RE: Driven: Hyundai Veloster 1.6 GDI DCT

RE: Driven: Hyundai Veloster 1.6 GDI DCT

Tuesday 13th March 2012

Driven: Hyundai Veloster 1.6 GDI DCT

Bold, stylish and distinctive is the Veloster the first really PH-worthy Hyundai?



We were keen to get our hands on the Veloster, not least to figure out whether that 2+1 door arrangement was anything more than a gimmick. It isn't.

You can't argue with the boldness
You can't argue with the boldness
But there's a lot more to it than that of course. Hyundai has made a coupe before of course but the Veloster is a very different prospect and takes the brand into aspirational territory. Certainly on Hyundai's part. But do Scirocco buyers aspire to Hyundai?

The value proposition, backed up with now strong design and those epic warranties, goes a long way to overturning badge snobbery in the mainstream marketplace. But it's got a harder test against cars like the Scirocco, Mini Coupe, Peugeot RCZ and - yes, it's been at least a day since we last mentioned it - the forthcoming Toyota GT 86 and Subaru BRZ.

It's one of those cars you want to will to succeed, just for the boldness of the concept. But, sadly, in this sector more than any first impressions count a great deal. Sadly the wow factor styling quickly plays second fiddle to ew factor plastics and the very clear sense it's been ruthlessly constructed to a price.

Looks good, but not up close
Looks good, but not up close
It's a pity. Because it looks great, exactly the kind of bold design statement Hyundai needs to stand out. And superficially it's the same inside. Strong design abounds and it all feels very 'now' with some great touches like punchy graphics on the infotainment system. Loads of standard kit too, including a touchscreen 'media centre', climate control, parking sensors and LED DRLs. Sport spec - another £2,500 - gets you leather, a full-length glass roof and 18-inch wheels plus more besides. Lots to like, in other words. And then your finger brushes another exposed screw head, the fuel filler cap clangs shut cheaply or the charcoal-like whiff of Korean plastic tickles your nostrils. It's a shame. Details matter and in this respect the Veloster, having dazzled with the big picture, falls down on closer analysis.

Same with the way it drives too, unfortunately. There's nothing actually wrong with it but nor does it inspire in anyway whatsoever. The steering feels springy, the gearbox - a dual-clutch auto (£1,250 extra) in this case - wails like a CVT and the 140hp is very hard won indeed. Hyundai badly needs to get that turbo bolted on and to the market if it's to square up to rivals using the 1.6 turbo PSA engine (Mini, RCZ) or the twincharged VW 1.4 in the Scirocco. Hyundai is moving in this direction but it can't come soon enough.

If it went as well as it looked it'd be a winner
If it went as well as it looked it'd be a winner
Much of which you could forgive, expecting a competitive pricetag. And then you look at the bottom line figure on our test car: £22,845. Money that'd get you in a Chili pack equipped 184hp Mini Cooper S Coupe with a grand to spend on extras or, for a few hundred quid more, a Peugeot RCZ with the zingy 156hp turbo 1.6 or a 160hp 1.4 TSI Scirocco.

Yes, the Veloster offers better back seat accommodation than many of these. And bags of style, badge snobs be damned.

You can see the Koreans working their way through the checklist and 'dynamics' is clearly next on the agenda too. Put simply the Veloster is a facelift away from meeting the Mini, Scirocco, RCZ and others on equal terms across the board. VW et al can sleep securely for now. But the Koreans are nothing if not focused and you can be sure the Veloster isn't done before it's begun.


HYUNDAI VELOSTER 1.6 GDI SPORT DCT
Engine:
1,591cc 4-cyl
Transmission: 6-speed manual/6-speed dual-clutch auto, front-wheel drive
Power (hp): 140@6,300rpm
Torque (lb ft): 123@4,850rpm
0-62mph: 9.7sec/10.3 sec (DCT)
Top speed: 125mph/124mph (DCT)
Weight: 1,236kg/1,279kg (DCT)
MPG: 43.5/44.1 (NEDC combined)
CO2: 148g/km/145g/km (DCT)
Price: £21,745 (£22,845 as tested)




 

 

Author
Discussion

chunkymonkey71

Original Poster:

13,015 posts

198 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
Looks ok and I think Hyundai are doing good things, but it looks like the dash was nicked from a Fiesta.

