Category Archives: Genesis

Hyundai Genesis a luxurious ride

The largest, most powerful and best-equipped Hyundai ever sold in the United States, the Genesis offers a value-priced alternative to premium European and Japanese sedans, according to a spokesman for Gaddis Hyundai of Muncie.

New for the 2009 model year, the first of the Genesis models began arriving recently at the local dealership, said Jim Raines, sales representative.

“The Genesis compares favorably to a BMW, Mercedes or Lexus,” he said. “Hyundai’s objective in designing this car was to offer value-minded buyers the chance to have the performance and luxury of a $45,000 to $50,000 car for a price $9,000 to $15,000 less.”

Hyundai did not create the Genesis by starting with an existing model and hanging extra options and equipment on it, Raines said: Instead, the car is built on a new full-size, rear-drive chassis that offers rigid construction and nearly 50/50 front-to-rear weight distribution.

“Rear-drive is the standard among most cars in this class, and this chassis offers the balance and handling people expect of a performance-oriented sport sedan,” he said.

Raines added that some features of the Genesis are not available on other cars in the same class.

“The only other car to offer the Genesis’ available 17-speaker Lexicon audio system is a Rolls-Royce,” he said. “This audio system is set up much like a home-theater system for the car.”

In addition, the Genesis has an internal fiber-optic network that connects many components and accessories to the car’s computer system. Hyundai says the fiber-optic system is more reliable than conventional wires and allows faster transfer of data.

Safety features include eight airbags: front, side and head-curtain airbags for the front as well as side and head-curtain airbags for the rear. The Genesis also comes standard with stability control, traction control and active front head restraints that move forward to reduce the chance of head or neck injuries in a rear-end collision.

The Genesis is covered by Hyundai’s standard ten-year or 100,000-mile powertrain warranty, which should enhance the car’s appeal to value-seeking buyers, Raines said.

Billed by Hyundai as “America’s Best Warranty,” coverage also includes a five-year or 60,000-mile bumper-to-bumper warranty and a five-year, unlimited-mileage roadside assistance plan.

Two Genesis models — the 3.8 and the 4.6 — are available.

The Genesis 3.8 comes with a 290-horsepower, 3.8-liter V6 engine and starts at $32,250, while the Genesis 4.6 has a 375-horsepower, 4.6-liter V8 and a base price of $37,250. Both models come standard with six-speed “Shiftronic” automatic transmissions that can be shifted manually if the driver wishes.

Other standard features on both Genesis models include a dual-zone automatic climate control system with air filtration and a “smog sensing” air quality system, electroluminescent instrument cluster, Bluetooth hands-free phone system, electronic pushbutton starting, leather upholstery, heated front seats, leather-wrapped steering wheel and shift knob, four-wheel antilock disc brakes, XM satellite radio and heated outside mirrors with integral turn signal indicators.

Additional or upgraded features on the Genesis 4.6 include 18-inch “Hyper Silver” wheels, a power rear sunshade, power tilt-and-telescoping steering column with memory features, rain-sensing wipers, illuminated door sill plates and a woodgrain-trimmed steering wheel.

Options include a 14- or 17-speaker Lexicon audio system, HD (hybrid digital) radio, a hard-drive based navigation system, rear backup camera, cooled driver’s seat and automatically-leveling HID (high-intensity discharge) headlights.

By KEN WICKLIFFE – July 20, 2008

2009 Hyundai Genesis Road & Track Test

We are running pretty hard through the twists and turns of the Sespe Gorge and over the 5,100 foot pass through the Caliente Range-in the very lap of silent luxury. As the tires approach their limits, even the Dunlop grip is silent. Acceleration is robust and soundless. What is this thing?!! A Hyundai. Really!

Rushing up the San Jacinto Reyes Scenic Byway (California 33) is a tradition with southern California sports car and motorcycle fans. It is a challenge at any speed and the more you ask of your machine the more it asks of your talent–and judgment; Route 33 is ruled by production European machines and Asian tuner cars. Hyundai isn’t a name one hears in the regular gathering zones. A Tiburon may appear from time to time. They are cool in spite of limited performance perceptions among the zealots. The artful coupes are better than that, but the Hyundai name remains a mask over real quality. Until now.

The 2009 Genesis represents Hyundai’s exodus from cheap, amusing sedans and inexpensive, if handsome, SUVs, Veracruz accepted, as its corporate norm. Since the company’s recent much publicized decision to move its corporate perception onto a new plateau, the products have both lived up to the promotion and delivered profit to the dealers. Even those retail outlets have been compelled to raise their public presence with a new, Bauhaus-moderne corporate facade.

A luxurious Hyundai sport sedan (hmmm) would have been a tough sell–until July of 2008. Now the word is out. The Genesis introduces so much to the Hyundai brand in one fell swoop that the mind boggles. A 100,000-mile warranty underscores Hyundai’s perception of its own ability to deliver on the marketing surge, and with that promise is the reality that the company, together with Kia, is now the fifth largest auto manufacturer in the world; ahead of Honda and Nissan.

The base Genesis is far beyond what that word implies. Most interior appointments are matched for both the V6 and V8 models. Only the feature package differs. Both include all the current luxury car tech: proximity key, airbags everywhere, leather seats with all over the place electric adjust and heat, fully automatic climate control, auto-dim lights and mirror, Bluetooth and iPod/USB and auxiliary input jacks. But the V8 includes a Lexicon (previously exclusive to Rolls Royce) 15-speaker sound system, the ones we had were equipped with a big screen nav system that was universally loved, a power rear sunshade, and a power adjust, wood-rimmed steering wheel.

The steering is as eloquent in its communication as the best of the Germans and the NVH and soundproofing is as good as the best from Japan. The ultimate Japanese product group created a sensory deprivation chamber for all passengers, including the driver. It then introduced an electronic simulation of what the engineering staff research suggested steering loads and surface communication should feel like. But it was never much loved by performance drivers and that group remained steadfastly devoted to the German manufacturers with decades of motorsport and high performance road expectations in their development programs.

Hyundai accomplished a remarkable ride and handling chassis with honest steering wheel communication–right out of the box. How’d they do that? We asked project engineer Michael Dietz.

“The design was done in Korea at the sparkling new, state-of-the-art design center in Namyang, with regular design reviews from both our American and European design staffs. That was also true for the chassis development you asked about. Sachs in Germany was directly involved in suspension design and tuning. There were Sachs engineers at the Hyundai Kia America Technical Centers in Irvine, California, and Superior Township in Michigan every few weeks to finish the five-link geometry, springs and Sachs ASD amplitude adaptive damping details. Wendell Collins was our lead chassis engineer and we are very proud of what he accomplished. The final set up includes a 35mm anti-roll bar at the front of both models and 18mm rear bar for the V8 and 17mm for the six. TRW co-developed our electro hydraulic power steering components and I saw a lot of the country during the testing and refinement process. I would be driving with two TRW engineers in the car with laptops making incremental changes in the programming.”

The power steering is a hydraulic system with adjustable valving and powered by an electric motor that takes one element of power drain off the engine.

Genesis’ entry level 3.8-liter V6 is a modern DOHC delivering 290 horsepower with a mid-range torque of 264 lb-ft at 4,500 rpm that makes everyday driving effortless, and there is a weight advantage that makes it a strong competitor to its upscale sibling. The DOHC V8 edition produces 375 hp at 6,500 revs and 333 lb-ft of torque at 3,500 from 4.6 liters, but has to carry 264 additional pounds, mostly on the forward end of the chassis.

