BBC Top Gear Magazine

Had your Chips?

Report 8 Hyundai i30N

- STEPHEN DOBIE

There is no greater vindicatio­n of the i30N’s quality than this. RaceChip, buried deep in Germany’s tuning scene, has modified a Hyundai hot hatch rather than its usual Mercs, Porsches and VWs.

An ECU remap and a new exhaust system lift the i30N’s outputs to 316bhp, identical to a Civic Type R, and 387lb ft, just 11lb ft off a Ferrari 458 Speciale. Yikes. There’s 15mm-lower Eibach suspension, 3kg-lighter OZ forged wheels and Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tyres. You can spec it all separately from €660, but the mods listed total five grand.

Some big changes, then, yet they serve to amplify the i30N’s existing traits rather than reinvent its character, which is what I admire most in tuner cars. There’s the same rambunctio­us attitude, just with added precision.

I had no idea the stock i30N had any slack in its steering until I experience­d the snappy turn-in of RaceChip’s, while the wheelspin that afflicts our car in lower gears has been eradicated. Impressive, given the extra performanc­e, and those tyres can probably take as much credit as how subtly integrated its extra torque is.

Its additional 108lb ft is most tangible when the 2.0-litre turbo instantly punches in higher gears, making this a much better autobahn car (a very German problem to have fixed). But not only does the grey car have the same power as a Type R, it feels like it operates at the same level. If I were to keep our i30N for myself (I wish), I’d be very tempted to give RaceChip a call.

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Proof positive that tuning doesn’t always mean ruining

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