Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Quietly impressive

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and after many miles of motoring showed 47mpg on the clear trip computer.

The diesel i30 would do better than that, of course, but I’d wager not better enough to persuade too many buyers to find the extra £250 needed to change fuels in this i30.

The least expensive new i30 also comes with petrol power, in the shape of a three-cylinder 1.0-litre engine and costs £16,995. This S-spec base car has alloy wheels, DAB radio, Bluetooth and electric windows all round. So not so basic at all.

At the other end of the price scale you find the £24,745 i30 in Premium SE trim and using the 1.6-litre diesel and driving through an automatic gearbox.

This one simply drips with kit, including bigger alloys, dual zone climate control, leather trim, a huge glass sunroof, sat nav and a heated steering wheel.

This car’s Premium (non SE) grade felt as though it lacked little, enjoying electric adjustment of the driver’s seat, heated seats for driver and front passenger, rear parking camera and a nicely clear satellite navigation system.

Safety features across the whole new i30 range include lane departure warning, forward collision warning, autonomous emergency braking and hill start assist that keeps the brakes on for a second or two as your foot moves from brake to accelerato­r.

Slip into the spacious cabin (there’s a generous sized boot too) and you’ll face a dashboard that looks neat and modern, if not especially stylish. Clear graphics and a logical layout are pluses and it all feels properly put together.

Hyundai tested its newcomer round the famous Nurburgrin­g race track in Germany but thankfully resisted the temptation to turn this family car into a pretend racer (leave that to others and their GT models). The result is a car that feels sharp enough at the wheel to enjoy on twisty roads, while you know deep down the i30 really wants to slow down a bit - all the better to show off a ride that stays comfy on just about any surface. Give it a smooth piece of road and this latest petrolpowe­red i30 becomes so hushed you might be in a limousine. It’s quietly impressive, you might say.

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