Wheels (Australia)

3 things you should know

...ABOUT STRAPPING INTO A TCR CABIN

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one HOT SEAT

The seat is bolted low to the floor, which limits vision, but since you won’t be encounteri­ng any roundabout­s on the track, that’s not a big deal, and the COG benefits. The steering column-mounted dash displays revs, gear selection, speed, and lap times for ego stroking ... or a reality check.

two DON’T TOUCH

The old race-car instructio­n was in force here: “Don’t fiddle with stuff!” Water and oil are primed at the press of a button before the engine is fired up. The big red switch is for the onboard fire-suppressio­n system, while the big stick is the handbrake which is used for launch control.

three FANCY FEET

The pedal box is adjusted to the driver’s frame. Each pedal is hinged from the floor. Getting the most out of the brakes requires significan­t force and is a proper workout. While the seat position is fixed, the steering column is lifted from the road car and thus adjusts for height and reach.

Hyundai Australia’s official N tech guru Geoff Fear got wind of our plans and has snuck into the garage to watch. He recommends winding all the i30’s drivetrain settings to kill, but keeping suspension in its softest mode. He says the extra compliance will allow the car to roll onto its outer tyre, and get the rubber to ‘hook up’ easier. Fear has overseen countless developmen­t and testing miles of the i30 N at this very track, so I’m not about to ignore his advice.

On the road, the i30 N is one of the most accessible and fun performanc­e cars around. I’ve felt more comfortabl­e pushing the Korean hot hatch on public roads than something like a GT-R Nismo. However, when presented with a race track the secret to a quick lap is patience.

On the relatively tight Wakefield Park, the i30 N is a hoot, however like any front-drive hatch speed management is vital to managing the grip on offer. It’s easy to barrel into a corner with more velocity than the front treads are prepared to deal with.

While it’s no porker, the i30 N road car’s 1429kg is much more apparent on the track. Brakes and tyres are punished and past their best after only a handful of laps. Though Hyundai’s five-year warranty for the i30 N covers track use, the car was never intended to suffer extended circuit abuse, so it’s time to give it a breather, peel into pit lane and squeeze into some Nomex.

ALTHOUGH it starts life as a basic i30 body-in-white, it’s clear the TCR version is a much tougher beast. A lowered ride height plus the foursquare stance of flared arches cut an intimidati­ng figure even in the stark white paint used for testing. Each wheel is shod with 18x10-inch slick Michelins but unfortunat­ely there are no tyre warmers on hand for the day, so the responsibi­lity for getting the rubber up to working temperatur­e is all mine.

“Don’t worry about weaving, your best friend heating up the tyres will be the brake pedal. Just slam it,” is the advice given by Nathan Morcom, the car’s regular pilot, before sending me out on track.

With visions of spearing off at the first turn running through my mind, I spend my initial lap heeding Morcom’s instructio­n. Accelerate. Brake. Accelerate. Brake. Gentle at first, but then with increasing ferocity.

The monotonous process allows me to recalibrat­e my brain to the brake-pedal force needed to maximise the TCR car’s stopping power.

Discs are enormous: 380mm ventilated steel units up front, clasped by four-piston calipers, while the solid rear discs are 25 percent smaller at 278mm. Morcom, who spent two seasons in Super2 after winning the Australian GT Endurance Championsh­ip, likens the TCR car’s braking ability to that of our home-grown Supercars.

As my confidence builds, more committed braking attempts require almost all the force I can muster through my leg. Even with the belts fastened to make it feel like my ribs are cracking, a forceful stop is like the hand of God slapping me on the back, forcing me forward in the seat. Even my most ambitious stomping of the brake pedal can’t cause the front tyres to lock, even despite no ABS.

It’s on my third lap of the Wakefield circuit I realise that something is a bit … off. While there’s nothing mechanical­ly wrong with the car, there’s something my brain can’t quite comprehend. Aren’t race cars meant to be fearsome beasts, ready to bite your head off and spit you out at the smallest provocatio­n, and tamed only by an elite few with rare talent? It seems that cliché doesn’t apply to Hyundai’s racer, which is encouragin­g me to push harder and carry more speed.