Both engines are essentially new. The six is the second generation of Hyundai’s Lambda engine, but is mostly new, and the V8 is a corporate first that uses some of the V6 engineering and components. Both include a dual stage intake system along with variable valve timing for clean performance throughout the rev range. The six uses Hyundai’s Aisin-sourced B600 transmission and a sporting Shiftronic gate. The V8’s torque required a shift to a ZF 6HP26 automatic that also makes use of the manual Shiftronic mode. On the track the manual mode was not as quick as some of the recent paddle shift Europeans, but it worked well and was the equal of the best of the journalists at the limit.

Curious is the engine data panel that includes performance figures for both premium and regular fuel. The V8 power goes from 375 to 368 by lowering the octane rating from 91 to 83 and the torque is only reduced by 9 lb-ft. So Hyundai’s focus on inexpensive ownership remains intact, even with a beautifully finished, high performance luxury sedan. The V8 delivers fuel consumption of 17 city and 25 highway while the V6 delivers 18 and 27 respectively; acceptable numbers for a modest mid-size sedan, impressive from a very luxurious high performance car.

The car was a surprising delight on the track. With 4-wheel, 4-channel, 4-sensor ABS and EBD (electronic brake-force distribution) switched as near to off as it would allow, the car was nearly as much fun as a Miata. It could be pitched into dramatic slip angles and brought back with a slight lift of the power pedal. It never seemed out of reach. The V6, with its P235 /50R 18 Dunlops (standard on the V8 and optional with the V6) allowed soft limits and easy return. You could feel the scrub of rubber on pavement, but very little sound until they were well over the limit.

Repeated hard runs up to tight corners had no affect on the “big _ _ _ brakes.” Ventilated front rotors were 12.6-in diameter on the six and 13-in on the eight. Rears were the same on both, with solid 12.4-in discs.

Hyundai has delivered a surprise. The company promised to raise its own bar for both quality and reliability, but no one expected this. It is a very difficult car to criticize. It has a larger interior than a BMW 5 Series and is best in class in every quantifiable target. The corporate exodus from cheap and amusing is well underway with a Genesis to lead the new line of less expensive and exceptional.

Source: Automobile.com

AutoBlog: First Drive 2009 Hyundai Genesis

Unless you’ve been living in a mine deep in the hills of West Virginia, Hyundai’s newest addition isn’t coming to you as a surprise. Around these offices, we’ve been anticipating the rear-wheel-drive Genesis platform and its offspring of luxury sedan and performance coupe for years. While we’ll have to continue waiting for the eagerly-anticipated 2010 Genesis Coupe, we’ve just taken our first drive in the elegant 2009 Hyundai Genesis sedan.

Hyundai would like you to consider the Genesis a competitor to an exhaustive list of cars. The targets reportedly include the Mercedes-Benz E-Class, S Class, BMW 5-Series, 7 Series, Infiniti M, Lexus GS, Chrysler 300C, Lexus ES350, Pontiac G8, and Cadillac STS. After a day behind the wheel over road and track, we whittled it down to a much shorter list. In one breath, the Genesis will simply compete head-to-head with the Infiniti M, Lexus GS, Lexus ES, Acura TL, and Acura RL. The German buyers want their badge; the American customers are true to their flag.

Taking design cues from the best of the best, the Genesis looks like the offspring of a tryst between a 7 Series, LS430, S-Class, and an Infiniti M. Engaging at first glance, yet completely unidentifiable from the badgeless front end, Hyundai designers put it all together in a very clean yet decidedly conservative package that emits a fair amount of luxury without looking… um, Korean.

Two different Genesis models will roll into showrooms this year. The standard model is the Genesis 3.8 featuring a six-cylinder powerplant and a base price of $32,250. Under its aluminum hood is a 3.8-liter V6, mated to an Aisin B600 6-speed automatic transmission. The powerplant is rated at 290 hp and 264 lb-ft of torque (EPA fuel economy ratings of 18/27). The Genesis 3.8 tips the scales at 3,748 pounds and scoots to 60 mph in a decent 6.2 seconds.

The flagship Genesis 4.6 model offers an eight-cylinder powerplant with a base price of $37,250. Displacing 4.6 liters, the engine is mated to a ZF 6-speed automatic. The V8 is rated at 375 hp and 368 lb-ft of torque (EPA 17/25). With a curb weight of 4,012 pounds, the Genesis 4.6 sprints to 60 mph in just 5.7 seconds.

Whether you choose the six- or eight-cylinder model, both Genesis sedans feature heated leather seating, fully automatic HVAC, Bluetooth hands-free phone, and iPod/USB jacks as standard equipment (to match the upgraded standard equipment on the Genesis 4.6 with a Genesis 3.8 model, simply order the Premium Package).

The Technology Package adds navigation, satellite radio, adaptive HID headlamps, and parking assist to both models. According to Hyundai, a nicely equipped Genesis 3.8 will run about $35,000. With all option boxes checked, a loaded Genesis 4.6 tops out at about $42,000.

As the doors unlock with the standard proximity key, the Genesis sedan welcomes driver and passengers into a very inviting cabin. Soft leather envelopes the seats, door panels, and dashboard, while LED interior lighting (emitting a brighter and whiter light) illuminates the cabin at night. Wood and aluminum inlays complete the package without appearing garish or out of place. The interior quality of materials didn’t simply meet our expectations, they exceeded them.

Sliding our six-foot two-inch frame behind the power-operated tilt/telescoping wheel, we found a comfortable driving position within seconds. The driver’s visibility outward and to the primary back-lit instrumentation is good, as is the proximity to all of the controls on the steering wheel and dash. Just behind the shifter is the now-obligatory infotainment control wheel, falling readily to hand. If we had to nitpick the cabin, we’d point at the climate controls below the radio/NAV display. In contrast to the round volume knob on the audio system, the HVAC offers a non-intuitive pad of flush silver buttons.

With a push of the start button, our Genesis 4.6 came to life. It quickly settled to idle with only the slightest hint of vibration that it was even running. An exhaust note was non-existent. With the transmission in drive, we dodged the morning commuters on our way out of Santa Barbara. Hyundai pointed us towards Buttonwillow Raceway Park, a popular club racing destination several hours away that would require us to trail through the coastal mountains before dropping down into California’s Central Valley. We couldn’t help but think a race track was an odd destination for this large luxury sedan.

Compared to its German rivals (both sporting MacPherson suspension designs in the front and multi-link in the rear), the Genesis matches Lexus with a multi-link set-up fore and aft. Like its Lexus competition, the ride of the new Hyundai is soft and very comfortable. Thanks to an impressively stiff chassis (more rigid than the 5 Series, E-Class, and LS 430) and lightweight aluminum suspension components, it takes bumps and potholes in stride. However, if the vehicle is faced with a set of rhythmic dips in the road, the softly sprung Genesis gently porpoises a bit more than expected. At legal speeds it was hardly noticeable. However, in excess of about 85 mph it became unsettling. While the spring rates seemed adequate, increased damping would stabilize everything in the easily attained triple digits. Of course, the engineer’s compromise on shock valving gave the Genesis a buttery-smooth ride on all but the most undulated roads. Let the Germans keep their occasionally harsh rides to themselves, the Genesis is a luxury car.

