RE: Hyundai Grandeur | Shed of the Week

RE: Hyundai Grandeur | Shed of the Week

Friday 16th May

Hyundai Grandeur | Shed of the Week

The Hyundai what now? Class is in session for a forgotten Korean gem. Well, we say gem...


Every now and then, we welcome new cars to the Shedly fold. It’s always a delight to see once-expensive vehicles brought down by the ravages of time, taxation and a total lack of interest. 

This week’s entry will probably end up being both a debutant and a swansong at the same time. According to a known source for this sort of information, there are only 17 Hyundai Grandeurs registered in the UK - and according to Nic, the known boss of PH content, the level of interest in it may turn out to be equally minuscule. All we’re saying is, don’t expect to see another one on here anytime soon.  

Many of those posting in the forum might welcome that thought, possibly going so far as to suggest the use of fire as a means of reducing Grandeur numbers still further. Others may bemoan the unstoppable erosion of the barge wafting movement. One thing’s for sure: nobody will praise the UK Government for taxing perfectly usable curios like this off the road. As the ad says, with just the right degree of outrage, this Hyundai sits at the top of the taxation punishment scaffold at £735pa. You might see this as a step too far or, more calmly, as an acceptable addition to the price – albeit one which will annually repeat itself on an upwardly sliding scale. 

Whichever view you take will depend on your attitude towards large-engined luxury cars built by firms with a good reputation for reliability. The Grandeur certainly has some heritage. For ten years before the rather nasty Dynasty arrived in 1996, the Grandeur had been Hyundai’s flagship motor. It was never imported into the UK, apart from a small batch brought in for Hyundai UK’s big knobs to mooch around in. Shed doesn’t think this is one of those cars as the reg number indicates a registration point somewhere in the West Country, and Hyundai’s HQ is in Leatherhead, Surrey. 

The gen-four car you’re looking at here in either admiration or disgust was the first modern-looking model. The suspension was fully independent, and the 3.3-litre ‘Lambda’ V6 chugged out 232hp and 224lb ft through the front wheels, enough with the 5-speed slushbox auto trans for a 0-60mph time in the mid-sevens and a top end of 147mph. The combined mpg figure was around 26mpg, hence the punitive tax rate. 

Some Grandeur features do date the car somewhat, like the Dolby cassette player and the manly steering wheel that you could use to pilot a supertanker through the Suez Canal, but others like the dual-zone climate control will continue to satisfy the modern motorist, assuming they’re still working, of course. We’ve no reason to suppose they won’t be. This car whistled through its MOT test in March once the garage had sorted out the single advisory, which is a first in Shed’s experience: ‘offside rear other passenger door likely to open inadvertently or not remain closed’. 

Getting past the interesting philosophical point of what the difference might be between a door opening inadvertently and a door not remaining closed, there’s no visible issue in that area now, or in any other one come to that. The wheels have a bit of pox on them, but the body looks as clean and straight as you’d expect from a car that’s clearly been cherished by the same owner for the last 12 years. The seats look like they might have all the lateral support of a pizza shovel, but the leather is nice and shiny and, unlike the crotch of the postmistress’s raciest bloomers, split-free.

Hyundai still makes the Grandeur. The current gen-seven makes quite the styling statement with its cliff-like cheesegrater grille, shallow glasshouse and chiselled profile. Look it up and be amazed/appalled. Long before Aldi was selling instant coffee by the same name, the Grandeur wore an Azera badge in some markets, the ones that still put a value on big saloons which can be driven by bods in caps while you take up a comfortable position in the rear compartment, a situation Shed always looks forward to on his naughty assignations with the PM. 

Admittedly, it’s a long way off a gen-two Toyota Century with its purring 5.0-litre V12 engine, but then it’s a long way off a good secondhand Century’s price too at one-nine-nine-five quid. Although he’s never been in a Grandeur, Shed ventures the opinion that there will be far worse chariots in which to ooze smoothly along the boulevard of life.


See the full ad

Author
Discussion

tomsugden

Original Poster:

2,354 posts

242 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Never even seen one of these, or knew they existed.

hammo19

6,317 posts

210 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
New one on me too. Rare I would say.

Alorotom

12,392 posts

201 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Super-rare

Looks immaculate more than its value - stick a non-age related plate on and job jobbed

Top shed I would say!

JD2329

495 posts

182 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
A semi-interesting curiosity, but the road tax kills it stone dead.

