Review: 2010 Hyundai Genesis Coupe 2
Review: 2010
Hyundai Genesis Coupe 2.0T Track makes more out of less
by Dan
Roth (RSS
feed) on Aug 25th 2009 at
11:58
2009
Hyundai Genesis Coupe 2.0T Track –
Click above for high-res image gallery
The
2.0T is the low man on Hyundai 's Genesis Coupe totem pole,
disappointing the power addled and whooping it up too much for
pinkie-waving tea drinkers. However, raw power isn't what this turbo
model is all about, and once that's made clear, the coupe becomes a
delightful flavor in Hyundai 's best recipe. All the careful
execution of the Genesis Sedan carries over, with an extra dollop of
involvement. It's a driver's car, pure and simple. And that's a
recipe we enjoy as much as Mom's London Broil.
While the
car-crazies have hotly anticipated the Genesis Coupe's retail
arrival, mainstreamers have yet to get the memo that Hyundai has its
afterburner lit. Entirely different than the Tiburon it sent packing,
the Genesis Coupe is a rakishly good looking car with crisply
pressed, creative styling. So it looks good, but how's it drive?
One
thing's for certain, the Genesis Coupe has serious potential. In 2.0
Turbo form, the GEMA four-cylinder that Hyundai shares with
Mitsubishi and Chrysler is mildly boosted to deliver 210 horsepower
and 223 pound-feet of torque. The torque is all-in by 2,000 rpm, and
there's serious untapped potential in the aluminum engine. In fact,
the Hyundai 2.0 shares some of its design with the raucous Mitsubishi
Evo's powerplant, although parts differ between the two. The Evo
connection is a tantalizing road map to increase the force-fed
Genesis' hijinks, and the aftermarket ought to have a field day once
it sinks its teeth in.
In the engine room, things are tidy and
laid out in a businesslike fashion; the details have clearly been
sweated. The turbocharger hangs off the passenger side of the block,
and is plumbed through an intercooler before pressurizing the intake
tract. There's plenty of room underhood for larger plumbing,
aftermarket boost controllers and the usual hot-rodding suspects. The
engine has been constructed with all of the right details: aluminum
block and heads with cast-in cylinder liners, a bedplate for the
lower end, oil sprayers to cool the pistons and dual overhead cams
with continuously variable valve timing. Stout stuff. And the square
dimensions, with both bore and stroke equaling 86 millimeters, make a
good trade-off between off-boost torque and revvability.
The
Track suspension package starches up the chassis with stiffened
springs and dampers, adds larger diameter stabilizer bars (25mm front
and 22 mm rear), stuffs 19-inch wheels with staggered, summer-only
Bridgestones under the fenders, and upgrades the brakes with Brembo
pieces. Four-piston calipers all around in the obligatory shade of
red squeeze 13.4-inch rotors in front and 13-inchers out back, which
is impressive braking hardware on a vehicle that's just shy of
$28,000 dollars. More importantly for building performance cred, the
Track package is not available with an automatic transmission.
Exiting a corner with Tutta
Forza called up, a Track-trim
Torsen limited-slip differential helps get the power down. The 2.0T
has to work hard to break loose – which might strike some as
less impressive to some than the big-torque V6 version, but on the
track, most wheelspin is little more than wasted motion. While the
Coupe and Sedan share a platform, there's nearly five fewer inches
of Genesis wheelbase in the two door. A more substantive change is
the strut front suspension in the coupe instead of the sedan's
control arms. The struts keep costs down, but not at the expense of
performance, and the strut towers are braced to keep the geometry
stable. The Track suspension in our Genesis Coupe 2.0T is simply the
finest job of performance-minded chassis calibration we've ever
sampled from Hyundai . The extra stiffness might make your pocket
change jingle, but it's still got enough compliance to be
comfortable on most surfaces. The ride is busy, but it's acceptable
for the extra capability, and more cushion is available by opting
out out of the Track package. It's cheaper, too.
The rest of
the goodies covered in the Track package are mostly cosmetic and
comfort upgrades, including all the goods in the Premium trim level
like an Infinity audio system, power moonroof, a power driver's
seat, auto-dim mirrors and push-button start. Inside, aluminum
dresses up the pedals and the comfortable, bolstered seats are
covered in a combination of black leather and red "high
friction" cloth. Navigation is forthcoming, too, though our
tester sported a large, legible LCD at the top of the center stack
in its place. Exterior details include foglamps, high-intensity
discharge headlamps, and a large rear spoiler that we'd have
accepted reduced downforce to avoid.
