HYUNDAI KONA N
“Like an i30 N on stilts!” Compact SUV now shot through with hot-hatch DNA
Eichler admits Hyundai’s own hotshoes put the suspension in Sport mode rather than full commando N mode to nail a quick lap at the Nürburgring Nordschleife, a track whose endlessly undulating topography is the ultimate test of chassis composure.
“Generally, the philosophy of the N mode is to be optimised for a really flat racetrack,” he says. “We do not expect our vehicle to perform well in N mode on public roads.”
Leaving aside any discussion as to why anyone would want to take an SUV to a racetrack in the first place, we’ll give Eichler points for honesty. But, as we found on the back roads of leafy Warwickshire, the Kona N is not quite as one dimensional as you might think.
Despite 39Nm more torque and a flatter torque curve – all 392Nm is available from 2100rpm through to 4700rpm – the Kona N’s engine still feels a little dozy below 2500rpm. It’ll mooch around happily enough at low revs in Normal mode with the dualclutch tranny shifting itself, but if you’re having a fang, using the paddles to shift manually, it’s happiest kept spinning between 3000rpm and 6000rpm.
It’s not a high-revving powerplant – everything’s pretty much done and dusted by 6200rpm – but it doesn’t need to be.
The new eight-speed dual-clutch transmission is quick and smooth and allows you to make the most of that broad swathe of mid-range grunt. Designed and built in-house by Hyundai, the DCT is a wet-clutch design, meaning it pumps oil on to the clutches to keep them cool, allowing them to handle more torque.
With the powertrain switched to N mode, the sophisticated control software allows for near seamless upshifts when it detects more than 90 percent throttle being used.
The transmission’s neatest trick, though, is what Hyundai calls Track Sense Shift. In N mode, the Kona N can sense when it is being driven on a track and activates an adaptive shift protocol designed to automatically deliver both upshifts and downshifts at precisely the right moment.
We’ll wait until we get the car on a circuit we know before making a definitive call, but on the poky little
test track Hyundai included in the drive program, it felt as brilliantly intuitive as Porsche’s PDK in Sport Plus, shuffling the ratios quicker, more authoritatively than could be managed by fanning the paddles on the steering wheel.
As with other N models, the Kona N comes standard with not only launch control, but also rev matching and the ability to completely switch off the stability control nannies.
N Grin Shift is a cartoonish moniker for a button on the steering wheel that does pretty much the same thing Porsche’s Sport Response button does in a Sport Chrono Pack-equipped 911, switching the engine and transmission to their highest response modes for 20 seconds, no matter what mode you’re driving in. Push to pass, in other words.
To get the best out of the Kona N on a good driving road, you’ll want to make sure you’ve pre-set the Custom tab in the N settings menu to allow the powertrain to stay in maximum attack mode while having the suspension and steering in their softer Normal settings. Configured this way, the Kona N does indeed drive like an i30 N. On stilts.
Even with the suspension in its softest setting, the ride is still very firm, but the more compliant damping allows the chassis to breathe over lumps and bumps, keeping the tyres in contact with the tarmac.
You’ll notice a slight latency on changes of direction when compared with the i30 N, not the least because your bum and inner ear are further away from the tarmac. But once it’s worked through the transients, the Kona N grips with the same tenacity as its low-slung sibling.
As in the i30 N, the front end is astonishingly consistent, especially under load. That trick e-diff means you can get on the power almost as soon as you’ve rotated the Kona N towards the apex and stay on the power all the way through the corner.
You’ll notice some torque steer under full power in N mode, especially on uneven roads, as the e-diff vectors optimum torque to each front wheel, but the traction is deeply impressive. The front end will go exactly where you point it, the rear axle tracking it faithfully all the way.
The laws of physics are immutable, however: No SUV can ever accelerate, stop, or steer as well as a lighter and lower car fitted with the same performance hardware.
If you want a proper Hyundai hot hatch buy the i30 N, or wait for the i20 N, a little zinger of a thing that puts the Fiesta ST on notice.
If you need a small SUV and want something that is genuinely quick and entertaining to drive, though, the Kona N is not only less compromised and more accomplished than you might expect, but also good value.
The Kona N will be available in two trim levels. The entry level model starts at $47,500, while the Kona N Premium, which adds suede and leather trim, heated and cooled power front seats, a glass sunroof, and a head-up display, among other things, starts at $50,500.
Exact timing is still to be confirmed, but the Kona N is due here in the third quarter of 2021.