There’s no traction control – this is still a proper racer – but the car supports you in the pursuit of speed, instead of fighting it. Even with 257kw and 460Nm thanks to a larger turbo, beefier internals and a racing ECU, Hyundai’s TCR car is never going to win a power war, but it’s a decent step up from the road car’s 202kw and 353Nm, and certainly potent enough to prompt the slick tyres into wheel spin with a vicious prod of the accelerato­r.

A more progressiv­e applicatio­n sees the front-drive racer just grip and go. The front axle is more than capable of performing both power-delivery and steering duties thanks to the fitment of a more aggressive front differenti­al, as the i30 shoots from the apex with no protest from the wheel.

Steering the i30 TCR doesn’t require forearms like tree trunks, due to an electrical­ly assisted rack and pinion set-up which, while mechanical­ly similar to what is found in the road car, features a massive change to the steering ratio. Turn-in is almost neurotic, thanks in part to the ultra-quick rack – just a single turn lock-to-lock – meaning precision and finesse are essential when working the Alcantara-clad wheel. The powerful combinatio­n of slick rubber and clearly functional aerodynami­cs means the car is able to maintain mid-corner speeds the road variant could only dream of. The nose of the car darts towards apexes with manic intent, the large front splitter and rear wing keeping it hunkered down.

In the transforma­tion from road to race, the i30 N’s suspension hard points and layout haven’t been changed, but the components are all beefed up. Under the front arches is a Macpherson strut set-up, with coil springs and gas-filled dampers (the team were testing both Öhlins and Supashock units on the day), while a four-arm multi-link axle combinatio­n underpins the rear. Gears in the six-speed Xtrac sequential are shifted without a clutch, using steering wheelmount­ed paddles, each change of ratio accompanie­d by a sharp BANG from the exhaust.

It’s a hot day, so driving the TCR car is a punishing experience. Brilliant, but punishing. Just a couple laps in and I’m dripping with sweat. Time to hand back the reins, and ponder how Hyundai’s German engineers transforme­d a body-in-white road car chassis into a racer with the most genial attitude.

Accelerati­on claims are nothing exceptiona­l in race-car terms, but it’s estimated a TCR car will crack 100km/h from a standstill in approximat­ely 5.2 seconds thanks to a fiendishly complex launch process. Wheels performanc­e-tested the i30 N road car last year, measuring a 6.4-second sprint to 100km/h.

Over a single lap of Wakefield Park, with Nathan Morcom driving, there is a 10-second gap between the road car and racer. But perhaps more interestin­gly, a mere mortal like me is able to get closer to the profession­al benchmark in the TCR car than the road car.

This largely comes down to the set-up of the TCR car, which just wants you to go faster, encouragin­g more commitment with every lap, where the road car fights back, waving that white flag named understeer when it isn’t treated with the finesse of a profession­al.

When the data is downloaded from the car, it’s clear I’m not going to earn a race seat any time soon – Morcom is a full six seconds down the road from me. But for broader context, my best time after a handful of laps is on par with Warren Luff’s benchmark figure in a 997-gen Porsche 911 GT3.

It’s all well and good letting a racing-crazed journo loose for a couple of laps, but the real test for the Hyundai i30 N TCR will be on the track, against a full field of competitor­s that are all frothing at the mouth in a rabid hunt for victory. As we went to print, HMO Customer Racing’s Will Brown had won two of the three races from the opening round of TCR Australia, and nabbed a podium in the other. Not bad at all.

GEARS ARE SHIFTED USING WHEEL-MOUNTED PADDLES, EACH CHANGE ACCOMPANIE­D BY A SHARP BANG

 ??  ?? Everything needed to turn an i30 into a TCR racer is from the official Hyundai parts catalogue, including the polycarbon­ate screen
Everything needed to turn an i30 into a TCR racer is from the official Hyundai parts catalogue, including the polycarbon­ate screen
 ??  ?? i30 N road car’s built in the Czech Republic. TCR racer is built in Germany by the same team who makes the i20 WRC car
i30 N road car’s built in the Czech Republic. TCR racer is built in Germany by the same team who makes the i20 WRC car
 ??  ?? Production-based engine is sealed for 5000km, limited to 257kw/460nm
Production-based engine is sealed for 5000km, limited to 257kw/460nm
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

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