper, low-centre-ofgravity sportscar.

I have tracked my Tesla Model 3 Performanc­e and crave its instant, AWD torque. But the 3 Performanc­e is not optimized for track use, and its Brembo brakes will cook after six laps around Pontiac’s 1.5-mile M1 Concourse. I hammered the 5 N for 42 km around Laguna’s 3.5 km rollercoas­ter (12 laps) with no brake fade. Indeed, Model 3s outfitted with properly tuned aftermarke­t brakes from Unplugged Performanc­e have recorded similar track times to the 5 N despite giving up 100 pound-feet of torque and 150 horsepower.

The future of electric performanc­e is bright.

But … tracking an EV at hyper speeds comes with the same compromise­s of any EV: namely, range.

The Ioniq 5 N’s 84 kWh battery holds just 355 km of range, and I sucked down nearly half of that over my 20-minute session around Laguna. Oof. That’s about six km off the battery for every mile on the odometer (0.8 kw/per mile), which is at least better than my Tesla’s 6:1 ratio since the Model 3 hasn’t undergone the extensive aero-and-heat management interventi­on engineers administer­ed to the Ioniq bot. Around two 22-km laps (45 km total) of the Nurburgrin­g and its extended, full-throttle straightaw­ays, Hyundai says I5N drank over half the battery.

Travel to Laguna from, say, Silicon Valley 128 km to the north, you’ll need to plan multiple fast charger visits to get laps on a track day.

Muscle car enthusiast­s may pass — waiting for the coming V8-simulation of Dodge’s Charger Banshee EV that, like the I5N, has a useful hatchback for hauling tires to the track. I found the I5N’s fake-ICE sound remarkably realistic on track laps — including the ability to shift through multiple gears (with rev matching) just like a gas car.

Unlike a petrol car, however, the so-called GRIN SHIFT option won’t make you faster. Single-speed, uninterrup­ted electric torque is the quick way ’round. Want to go even quicker? Press the N-boost button for an extra 40 horsepower when you want it.

Crazy.

 ?? HENRY PAYNE, TNS ?? The 2025 Hyundai Ioniq 5 N is focused on track days at tracks like Laguna Seca. Just watch your state of charge.
HENRY PAYNE, TNS The 2025 Hyundai Ioniq 5 N is focused on track days at tracks like Laguna Seca. Just watch your state of charge.

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