Mikebentley

7,276 posts

154 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
I know it will never break down but I wonder about spares availability. The Road Tax is a killer for older stuff. My 78 yr old mother had an SLK and a 2007 Honda CRV which were both in this bracket. Got rid of the SLK last year because of this and some big welding jobs lurking. She just bites the bullet when it comes to taxing the CRV which is in fine fettle.

Sn1ckers

654 posts

72 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Shame about the tax, only thing detracting from what would otherwise be a top shed.

RedWhiteMonkey

7,765 posts

196 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Not one for me, but there appears to only be 17 of these left registered in the UK.

https://www.howmanyleft.co.uk/vehicle/hyundai_gran...

carinaman

22,988 posts

186 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
JD2329 said:
A semi-interesting curiosity, but the road tax kills it stone dead.
Thanks, thought that would be the case, but it saved me checking.


I'll be paying £415 on my <£700 VAG hand me down that looks like it has the same paint code as a local catering magnate's Audi A8 W12.


Weird styling it's like a lozenge sucked Carina E or late 90s-00s Mazda 626 in blandness and then you see the rear three quarter view and it has those bulbous, sweeping rear wings over the rear wheel arches.

Looking again am I seeing some high arched 90-00s Audi glasshouse in that rear three quarter view too?


Is it too new for the Festival of the Unexceptional or whatever it's called? It's a bit of a curio.



Edited by carinaman on Friday 16th May 07:35

georgeyboy12345

3,874 posts

49 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
RedWhiteMonkey said:
Not one for me, but there appears to only be 17 of these left registered in the UK.

https://www.howmanyleft.co.uk/vehicle/hyundai_gran...
Did you not read the article?

LightweightLouisDanvers

2,481 posts

57 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Top post mistress smuttiness today biggrin
I'll pass on the car.

apm142001

278 posts

103 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
I like the MOT’s wording, it suggests that the offending door has a level of sentience which I’d not normally ascribe to bits of Hyundai.

It’s quite rare to find a car I didn’t know existed but Shed has managed this today (with a typically good article).

Not really my sort of thing but am glad to see that something this odd is still on the road, as modern cars get ever-more homogenous.

cerb4.5lee

36,609 posts

194 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
I didn't know it existed, and I'm certainly no fan of Hyundai either. However there are some things that I like about it though, the V6 petrol engine/the leather interior for example, so I'd knock around in it as a shed I think.

I also enjoyed reading about the shenanigans with the PM too. biggrin

86wasagoodyear

705 posts

110 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Fuel costs aren't going to be pretty to add to the tax. It's such a shame that stuff like this need quadratic equation man-maths to be viable to run nowadays. See also cheap examples of the magnificent Subaru Legacy mk4 3.0.

FrankandLynn

21 posts

7 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Mikebentley said:
I know it will never break down but I wonder about spares availability. The Road Tax is a killer for older stuff. My 78 yr old mother had an SLK and a 2007 Honda CRV which were both in this bracket. Got rid of the SLK last year because of this and some big welding jobs lurking. She just bites the bullet when it comes to taxing the CRV which is in fine fettle.
The spares availability is a very valid point for a car that has not been imported into the country in volume… could be the second biggest problem after the ridiculous RFL cost !

mart4856

115 posts

38 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Another anonymous big old barge killed by high VED and hefty running costs. Just crush it and do the world a favour.

el romeral

1,519 posts

151 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Top shed anonymity. It was a new one on me and quite likely most of the Hyundai dealers have never heard of it either. Definitely a hint of Passat from some angles. Large bills but low price may be tempting for someone.

GreatScott2016

1,822 posts

102 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Unaware these existed. Looks to be a tidy example, but that tax frown

Lester H

3,383 posts

119 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
el romeral said:
Top shed anonymity. It was a new one on me and quite likely most of the Hyundai dealers have never heard of it either. Definitely a hint of Passat from some angles. Large bills but low price may be tempting for someone.
If a huge bill loomed, you would just have to scrap it. This and the road tax already discussed is a damn shame because ironically it causes waste (and the manufacture of another car.). Daft government policies with unforeseen consequences!

Piston-slapper

62 posts

104 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Am I the only one to read "PM" as maybe meaning Mr. Starmer rather than "postmistress" until the penny finally dropped (and the morning coffee kicked in)??!! Great article.

ducnick

2,025 posts

257 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Perfect shed. Looks clean, probably quite reliable. Ideal if you live somewhere with limited camera / police. Pay in cash, give a fake name and address to the dealer and it’s free from VED and insurance. Cheap motoring.