The Korean automaker paid careful attention to aerodynamics and wind management. A low drag coefficient (Cd of .27) and an acoustically laminated windshield and front side windows keep the passengers extremely isolated. Independent testing says the Genesis equals the serenity of the Lexus LS 460 over rough pavement, and our ears believed it. It’s what you don’t hear in the Hyundai that matters.

The hushed cabin was the perfect environment to enjoy the premium 528-watt Lexicon sound system and its 11-channel digital amplifier… or so we thought. After adjusting tremble, bass, fader, equalizer and surround mode, we couldn’t get the 17 speakers to vibrate in pleasant harmony. Far from decent FM reception, and without a CD in pocket, we were forced to listen to metallic-sounding satellite radio during our drive, or sing old television tunes. We chose neither.

Arriving at the Buttonwillow track, Hyundai had set up three different challenges for us. The most interesting, and sure to embarrass the luxury-oriented Genesis, was the track course. So, we took it first. With our only instruction to “safely stay on the track,” we were offered freedom to flog both the six- and eight-cylinder models repeatedly. With a bit of apprehension, we grabbed a helmet and a V6 model shod with all-season tires. Knowing it was going to get ugly fast, we left the stability control engaged. To our disbelief, the Genesis did fairly well where the big boys play.

All-season tires slide on a warm track like Crisco on a hot skillet. Without much grip, and soft underpinnings, the Genesis initially rolled like a ship… and then it surprised us by settling down. The RWD chassis and respectfully balanced weight distribution (52:48 on the V6) kept the car relatively stable on the curves as the tires howled and cried in protest. The more powerful V8 didn’t help lap times either. In fact, with more weight over the front wheels (54:46 split); it frustratingly pushed over the front tires (demonstrating understeer) more than its lighter sibling. On both vehicles, the ESC was relatively unobtrusive until the vehicle was in a stupid angle in relation to the intended direction of travel. The brakes, beefy four-piston units that bit hard and consistently lap after lap, were the highlight of the track exercise. As expected, it was far from enjoyable tossing either sedan back and forth through the corners of a road course, but Hyundai had made its point – the “Genesis chassis was certainly up to the task.

The second comparison was a cone-laden slalom pitting each Genesis sedan against a Mercedes-Benz E350. Held in first gear with the stability control defeated, the two Koreans wagged themselves back-and-forth in quick, if not pretty, fashion without tagging a single cone. The German, refusing to stay in a throttle-controlled low gear, followed a bit slower, but just as precisely. Each was out of its element, but it was fun watching chunks of rubber fly off the tires.

The final comparison took place on an unused straight-a-way. It was essentially a “drag race” between the Genesis 4.6 and a BMW 750i. As expected, the lighter and more powerful Genesis won each time.

Leaving the track-terrorized sedans at Buttonwillow, we grabbed a fresh set of keys and drove back to Santa Barbara in a Genesis 3.8 model. Although it was down 85 horses to the V8, the 3.8 model effortlessly passed heavy trucks on the mountain passes. The car was quiet and comfortable for the 150-plus mile ride back to the hotel. While our enthusiast blood naturally migrates towards larger cylinder counts, we couldn’t help but feel the V6 is more than enough engine for this vehicle’s luxury mission. Hyundai, expecting 80% of buyers to choose the Genesis 3.8 model, agrees with us.

Two decades ago, few would have bet that a Japanese economy-car manufacturer would ever dominate the North American luxury-car market. Toyota proved everyone wrong with its picture-perfect introduction of the Lexus brand the following year. While this Korean automaker is as determined – and as financially capable – as its Japanese counterparts, the question isn’t about product. This time, it is about perception and timing. With its first world-class luxury sedan rolling into showrooms later this month, Hyundai’s bold venture is about to be placed in the hands of the consumer.

Source: AutoBlog

Let there be technology: What’s under Hyundai’s new Genesis sedan

The story of what’s underneath — and inside — the Hyundai Genesis is central to the story of the car and what Hyundai’s trying to do with it. The body-in-white of the Genesis has a larger total body area than the Lexus LS460 and Mercedes S-Class. Yet ten years ago, if we had asked you which carmaker would create a rear-wheel-drive V8 sedan with a body structure that is larger, yet stiffer and lighter than the 5-Series or E-Class, would you have guessed it would be Hyundai?

Of course, you probably wouldn’t have guessed that BMW would be selling all the MINIs it could make, or that Alfa Romeo would sell out a run of $200K supercars. The lesson: the games — plural — have changed for everyone. Follow the jump to find out how the Genesis is the spearhead of change for Hyundai and, if Hyundai gets its wish, the entire luxury segment.

Before we dive inside, we’ll start outside with the Genesis’ design. We remember seeing the HCD-1 in 1992, and thinking, “Wow, a Hyundai…” The stream of HCDs that followed have had us thinking the same thing — meanwhile, we saw almost none of their daring on dealer floors. We were showed slides of Genesis concepts during a presentation in Korea, and some were genuinely stunning. When we got the chance to speak briefly to the designer of the HCD-1, our question was why isn’t the Genesis a little bit… bolder?

The various answers we got from him and several other designers were that, essentially, the Genesis should be considered a test of the Hyundai Luxury System. They wanted a mainstream design that wasn’t extravagant and emphasized proportion, stability and dynamism. Success on all counts. It’s a good looking car — it’s simply not memorable. We were, though, told that a more distinct design vocabulary will come. For now, they don’t want to crash the party with something that will make people wonder, “Um, who invited that?”

A discussion of design led naturally to the issue of badging. We really like the winged Genesis badges, and couldn’t understand why Hyundai didn’t call the thing a Genesis instead of a Hyundai. A few readers have asked the same question, with one commenter nailing it when he wrote, “This is one of the best arguments for a separate brand. I think Hyundai really dropped the ball on this one. A Genesis line (Coupe, Sedan, Veracruz SUV) would make a killing.” Hyundai had considered that exact proposition.

There are a number of reasons why they didn’t follow through. Hyundai hired an outside consultant to estimate the cost of launching a standalone brand, and the number they quoted was $250 million, with a break-even point 13 years hence. For a company focused on delivering a lot for a little, and not selling cars at a loss, that’s a large number to spend in the unscientific arena of penetrating brand consciousness, which is what this would come down to. And we assume that is the necessary number only if the brand succeeds as intended; other standalone brands have spent much more than that to launch in the U.S. and, arguably, still haven’t met their objectives.

Beyond hard cash is the softer, marketing-driven reason: Hyundai of America’s marketing honcho said “We want to use the Genesis to sell 30,000 more Azeras.” When looking for the kind of association that will lead to that kind of sales impact, not creating a separate brand makes sense. A Nissan GT-R can be expected to help shift more 350Zs — certainly far more than the supposed Infiniti version of the GT-R would.

Hyundai wants you to think of the Genesis as a Hyundai, not a Genesis. Initially, in light of the branding, we didn’t realize that — the banners in Korea all read “Genesis by Hyundai,” not “Hyundai Genesis.” Once we understood the sales aspect, it made sense. The Genesis will be sold in a special area of a dealer’s showroom, described at one point as a “well decorated corner.” So it won’t be quite like the Maybach, but looking in that direction. Dealers are installing touch-screen kiosks called iTubes that will mirror information onto laptops, and getting copious tours and training on the car.

