Driven

TWINCAM GLI LIVES AGAIN

HYUNDAI ELANTRA 1.6 TURBO ELITE SPORT

- Report by BERNIE HELLBERG | Images © HYUNDAI SOUTH AFRICA

THERE ARE PLENTY OF COMPARISON­S TO DRAW BETWEEN THE RECENT EMERGENCE OF THE KOREAN AUTOMAKERS AND THE RISE OF THE JAPANESE MANUFACTUR­ERS IN THE 1980S. BY CREATING A REPUTATION FOR RELIABILIT­Y, THEN SLOWLY INTRODUCIN­G SPORTIER VERSIONS OF THEIR CARS TO THE MARKET, JAPANESE CARMAKERS CAPTURED THE HEARTS, AND WALLETS, OF THOUSANDS OF SOUTH AFRICANS. BERNIE HELLBERG LOOKS AT ONE SUCH COMPARISON BETWEEN THE TOYOTA COROLLA 1.6 TWINCAM GLI, AND ITS SPIRITUAL SUCCESSOR, THE NEW HYUNDAI ELANTRA 1.6 TURBO.

Back in the 1980s, there were vastly fewer motoring options than there are today, and if you wanted something zippy and powerful, yet economical, there was only one car to have – the Toyota Corolla 1.6 Twincam GLi. Today, there are plenty more options, but just one has, in our view, got the goods to be called the spiritual successor to the Twincam Corolla, and that is the new Hyundai Elantra Turbo.

When the Corolla Twincam debuted, there was nothing like it available anywhere, and an instant classic was born. Up to that time, if performanc­e was what you wanted you had to settle for a much larger car than the Corolla. Think Ford’s 3.0-litre Cortina or one of the big German saloons.

The upstart compact sedan broke all the rules, and help set Toyota to maintain its course as the most significan­t motoring brand in the country.

It was quite a brash little thing, that Twincam. Eager to go, yes, but also besieged by annoying torque-steer and lousy brakes. It was the most fun you could have for the equivalent of under R400,000 today.

A CLASSIC REBORN

It’s no secret that Hyundai has been working to emulate the success of its Japanese rivals across the globe, and in South Africa that strategy translates to giving people reliable cars at affordable prices first, then slowly introducin­g pizzazz to the mix.

And so the Korean brand surprised everyone in mid-2017 by introducin­g its sleeper sporty sedan for a mere R399,900.

Sporting crisper styling than its more mundane stablemate­s – purposely targeting other premium compact and business sedan buyers in the process – the blown Elantra doesn’t only look good, it also goes like the clappers thanks to Hyundai lifting the engine from the Veloster Turbo and bolting on a quick-shifting seven-speed dual clutch transmissi­on with optimised mapping.

Pushing out 150 kW at 6,000 r/min and 265 Nm from 1,500 r/min – the Corolla managed 103 kW at 7,200 r/ min and 147 Nm at 6,000 – the Elantra has an urgency about it, but not quite the guts to challenge some of the seriously hot hatches around.

Unfortunat­ely, it suffers from a similar torque steer problem that saw the old Twincam jostle and jump from standstill in the good old days, but it is refreshing that the car has some personalit­y built into it, given how stale so many other cars in this segment have become.

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