Atomas

15 posts

183 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
22.5k That's a lot of pounds!, especially considering that it is selling for about as much dollars in North America. They gotta bring it down closer to 15k to stand a chance

TheHeretic

73,668 posts

255 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
No... The Genesis was the first PH worthy Hyundai. wink

DanDC5

18,786 posts

167 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
TheHeretic said:
No... The Genesis was the first PH worthy Hyundai. wink
With luck we'll get the updated one now the GT86/BRZ are being released here. Hopefully.

arkenphel

484 posts

205 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
A neighbour has one. It's a very eye catching design externally. I'm expecting big things of the Koreans.

lazystudent

1,789 posts

161 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
I really like it. But I'd never buy one!

TheHeretic

73,668 posts

255 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
lazystudent said:
I really like it. But I'd never buy one!
Why not?

ED209

5,746 posts

244 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
At 17-18 k maybe at 22 not for me. Hyundai seem to be loosing their reputation for value.

MrTappets

881 posts

191 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
It's bold, but quite lumpy and awkward, and almost £23k is too much for something that can barely crack 10 secs to sixty. But I agree that compared to what's gone before (Genesis and Coupe aside) it's a step in the right direction. At least I actually have an opinion now, which isn't something I could be bothered with for most of their other stuff.

JameshGT

92 posts

149 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
I like them, the turbo varient especially.

Although looking at the 22k tag for that, the turbo may be a tad pricey

uncle tez

530 posts

151 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
TheHeretic said:
lazystudent said:
I really like it. But I'd never buy one!
Why not?
Same here but couldn't really give an answer to why not. I feel the same about the rcz. I Love the looks of it but I would never buy one. I think it might be one of those cars where you think "for that price i could buy.........". It'll probably make a great second hand bargain in a few years though

lazystudent

1,789 posts

161 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
TheHeretic said:
lazystudent said:
I really like it. But I'd never buy one!
Why not?
Dunno. Gut feeling? Style over substance? I'm sure it will be sold in fairly large numbers, but as someone who cares more than the average car buyer who just thinks "it looks nice", I would want to get something more interesting for the equivalent money.

anonymous-user

54 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
ED209 said:
At 17-18 k maybe at 22 not for me. Hyundai seem to be loosing their reputation for value.
Definately makes more sense as the entry level £17,995

Oddball RS

1,757 posts

218 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
I guess if you want one, and i do think they look different at least, its going to be an ex demo or 6 moth old car and never a brand spanker at that price.

pistonpie

175 posts

159 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
I think the design is a bit naff..looks nice enough from the front end but the rear of the car is horrible and clumsy looking in my opinion...

Dagnut

3,515 posts

193 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
The pricing is crazy..if it was cheaper than it's rivals you might take a punt but when sit the same price and dearer why would you be tempted from your current car?

You can buy a 160bhp TSI golf for the money...the Hyundai will probably be better built but I can't see many people walking buy a VW dealership to buy this

Dave Hedgehog

14,549 posts

204 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
bucket seats and a 60 of 10 seconds ...

PHMatt

608 posts

148 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
I live about 100 yards from a Hyundai dealership and they have one of these parked on the forecourt.

At first I thought they'd put the wrong price in the window. It was actually £23k and some change.

Come on! - really? For a weak 140bhp tatty made Korean tin box that WILL UNEQUIVOCALLY depreciate to absolutely NOTHING within 3 years?

It may look dramatic, but by this entire write up it confirms it still suffers what they all have - made out of recycled carier bags and tin foil, hideously under powered and "meh" in the driving stakes.

I can honestly say I would walk past one of these 100 times out of 100 and go to some where like Renault and buy a Clio RS. It'd surely be substantially cheaper than £23k and even the French can make cars that feel better than Hyundai.

Ps, hate to be pedantic, but please put a full stop in the title.
"Bold, stylish and distinctive. Is the Veloster the first really PH-worthy Hyundai?"

Without the full stop it's a mash of words that make my brain hurt.

Edited by PHMatt on Tuesday 13th March 17:01

theJT

313 posts

185 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
This must be what they mean by a "Marmite" car, becuase seriously I think that's about the ugliest new car I've seen this year - that awful Bently concept included.

Dagnut

3,515 posts

193 months

Tuesday 13th March 2012
quotequote all
PHMatt said:


tatty made Korean tin box



Edited by PHMatt on Tuesday 13th March 17:01
Couldn't be more wrong