They’ll be rehearsing their lines to talk about some of the 20 new technologies that Hyundai created for the Genesis — things about which the typical Hyundai buyer isn’t used to hearing. They’ll also be talking up the segment advantages a buyer would get from what is supposedly a non-premium car. Among Hyundai firsts and segment advantages are:

* HID headlights with auto-leveling depending on the load, and Active Front Lighting that swivels with the steering wheel.
* Navigation with a multimedia controller and MOST fiber optic wiring.
* Parking sensors in front and back.
* Rear back-up camera.
* Brake assist and electronic brake distribution.
* Cooled driver’s seat.
* ZF 6-speed transmission in the V8.
* Sachs Amplitude Selective Damping (ASD) suspension.
* Acoustic laminated glass (windshield and front side windows).
* Auto windshield defogger with humidity sensor and rain-sensing wipers.
* Highest specific output (HP/liter) V8.
* Iridium double-tipped spark plugs good for the life of the engine.
* 5-link suspension with aluminum knuckles, lateral arms, tension arms, and carriers front and rear.
* Electronic active head restraints.
* Proximity entry with electronic pushbutton start.
* Aluminum hood.
* Replaceable “crash box” structures to absorb low-speed impacts and reduce repair costs.
* Roof and side outer panels fused with a continuous laser weld, not spot welding.
* HD radio.
* 500-watt Lexicon LOGIC7 audio system with 17 speakers, a 12-channel digital amplifier, and available 40GB hard drive.
* Three-stage Smart Cruise Control available after a year.

Speaking of that ZF 6-speed, sixth is geared to run laughably low RPMs — on the test track, the V8 was doing 3,500 RPM at 130 mph.

Otherwise, on the tech front, Hyundai has teamed with Microsoft to work on future car entertainment systems. According to Hyundai, things like voice-controlled connectivity between mobile devices will be available in the U.S. from 2010. The Genesis also has a “cluster ionizer” — but we didn’t press that button for fear it would zap us back to the scene of our parents’ courtship.

That’s a lot of gadgetry for a Hyundai. Or, Hyundai would probably like you to think that used to be a lot of gadgetry for a Hyundai. Some readers have made much of the troubles Hyundai had with the Excel. Yet if things had really been that thoroughly awful, Hyundai wouldn’t be here anymore. Forget about Yugo — anyone remember Renault, Peugeot, and Fiat?

During our time in Korea, we got a kick out of the story of Chung Mong-koo, Hyundai’s chairman. He headed Hyundai Motors’ after-sales service division for 20 years when the company was focused on volume more than quality. When he took over the company, he had long experience with the company’s quality problems and knew just what needed to change in order to make better cars.

Are there going to be issues? It’s certainly possible, as with any new car. But Hyundai was hitting the top three in J. D. Powers’ Initial Quality Survey back in 2006, and you get that five years of bumper-to-bumper protection with 24-hour roadside assistance, and that 10-year / 100,000-mile warranty… and $33,000 for the V6, come on — it’s a great deal on paper and continues Hyundai’s tradition of offering more car for less money. In this case, the Genesis is a lot more car.

Other tidbits from our time in K-town:

* The Hyundai Corporation comprises 42 companies, including rolling stock, parts, steel, construction, logistics, finance, R&D, and IT.
* The Hyundai-Kia Automotive Group (HKAG) is the world’s #6 automaker.
* Hyundai made its first car, the Pony, in 1967. Before that it built Ford Cortina and Granada kits imported from Europe.
* Hyundai motors has 6 R&D centers. It also has a proving ground that it “cribbed” from another automaker by looking at Google maps.
* Hyundai’s Ulsan, Korea factory is the world’s biggest by volume, putting out 1.2 million units annually.
* Last year Hyundai sold 1.7 million cars in Korea, 911,000 internationally.
* Iran and Egypt are the largest importers of Hyundais (build kits).
* In 2009 Hyundai will sell an Elantra that runs on LPG in Korea.
* Hyundai plans on having a fuel cell vehicle in production by 2010.
* On creating the Genesis: Hyundai got the idea for it five years ago; designing the body took three years; it cost $500 million to develop and included 23 months of development work; reliability testing ran for 800,000 miles.
* The Tau engine took 100 engineers four years and $260 million to develop.
* Technologies such as direct injection and air suspension were nixed for cost/benefit reasons.
* The Genesis is ULEV II compliant.
* There is no plan for a diesel Genesis in the near future, nor will the Genesis be going to Europe. The car will go to North America, China, and Russia.
* Hyundai is developing paddle shifters, but don’t expect them on the sedan any time soon.
* There is no 4-wheel-drive version planned.
* The guide lines on the reversing camera screen don’t turn when you turn the steering wheel.
* All workers in the paint, body, assembly, and quality departments of the Genesis factory have at least 19 years of experience.
* HKAG has 7 new vehicles planned for the US by 2010.
* Now that Hyundai and Kia each have their own designers, Hyundai is planned to be modern and refined, Kia will be sport and dynamic.
* In spite of the economic climate, Hyundai plans on adding forty new dealers to its U.S. network.

Source: AutoBlog

2009 Hyundai Genesis Sedan: First Drive

One thing was clear long before we first set eyes on the Hyundai Genesis premium rear-wheel-drive sedan prior to the April 2007 New York International Auto Show: the Genesis four-door phenomenon is only partially about driving the car.

This big Hyundai (not the smaller and rather unsurprising coupe replacement for the Tiburon, which is also inexplicably called Genesis) had better be ready for the toughest critics in the world to peel its business case apart like a pile of kimchi and analyze every bit of it for credibility. Hyundai has big notions of what the Genesis sedan can accomplish, and the company needs to convince a mess of people to jump on board. With the U.S. intended to buy just under 40 percent of all Genesis four-doors per year (more or less 30,000 units), this event is only slightly less important than Hyundai’s unassuming launch into the U.S. market in 1986 with the two-door Excel hatchback.

Following a really well-executed drive event and information download at the HyundaiKia proving grounds outside of Seoul, we feel honest in giving the bigger Genesis a solid eight out of ten score. We were allowed free rein through obstacle courses and around the high-speed 43-degree banked oval, and we did so back-to-back with not only the 375-horsepower Genesis 4.6-liter V-8 and 290-horsepower 3.8-liter V-6, but also with a 268-horsepower BMW 530i, 272-horsepower front-wheel-drive Lexus ES350, and 275-horsepower Infiniti M35. This all proved enlightening, to say the least. (We also have to mention that while being bussed to the drive location, we spotted a Maybach 62 in the heavily guarded R&D parking lot. Talk about your benchmarks.)

Project “BH,” as the upmarket sedan is called internally, started back in 2003. Our firsthand knowledge of BH dates back to late November 2005 when we were brought to the then new Namyang design center to eye the final three full-scale models and give our opinions and our pick. Turns out our pick was the version put forth by the HyundaiKia Engineering & Design Center in Irvine, California. And thank goodness that one won out in the end, because suffice it to say that the other two non-California versions were really dumpy. The California BH is handsome work from any angle, to our eyes representing a lot of what the BMW 5-series design should have been. We could do without the very Korean-taste gleaming grille treatment and slightly cheap-looking wheels, but the full package is hot stuff.

