The Citizen (KZN)

GTI shadow hangs over i30 N

HYUNDAI: DESPITE HOT HATCH’S RACING INSTINCT, IT WON’T THREATEN LOCAL FAVOURITE

- Mark Jones

The car is a blast to drive fast on a track or on a nice twisty piece of road.

There are days when I get a car to test that is fast, and then I say fast things about the car. Easy. Then I get a car to test that is slow and then I say slow things about the car. Easy.

And then I get a horrible, cheap car to test and I say horrible things about it. I think you get where I am going with this.

When a car is sold and presented as something straightfo­rward, be it good or bad, my job is that much easier. But when the car is Hyundai’s i30 N, and it is way more than just fast or slow, nothing about writing this road test is then going to be easy.

Let me tell you what I mean. Starting at the top, the styling is spot on, and not completely over the top. Aggressive bumpers front and rear, a roof spoiler, dual exhaust system, all riding on cool looking 19-inch alloys wrapped in high performanc­e 235/35R19 Pirelli P-Zero rubber gets the job done.

Jumping inside, the important stuff to note is the drive mode button and N Performanc­e button on the steering wheel. These buttons not only offer you fidrive modes (Eco, Normal, Sport, N and N Custom), they are the key to exploring and unleashing the car’s rich motorsport DNA and over 10 000km of track work at the Nordschlei­fe circuit at the Nuerburgri­ng.

This motorsport input is immediatel­y evident – the i30 N is a blast to drive fast on a track or on a nice twisty piece of road. The Electronic­ally Controlled suspension (ECS) firms up considerab­ly at a push of a button, and the Electronic­ally Controlled Limited Slip Differenti­al does a great job of keeping you between the lines. There is a downside though, and that is the car does not like bumpy or rutted tar, even in Comfort Mode.

From what I’ve seen on YouTube, the i30 N is quicker than VW Golf TCR around a track, and I can agree with this. But it is the straight-line performanc­e of the Hyundai that left me questionin­g several things.

The i30 N runs a potent 202kW/353Nm, 2.0-litre turbocharg­ed engine. Although at R679 900 it is priced directly against Golf’s 213kW limited edition R669 000 TCR, it didn’t have the legs to beat the 169kW Golf GTI in a drag race.

This is going to hurt the Hyundai’s street cred in a huge way.

The 0 to 100km/h sprint time of 6.52sec is only six-hundredths of a second quicker than that of the GTI. But before you celebrate this as a victory, this was the best I could get after a number of runs, and the GTI simply drives out of the i30 N’s life and is running quicker at the quarter mile, half mile and the 1km mark. This is somewhat different to what is on the internet but bear in mind they have manual GTIs overseas and we only get the quicker shifting DSG version, and this does make a difference.

Just as perhaps our horrible 93 octane fuel and high altitude would affect the highly-tuned Hyundai more than the Golf.

This said, my job is to test what is in front of me, and the numbers you see in the performanc­e box, are the numbers I got, and the bottom line is that what we have here is Hyundai’s first attempt at a proper, mass produced, performanc­e hot hatch. And they got it spot on, but will it sell in SA? Not a chance.

Why not? The price is wrong and there is a thing called a GTI.

Likes

Styling, dynamics, and that something different to the GTI brigade

Dislikes

Price Straight-line performanc­e

Verdict

I think the Hyundai i30 N is better than all the numbers suggest, and I really enjoyed the car. It’s a fun, lively and very competent all-round hot hatch, but sadly it won’t get the sales recognitio­n it deserves

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