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Hyundai Tucson's star
rising
Hyundai
crossover's quiet good looks demand top billing
SCOTT
BURGESS
Los Angeles
Hyundai Motor Co. has grown tired
of its Not Ready for Prime Time status in the United States.
It has spent nearly two decades
repairing and then polishing its reputation. In the past, critics,
including myself, have accused it of copying designs and then
dulling them up. Some vehicles had styling, just not Hyundai's.
Not anymore. Hyundai is original,
respectable and nibbling out of Toyota Motor Corp.'s, Honda Motor
Co.'s and Nissan Motor Co.'s Bento Box. It is becoming that other
guy with some pretty cool cars.
Need more evidence? Take a look at
the 2010 Hyundai Tucson small crossover. It's surprisingly
comfortable, offers a quiet, smooth ride and still has import good
looks. It drives like a car, hauls like a crossover and costs less
than some compacts.
And Hyundai has moved into a
leadership position with its powertrains, as the Tucson will
feature only four-cylinders and six-speed transmissions, something
other carmakers will undoubtedly follow. The V-6 has disappeared.
Really, why should there be those
other two cylinders? The 2.4-liter Dual Overhead Cam inline
four-cylinder engine provides 176 horsepower and 168 pound-feet of
torque, plenty of juice for canyon-carving around Malibu. It's
also on par with all of the major four-cylinder competition such
as Honda CR-V, Toyota RAV 4 and Ford Escape -- just with better
gas mileage.
The Tucson is the only compact
crossover out of that group to top 30 miles per gallon on the
highway. Overall, the Tucson can manage 23 mpg in the city and 31
mpg on the highway -- a 24 percent improvement over the 2009
model. Only the 2010 Chevrolet Equinox can top the Tucson's
numbers.
Many small changes
Creating a lighter, more powerful,
slightly larger vehicle is no easy task. Much like every carmaker,
Hyundai had to chip away at improving mileage numbers. There is no
easy big fix, just lots of little ones. It had to improve the
aerodynamics, make it lighter, add electric power steering and a
better gearbox. It may sound easy enough, but if it were, there'd
be more than two five-passenger crossovers that managed better
than 30 mpg on the highway.
Hyundai developed its own
transmission -- a big undertaking that will inevitably make it
onto a lot of new vehicles -- one that is particularly smooth and
fluid (as well as smaller and lighter). The transmission never
hunted for the right gear and responded to the driver's input
quickly and efficiently. Driving up a steep hill, you could feel
it find the right downshift and provide the additional needed
power.
Also, it never raced to sixth gear
too quickly, an annoying fuel-saving feature other vehicles tend
to have to save a few more drops of gasoline. The Tucson never
felt like it sacrifices performance simply for the sake of fuel
savings.
Hyundai has included a green Eco
light on the instrument panel that comes on every time your foot
comes off the accelerator. Engineers say that if a driver follows
the light's suggestions to keep it on more than off, you can
improve your fuel efficiency by as much as 17 percent. Color me
skeptical, I just wish you could turn it off. I don't mind
eco-driving, I just don't want the lecture.
More for your money
But that was really the only
feature in the cabin that felt like a well-intentioned gimmick.
The cabin was spacious, well designed and comfortable. The flow is
calming and the lack of sharp edges means Hyundai was safe from
any cutting criticism.
The speedometer and tachometer are
set deeply into the dash and the center of dash bumps out nicely
to make all of the controls easily accessible to the driver. There
are lots of nicely appointed silver trim throughout the cabin that
adds a touch of sophistication and luxury. Nothing is over the
top, nothing offends, but everything seems to meld together into
an intuitive interior.
The value of Hyundai has always
been that the brand provides more for your money and the Tucson
carries that tradition forward. Standard features include
Bluetooth connectivity for hands-free phone operation with voice
recognition, remote keyless entry and a 160-watt, six-speaker
audio system. The stereo can play a driver's iPod or other music
device, a USB thumb driver, and then control the device through
the vehicle's optional navigation screen. The driver's iPod and
cell phone can fit nicely in a small open storage bin at the base
of center of the dash, where the USB port rests.
There are some optional features
that are certainly worth consideration as well. The leather
interior is crisp and clean and feels much more luxurious than the
Hyundai's low price tag. Hyundai has added a two-pane panoramic
sunroof that provides blue-sky views from the second row and makes
the cabin feel even more open.
There's also the versatility within
the cabin for someone who carries more stuff than people. The
60/40 split second row can create up to 55.8 cubic feet of stuff
and even with the second row up, there's 25.7 cubic feet of room.
Most of all, there's plenty of room
to stretch your legs -- what with 41.2 inches of legroom in the
front and 38.7 inches in the back.
Smoothly quiet
Now, while driving around Southern
California, perhaps the most noticeable aspect of the Tucson was
how quiet it rode. This is in part because of all the work Hyundai
did to deaden the sounds from the outside as well as smooth out
its ride.
Most impressive was the Tucson's
electric power steering that felt well weighted on the road. The
feedback was excellent, and had no one told me, I would have
guessed it was power rack-and-pinion steering instead of electric.
(One reason this helps improve a vehicle's gas mileage is that
traditional power steering required a pump that ran off the car's
engine. Now that no pump is needed, power to move a belt to
operate the pump is, instead, used to power the car.)
Not every fuel saving idea was
original and the Hyundai Tucson never wows you the way some
vehicles do. But the redesigned Tucson is ages ahead of its
predecessor and demonstrates how much Hyundai has matured.
This is just the beginning for the
Korean carmaker, as 2010 promises even more vehicles with clean
design and good gas mileage.
To assume Hyundai is not ready for
the prime time is to make a big mistake, because it's already
there.
Overall:
★★★
1/2 Exterior:
Good. Straight-laced and flowing design gives the Tucson a good
overall look. Interior:
Excellent. Comfortable and well-appointed, the Tucson comes with
scads of amenities. Performance:
Good. Quiet, comfortable ride. The 2.4-liter I-4 provides plenty
of power and excellent gas mileage. Pros:
Good value and performance create a well-balanced package. Cons:
Not as sporty as some small crossovers, but a good family hauler.
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