So, from the start of BH sightings and showings we’ve liked this car a lot from the outside. Having the Lexus, BMW, and Infiniti on hand, though, allowed us to get inside all four in quick succession and make our judgment. In short, the Genesis sedan’s interior wins in the balance. What we mean is that there are individual categories among the many where one of the other three cars beats the Genesis, but overall the Genesis interior feels like more of a whole and well-cared-for product. In every single passenger dimension you can think of, too, the Genesis gives more room without feeling at all bloated.

Most importantly, however, is the fact that we’re as much enamored of the inside as we are of the outside. Whereas BMW interiors are only now beginning to awaken from their deep gray funeral-parlor world, the Genesis is simply handsome and enjoyable to look at and live with. In the case of the Infiniti M35, the interior is fine but weirdly incongruous with the exterior form, especially with its swathes of wood veneer and the step effect of its dashboard. Lastly, the Lexus ES350 interior–despite the model’s popularity that in theory would indicate the opposite–is almost embarrassing in its dated un-handsomeness versus the really attractive Genesis approach.

Now, we drive. The first two hurdles were a brisk double lane-change and then a slalom set. This was a great baptismal, since it showed right away where the Genesis stands among these three competitors, or versus a Mercedes E350, Audi A6, and so on. BH chassis director Baeho Jeong and his team have done some excellent work balancing cushioning and dynamics. In this pair of tests the Genesis V-6 and V-8 proved themselves almost identical in feel to the 530i, the heavier V-8 approaching the sensations of a 550i. With the Genesis wheelbase at a class-leading 115.6 inches (overall length at 195.9 inches is roughly five inches longer than any competitors mentioned here), this agility was slightly surprising to us. The Hyundai dynamicists have incorporated aluminum steering and suspension knuckles, aluminum front link arms and brackets, a sophisticated five-link suspension geometry at all four corners (as on the Lexus), and a simple yet solid all-around Amplitude Selective Damping system. The best of the cars through these first two sections was definitely the Infiniti M35, though we are again left a little conflicted over the overall package and image of the Infiniti brand. At a glaring opposite end of the spectrum handling-wise was the Lexus ES, which was heavy and laborious through both the lane-change and slalom exercises. Hyundai engineers also confirm that the suspension feel for North America will be less soft than the Korean setup, so the final U.S. version may be even better than what we drove at Namyang.

Hyundai executives repeatedly mentioned that the Lexus was their chief benchmark target, with the BMWs a close second. All we can say, at least based on the Lexus ES present at the test, is that the Genesis out-handles and out-drives the ES quite easily. Then on the rough pavement section at the proving grounds, the Lexus on its factory-issued wheel and tire setup transmitted almost thunderous road noise to the cabin. While the ASD system of the Genesis works as well comfort-wise as the Infiniti or Lexus in a straight line or gentle curves while cruising, it is calibrated to a fairly unsophisticated rebound feel over bumps. The default damping on the 530i with its straight-six was noticeably the best of the bunch, though one would hope so at a base price tag approaching $50,000. Hyundai aims to bring the V-8 Genesis to the U.S. this summer starting at just under $40,000. The already satisfying 3.8-liter V-6 sedan, however, is our favorite bottom-line choice and set to begin at roughly $33,000.

Hitting the big high-speed oval at the R&D center shed yet more light on the Genesis sedan’s credentials. Both the V-6 and V-8 with outstanding six-speed ZF automatics are great cruising powerplants, the V-6 reaching 140 miles per hour after some waiting, the V-8 shifting to sixth gear right at 140 mph on its way up to a 155-mph v-max. While the V-6 idles at 625 rpm, and more quietly than any car in this class at just under forty-two decibels, under acceleration it shows (as the new V-6 in the CTS Caddie showed us) just how much harder it has to work to compete with V-8s. The new Tau 4.6-liter V-8 is right in range of the biggest players in this class so far as acceleration, responsiveness, cabin noise, and fuel efficiency are concerned (17 miles per gallon city and 25 mpg highway, according to the EPA; 19/27 for the V-6). The V-8 Genesis sedan also boasts a respectable 0-60 acceleration time estimated at 5.8 seconds. Initial dealer orders for the car in the States show a 70 to 30 percent V-8 to V-6 split, but Hyundai expects that to balance out over time to a 40-60 split in favor of the V-6.

Entering and heading through the steeply banked curves of the oval at top speeds on fairly sturdy standard eighteen-inch Dunlop tires, the Genesis required a slightly firmer hand at the wheel, with a little more steerage to the right required to stay on the perfect line. This is a sign of a lower-tech steering setup, but it is honestly not a black mark. How often will you be driving at 140 mph on a 43-degree banking for half a mile? Off the banking at tippy-top speed on the flats, either Genesis is a fine contender for any buyer in this part of the market.

Complementing the widespread use of aluminum (including the engine hood) and a consequent contained curb weight for its size of 3748 pounds (4006 pounds for the V-8), the Genesis boasts a heavily streamlined coefficient of drag of 0.27, which is top of its class. We noticed an acceptable level of wind noise off the front pillars and side mirrors. In addition, the extensive use of high-tech adhesives for joining chassis sections and sheetmetal is reflected in equally class-leading torsional and bending rigidity. NHTSA has just awarded the big Genesis a five-star rating, too, in all front and side impact tests. One particular luxo touch that we noted immediately is the substantial laminated windscreen and front window glass. Opening and closing the front windows is an absolutely silent operation a la Rolls-Royce. Genesis is also the first car for sale in the U.S. with major use of fiber-optic technology for onboard systems, reducing the complexity and weight of a traditional wiring harness.

As a side note, the Genesis sedan has been on sale in South Korea since January, and it had 10,000 advance orders when deliveries started. Customers are still willing to wait two months to get their car. By 2009, there will be a stretch version of the Genesis sedan (VI is the name internally) to replace the current and still popular Equus in South Korea, China, and the Middle East. The front-drive Equus with iron-block V-8 sells for the equivalent of $80,000 U.S. dollars and is the most expensive domestic car available. The Genesis four-door–stretch or normal–is by comparison a huge step up in the Korean premium image, and Hyundai is hoping this home market enthusiasm translates in more mature markets. Meantime, the BK Genesis Coupe we featured in the May 2008 issue of WINDING ROAD starts U.S. deliveries in early 2009.

And herein lies the challenge for the larger Genesis in the U.S. Are buyers for this style of car ready to see all the pluses this product obviously represents? Or will they automatically shell out the extra bucks and go for the Bimmer or the Lexus, unable to see past the Korean tradition in America of cheaper durable goods? The Japanese succeeded over a twenty-year period and are now conquerors. Hyundai has fewer funds to spend in support of such a long campaign in search of high-margin credibility, but it absolutely needs to take on the challenge or the Genesis effort will fizzle like a Volkswagen Phaeton or Ford’s Merkur franchise. A first step is to retrain Hyundai dealers and service people to be as top-notch as a Lexus or Mercedes store, not to mention dressing up the sales environment a bit. Then the residuals on Hyundais also need to improve significantly, a trend that has already begun.

In truth, what has led to the Genesis sedan being launched as a Hyundai flagship and not as its own brand is the sheer cost to adequately set up a luxury brand these days. When Hyundai finished the initial due diligence back in 2005, it projected a cost of $2.5 billion and then twenty years to actually turn a clear profit. General manager of the HHyundai North America team H.C. Kim and others tell us that once we’ve had three full years of Genesis sales in the U.S. that only then will the idea of a separate Genesis division be proposed with all the requisite number crunching and dealer input.