The driver's office is
also a fantastically good effort. Controls are in the right places,
the wheel and stubby shift knob are wrapped in leather, and the
center stack is attractively clean while still carrying a full
complement of controls for the ventilation and comprehensive
entertainment systems. The metallized plastic that tastefully
accents various surfaces in the interior may be easily marred,
especially where the fob docks, so an entire keychain resting on the
lower left corner of the console for thousands of miles is bound to
leave a mark. In front of the driver are two metal-ringed nacelles
housing legible gauges with halo-style lighting. All of the switches
and buttons feel first-rate, and cheap plastics only invade unseen
areas.
The only gripe we can muster is the way the steering
wheel spokes occasionally block the stalks, making it difficult to
see what you've set the intermittent wipers to. Casting an eye
around the interior of the Genesis Coupe, you see refined design,
and even though some surfaces appear richer than they feel, for the
most part, only those who'd rather poke and prod the dash pad will
be disappointed – the rest of us will be too busy driving the
car.
Upon pressing the "go" button and setting
off, we noticed pedals well placed for heel and toe downshifting,
and the machinery is game to play along. Underway, there's a growl
from the four-cylinder's exhaust, and you can detect the occasional
whoosh from the mostly silent turbocharger. The Genesis impresses by
being tight, rattle free, and more serene than we expected. A common
complaint, at least among those who've tried the V6 Genesis Coupe,
is that it has a heavy clutch. In the Turbo, we found the opposite
to be the case; the clutch is light and the take-up point is vague.
Likewise, steering feel has been widely praised when fitted with the
other powertrain, but our initial impression was that it erred on
the light side. However, the steering's communication won the day,
conveying plenty of detail about what's going on at road level.
There's some softness when off-boost, especially in the
first couple of gears where the shorter gearing of the Turbo
prevents boost from building. It all fizzes up nicely in 3rd gear,
though, and the 2.0 pulls strongly. At speed, a poke at the pedal
delivers a responsive surge of pressurized acceleration. When
attempting a quick tear through the gears, the electronic throttle's
tendency to hang open during shifts precludes smooth driving. It's
an emissions thing, for sure, but the calibration forces either
slower shifts, or an acceptance of less graceful forward progress.
While there's certainly noticeable grunt delivered by the
powertrain, the joy in the turbocharged Genesis Coupe is not in a
thuggish shove into the seat. That's what the V6 is for. The 2.0T
Track is all about being a pavement scalpel. The handling is clean
and deft, the transmission plays along nicely as you row the
six-speed gearbox, and the overall execution is impressive for a
first effort at a rear-wheel drive coupe that's essentially a
ponycar. The capable Genesis Coupe might not have you bellowing the
theme to "The Courtship of Eddie's Father" in the same way
that the telepathic Nissan 370Z does, and there are cars that will
outrun it, but the Genesis Coupe can still hang without excuses.
The potential that lies within this inexpensive,
well-crafted coupe is what's really exciting. The easy way to
increased capability is winding up the boost. With the aggressive
buy in price, there ought to be coins left rattling in the piggy
bank for immediate upgrades. On the practical side, the Genesis
Coupe offers a (very tight) back seat that folds, a trunk that's not
too shabby for a coupe, and it can return 30 miles per gallon on the
highway when driven far more gently than we managed. We made too
many visits to Boostville to attain that EPA highway estimate.
While the Genesis Coupe is not perfect, it's an extremely
solid entry into a newly refreshed RWD sport/ponycar class with
plenty of competition. Anyone contemplating the neo-retro Mustang,
Camaro, or Challenger ought to check out the Genny, as it offers a
whole lot of performance for a solid price without egregious corner
cutting. Hyundai 's money has gone into the things that matter with
this car, and it works phenomenally well, even if we were left
wanting more torque in first and second gears every time we launched
it hard. Wrap the package in handsome, original bodywork that's not
trying to recapture 1969, and Hyundai 's effort makes a compelling
argument.
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