For now, we like what we see and enjoy what we’ve driven. A key marketing angle Hyundai wants to press home for the Genesis is that it approaches the size of a BMW 7-series in packaging, gives the performance of a 5-series, and costs the price of a 3-series. All true.

Source: Winding Road

Genesis signifies rebirth for Hyundai

It was a sunny day, and the hot dry heat of the desert radiated off the black pavement at the Buttonwillow Raceway Park in Buttonwillow, Calif. A Pearly white BMW 7-Series lined up next to the cone, with the journalist behind the wheel revving the engine. I hopped into the driver’s seat of the car to the left of 7, hooked my seat belt and toed the starting line.

I watched the gray-haired man in front of me raise his arms, and I felt a rivulet of sweat drip down my back. From the heat, yes, but also from the nervous sense of anticipation.

I had never drag raced before, and here I was pitted against a BMW… in a Hyundai.

I was focused on the man in front of me, left foot on the brake, right foot hitting the gas pedal, bringing the tachometer up to 1,500 rpm.

His hands dropped, and I simultaneously took my left foot off the brake and jammed my right foot on the accelerator. Pedal to the floor, I beelined for the finish line. Halfway through the quarter-mile stretch, I spared a quick glance at the white car next to me, and I was stunned. I was ahead of the BMW 7-Series by about 2 feet, and the gap was curiously widening.

I won my first drag race while driving an all-new 2009 Hyundai Genesis, which has a 0-to-60-mph time of 5.7 seconds.

I didn’t fare so well the second time around. Switching places with my colleague, I tried a turn in the 7. And lost. Time after time, I watched the competitive auto journalists take turns in both cars. Each time, the Genesis won the race.

Some might argue that the extra 900 pounds or the extra 2.5 inches in length carried by the 7 account for its noticeable sluggishness. I’d like to point out that the 7 also has more than 50 additional horsepower. And it still didn’t win.

While this newest Hyundai isn’t quite in the same league as BMW and Mercedes-Benz, Hyundai wanted to prove that this Korean car could hold its own against the Germans. I’m pleased to say the automaker succeeded.

New for 2009, Hyundai introduces the full-size, rear-wheel-drive Genesis as a kind of halo car with a base price of $33,000. But, in true Hyundai form, that base price gets you a whole lot of goods. From leather seating surfaces to front and rear side-curtain airbags, the Genesis is packed with standard luxury and safety features. Heated front seats, fog lights, iPod USB and auxiliary input jacks, Bluetooth and automatic headlights are all standard.

Base engine in the Genesis is a 3.8-liter V-6 that delivers 290 horsepower. To upgrade to the 4.6-liter V-8 engine, you’ll tack on $5K to the price tag, but you’ll also add some additional standard items, such as ultra-premium leather seats, power sunroof, tilt-and-telescoping steering wheel and a Lexicon 14-speaker surround sound audio system.

While the V-8 model doesn’t require that you put premium fuel in it (thank goodness), Hyundai does, however, note that it will perform better with the premium grade fuel. Fill it up with regular and you can expect a respectable 368 horsepower. Fill it up with premium and you’ll go up to 375 horsepower. Personally, that’s not enough of a difference for me to opt for the $4.75 per gallon fuel vs. the $4.55 per gallon fuel.

During the press preview, which included more than 300 miles of street driving as well as a couple hours of track time, we had the opportunity to drive both the V-8 and the V-6 Genesis. My driving partner and I grabbed a fully loaded V-8 model for the first leg of the road trip. From twisty-turny mountain roads to desert straight aways, the V-8 was absolutely brilliant. Accelerating up hills, passing at high elevations and maintaining constant highway speeds were a breeze. My partner and I were both incredibly impressed with the road manners and performance of the V-8 model.

On the way back from the track, we grabbed a V-6, and we were no less impressed. Sure, there was a little more effort required to pass or accelerate up hills, but for a V-6, it did a darn good job. And, since it’s a little bit lighter, it was a little easier to fling the V-6 model around the twisty-turny bits.

On the racetrack itself, both the V-8 and V-6 were more than up for some spirited driving. I never would have thought of taking a large Hyundai sedan on a racetrack, but the Genesis was perfectly at home.

In addition to the drag race and actual track time, the folks at Hyundai prepared another comparison test for us at Buttonwillow, setting up a slalom course and bringing in a Mercedes-Benz E350 with a V-6 engine that delivers 268 horsepower. I started with the V-6 Genesis and took a couple turns on the course. I took the speed up between 35 and 40 mph and noticed that the V-6 model virtually glided around the cones. It was a smooth and continuous S-curve that the car just seemed to float through.

The V-8 model added some power to the slalom, and the course became a bit more aggressive. I pushed around the cones, keeping the speed closer to 40 mph. The course was more fun, and the car held the lines pretty well.

I finished with the E350, and in addition to being uncomfortable in the driver’s seat, I didn’t think the car held the line as well. I kept the speed between 35 and 40 mph, and it required a bit more effort to keep the E350 on course. Plus, there was some definite tire squealage that I didn’t notice with either of the Genesis models.

While the ride and handling of the Genesis are multifaceted and complex, its design is a study in simplicity. The exterior of the Genesis isn’t radical. It’s actually very conservative with long sleek lines. The turn signals on the side mirrors and bedazzling taillights give an upscale feel, but the most eye-catching feature on the Genesis has to be the grille. It’s an attractive chrome double waterfall, and Hyundai badging is noticeably absent. From the front or side, there is no way you’d guess this car is a Hyundai. The back simply has the circle H badge.

The interior, on several levels, is the real stunner, though. Both test vehicles had the two-tone saddle-and-black interior that reeks of high-end luxury. All of the touch points were solid and attractive, and the cockpit was well configured. I was able to get a great driving position with the power adjustable driver’s seat, and I loved the standard heated front seats that went all the way up the back of the seat.

My only quibble with the interior – and, in fact, with the whole car – was the headliner. The interior of the test vehicle was black and brown, yet the headliner was a light khaki color. This didn’t bother my male driving partner, but if I were choosing an interior I’d have to go with the Cashmere so that the headliner matched the seating surfaces.

The standard audio interface is simple yet attractive, and most of the controls on the center stack are within easy reach. The only dial I had difficulty reaching was the tuning dial, which is a lot closer to the front passenger than the driver.

The center stack is transformed when you upgrade to the Technology Package, which includes the 17-speaker Lexicon discrete audio system, DVD navigation and rear backup camera. The knob that controls the upgraded package looks frighteningly like the knob that goes with the oft-hated BMW iDrive system. So, it was with much curiosity that my partner and I spent some quality time in the parking lot tapping around the system.

BMW should take notes. The Hyundai system is phenomenal. Rather than peeling through layers of screens to get where you want to go, there are clearly labeled buttons surrounding the knob that cut out two or three layers of distracting info screens. The screen itself was brightly colored and the lettering on the screen is san-serif and easy to read.

Hyundai opted to keep the pricing and packaging simple on the new Genesis, and the V-6 model has three main packages: Premium ($2,000), Premium Plus ($3,000) and Technology ($4,000). Since the Premium Plus package includes the Premium package, a completely decked out model will top out at $40,000. The V-8, which starts at $38,000, only has one package available: Technology ($4,000). Thus the top-of-the-line, fully stocked Genesis will cost $42,000.

I know there are naysayers out there who are tsk-tsking at a $40K Hyundai. But I think Hyundai has completely hit the mark with this car. So, all I have to say is: Drive it. You’ll see.

2009 Hyundai Genesis
Engine: 3.8-liter V-6; 4.6-liter V-8
Transmission: 6-speed automatic
Horsepower: 290 (V-6); 368 (V-8 with regular fuel); 375 (V-8 with premium fuel)
Torque: 264 lb-ft (V-6); 324 (V-8 with regular fuel); 333 (V-8 with premium fuel)
Drivetrain: RWD
Wheelbase: 115.6 inches
Height: 58.1 inches
Length: 195.9 inches
Width: 74.4 inches
MPG (city/hwy): 18/27 (V-6); 17/25 (V-8)
Pricing: $33,000 (V-6); $38,000 (V-8)

July 1, 2008
BY JILL CIMINILLO SearchChicago – Autos Editor

2009 Hyundai Genesis 4.6 – Short Take Road Test

From Genesis to Revelations: The Korean upstart tries to pull a luxury rabbit out of the Lexus top hat. And pretty much does.

Hyundai established a beachhead in the U.S. market with affordable economy cars in 1985. Over the years, the number of models offered increased, and steady improvements in quality resulted in steady gains in the market. Now Hyundai is headed upmarket, and the full-size Genesis sedan is its first entry. It has rear-wheel drive, an optional V-8 engine, and all the indulgences one finds in a big luxury car but at a price significantly lower than the Germans or Japanese charge.

Sounds like a remake of the Toyota story line of 1989, when that Japanese automaker launched the Lexus luxury brand with the big LS400 sedan. At least Hyundai wants us to think it’s the same story. That Lexus changed the automotive landscape, and we’ve seen plenty of imitators try to repeat that feat, but none with the Lexus effect. Moreover, the price range the Genesis plays in–base price is $33,000 for the V-6 and $38,000 for the V-8–is both more crowded and more competitive than it was in 1989. And the Genesis doesn’t enjoy a new brand and dealer network as Lexus did. So, is the Genesis the second coming of the LS400 or just another heroic but failed attempt at redefining luxury?

The LS400 earned its fame not just for offering its luxury for two-thirds the price of Mercedes or BMW equivalents, but for refinement, attention to detail, and a superb dealer experience. All of these qualities persist throughout the Lexus lineup and have been adopted by the German competition as well. From an engineering standpoint, the Genesis makes a strong case for being considered an equal in that crowd. Take, for example, what Hyundai has done to cancel out cabin noise. More than 275 feet of structural adhesive (that’s glue) is applied to the body shell to damp vibrations and improve stiffness. The roof panel alone has six anti-vibration pads, and the floor is covered with them, too. Even some of the open space inside the body pillars is stuffed with insulation. The windshield and door use double-paned glass for more sound insulation. If the Genesis isn’t quiet, it’s not for a lack of trying.

The suspension, as well, is as sophisticated as they come. The four main links on the two front corners are each attached to the hub with a ball joint. This arrangement locates the steering axis much closer to the center of the tire’s contact patch than it would with a conventional unequal-length control-arm suspension, which should improve steering feel and reduce bump steer. It’s an expensive setup, made more so by the use of lightweight aluminum for the links, knuckles, and brackets, and further evidence that Hyundai is making a serious effort here. That front suspension setup also hints at a yet-unannounced four-wheel-drive version because that arrangement reduces torque steer. The rear suspension knuckles are aluminum as well, connected to the chassis with five links. The power steering is hydraulically assisted, but an electric pump supplies the fluid pressure, which Hyundai says increases fuel economy by 2.7 percent.

The centerpiece of the Genesis is the all-new, Hyundai-designed 4.6-liter V-8, codenamed “Tau”. The output of 375 horsepower on premium gas (a fill-up of regular reduces power to 368 hp) puts this engine in a fairly exclusive crowd, more so when you consider its specific output of 81.0 horsepower per liter. The base 3.8-liter V-6 is rated at a competitive 290 horsepower. Both engines are mated to a six-speed automatic; the V-8 version’s is supplied by ZF.

In contrast to the advanced engineering in the Genesis, the styling is more cautious. Hyundai went for a mainstream look, convinced that bold designs tend to age quickly. So there’s a bit of S-class in the headlights, a hint of Lexus GS in the hood, some 5-series in the taillights, and a BMW- or Nissan-like kink in the C-pillars. At least the grille is unique, and it manages to elevate the looks of the Genesis from well proportioned and anonymous to well proportioned and handsome. Speaking of proportions, the 195.9-inch overall length of the Genesis makes it just about the same size as a Pontiac G8 or Chrysler 300C, a few inches longer than a 5-series, and a few inches shorter than a short-wheelbase 7-series.

If the exterior sets modest expectations, the interior exceeds them. The Genesis isn’t just the best-appointed Hyundai, it’s good enough to be judged against established luxury marques. High-gloss wood accents are plentiful, and every version except the base V-6-equipped car comes with a leather-wrapped dash. Standard items include keyless entry and ignition, heated seats, XM satellite radio, iPod and USB audio integration, and Bluetooth phone connectivity. A fully loaded Genesis with the Technology package includes navigation with live traffic information, adaptive HID headlights, a 17-speaker audio system, a cooled driver’s seat, a reverse backup camera, a power tilting and telescoping steering wheel, automatic wipers, an automatically defrosting windshield, a rear power sunshade, and a multifunction knob similar to the ones found in BMW, Audi, and Mercedes-Benz vehicles. Adaptive cruise control will be an option in late 2009.

On paper, the Genesis looks like it’s everything it aspires to be, and our test numbers for the V-8, gleaned at Hyundai’s R&D center in Korea, support that. The results include a 0-to-60-mph time of 5.6 seconds, a quarter-mile performance of 14.1 seconds at 103 mph, a skidpad figure of 0.86 g, and a 70-mph-to-standstill braking distance of 169 feet. That puts the Genesis in with the lofty company it aspires to compare with. Hyundai claims the V-6 should be about a half-second slower to 60 mph. Our brief driving impression revealed well-controlled drive motions, predictable handling, and an excellent powertrain. We’ll need more time behind the wheel to be sure, but all signs point toward a well-tuned chassis. We’re not suggesting banishing that 5-series just yet, as the Genesis is tuned more for Lexus-like isolation than BMW-like involvement. And that, at least ideologically, is one of the few minor shortcomings of the Genesis. Lexus makes fine cars, to be sure, but the Germans and Infiniti have more to offer in the fun-to-drive category.

Then there’s the price. A top-of-the-line Genesis V-8 costs $42,000, or about $10,000 less than a base 2008 Lexus GS460 (a loaded Genesis V-6 tops out at 40 large). That’s also significantly cheaper than the mid-size offerings from Audi, BMW, Infiniti, and Mercedes-Benz, and the Genesis comes with full-size dimensions. But 1989 was a long time ago, and a Lexus-like upset of the luxury-car order is unlikely if not impossible in this era. Plus, the Genesis is expensive for a Hyundai, and it is pricier than the less luxurious 300C and G8. That said, the Genesis stands poised to make drivers reevaluate their perceptions of the Hyundai brand, which is good for Hyundai and bad for the competition. In that respect, then, it looks like 1989 all over again.

BY MICHAEL AUSTIN
Car and Driver
August 2008

First Drive: 2009 Hyundai Genesis sedan

Autoblog recently spent time in Korea driving pre-production versions of the new Hyundai Genesis. This is the car that, according to Hyundai, will usher in a new era of luxury. Them’s big words, and we only got a limited amount of time to figure out how true — or not — they were. But the main thing you need to know about the Genesis is this: unless they pull a bait and switch on the price range they mentioned, the car will be worth every penny Hyundai charges.

The parking lot statistics are these: the Genesis is a big car with a fair bit of horsepower. The car is longer, wider, and has a longer wheelbase than the BMW 530i, Mercedes E350, and Lexus ES350. It’s also good looking — massive and curved without being bulbous — although it’s not designed to be controversial or, frankly, beyond the grille, that memorable. All you’ll be left with a few hours later is, probably, “It was a good looking car.” That is not a bad thing, since most people wouldn’t remember exactly what an ES350 looks like, either, and this slice of the mass-market segment is not where you’re trying to compete with Gaudi or Scaglietti… or Bangle. But if you’re really worried about the price of gas, you’ll be happy to know it also has a better Cd than any of those other cars, too.

Under the hood you get your choice of a 4.6-liter V8 or 3.8-liter V6. The bigger lump corrals 375 horses when sipping premium, and 368 with regular gas. Torque numbers are 333 lb.-ft. and 324 with premium and regular, respectively. Those numbers put it in the mix of luxury offerings from Infiniti, BMW, and Mercedes, the Lexus GS460, along with the Chrysler 300C, and Pontiac G8, with slightly more horsepower than all but the E550, and slightly less torque than any of them. Hyundai’s first in-house V8 also gets high-zoot tech like a two-step variable induction system and dual continuously variable valve timing. The 3.8-liter Lambda V6 gets 270 hp and twists 233 lb.-ft., which keeps it in good company as well. It also provided quite the surprise when we got behind the wheel, but we’ll get to that in a moment. Through the six-speed automatic transmission, your mileage will be 17/25 in the V8, and 18/27 in the V6.

Inside, the Genesis is nice. No, we mean nice. We admit that we’re suckers for a cockpit that looks like mission control, but that’s until we’re actually driving at speed and have to figure out where the button is to stop cold air from blowing in our face. Then we hate it. Credit goes to Hyundai for creating an IP interface that we like almost as much as the Jaguar XF’s, which has just the right amount of buttons to get crucial functions handled quickly. The difference is that the Hyundai doesn’t have a touchscreen, which would have been wonderful, but hey, this is only round one, and that Jag screen will cost you quite a few Korean won more…

Seating, driving position adjustability, and the view from inside are all top notch. The back seat, however, was our favorite place. That had nothing to do with not wanting to drive the car — it’s simply an enormous back seat area. With the cars exceptional length and wheelbase, there is enough room for people in front and back to stretch out at the same time. If you don’t get too rowdy, you could probably even have a game of ring-around-the-rosie back there. And swing a few cats. It’s that roomy.

Fit and finish, stitching, touch, materials, and integration are all very good. Now, before anyone goes scanning pictures through an electron microscope and saying “Well, it kinda looks like…”, remember, we’re talking about a car that will probably come in well under $40K — and that’s for the V8. And while we don’t want to hit the price refrain too often, this isn’t about making excuses, it’s about keeping in mind what the competition is. Is it as nice as a BMW interior? In absolute terms, no — if the BMW is a 10, the Hyundai is 9-and-change. But for practical purposes, yes, because that extra percent will cost you at least $7K more to access, and it’s not that much nicer. Sit in a Genesis and see what you think. In fact, sit in a BMW 530, sit in a Genesis, and then sit in a fully kitted out V6 Honda Accord, and you’ll see where the Genesis is playing.

BMW can take credit, however, for Hyundai’s Driver Information System (and COMAND, and MMI, and so on…). BMW, having pioneered that type of interface, has had to watch as other companies got it (more) right. And the DIS is a pretty straightforward and simple to use, incorporating HDD nav, voice recognition, Bluetooth handsfree, multimedia, climate control, and vehicle dynamics.

But let’s get to the driving. We only had a day with the Genesis, and that was on a proving ground, so we can’t really talk about the finer points of long distance driving and handling. Things like day-long comfort and suspension capabilities will have to wait until we can spend a week with the car next month. For now, know that the V8 car has a weight balance of 54:46, the V6 posts a 52:48. We were told there was about a 400-pound weight difference up front between the V6 and V8, factoring in both the engine and associated components.

The car gets a five-line suspension front and rear with some aluminum components like knuckles, links, and brackets. The shocks have amplitude selective damping. The power steering motor and pump unit have been isolated from the engine to improve steering feel, and that feature also improves fuel economy. The body is 74-percent high-tensile steel, with an ultra-high-strength steel cage around the cabin that is laser welded to form a continuous seam and provide appreciably more stiffness and rigidity and less flexing than the luxury competitors.

We tried increasing speeds through the slalom, and the car handles admirably, with almost no wallow. Irretrievable pendulum action didn’t occur until we got to toward the end of the six cones at speeds a little higher than those we were advised to drive at, having accelerated through. Let off the throttle in the middle of a screeching tire turn, and the car settles right down. The car isn’t begging to be driven like that — you won’t race through a slalom and be itching to turn around and do it again — but the car’s capabilities are more than enough when emergencies dictate sawing at the wheel.

Take the car up to 70 mph and hit the brakes, and you’ll find yourself back at zero in just over 160 feet. Among its luxury competitors, that beats everything but the BMW 535i by almost ten feet or more.

On the handling course, the V8 has a rewarding, linear curve. Again, it’s not the kind of car that you’re going to throw into Eau Rouge at top speed — and that’s not the point. But you know what the car is doing, and you can walk it toward its limit without worrying that you’ll go beyond it first. It’s a big car, so there’s quite a bit of weight, so while the car is taut, you’re going to feel it shifting and settling when you’re blazing through sweepers. But the Genesis didn’t need a few moments to decide what it was going to do around the corner, and didn’t complain. You set your speed, turn the wheel, and the Genesis sorts it out.

Get frisky through hairpins and the sedan — specifically its integrated ESC system — will have something to say about it. Throttle control kicks in first, and if matters out back are still too loose, the rear outside brake clamps down for a fraction of a moment. However, none of the intrusions are abrupt, there are no shrieking chimes or strobing lights, you’re not suddenly out of power in the middle of a turn, and you know where the car is the entire time.

It was on the high speed oval that we began to wonder about the V6 versus V8 question. The V6 at top speed, (130 mph) in the highest lane, was rock solid, while the V8 at about 145-MPH suffered some suspension squash and wandering. In the middle lane, at 100 mph, the V8 was solid as granite, with the V6 just a fraction behind it in solidity. All of this is mainly due to heft of the engine.

The important things to take from this are: 1. We drove a Hyundai at 145 mph and didn’t have any concerns about it; 2. we drove a Hyundai at 130 mph and 100 mph and described the experience as rock solid; 3. Nearly all Genesis drivers will never have to worry about how the Genesis handles on a high-speed oval; 4. Nearly all Genesis drivers will be pleasantly shocked that a Hyundai handles superbly past the century mark.

And the final thing to take away is this: we couldn’t understand why we should buy the V6 over the V8. They perform nearly identically. The V6 is almost as fast. The interiors are the same. They look almost identical, with nothing other than a small badge on the rear valance to differentiate the two. Even the tailpipes are identical. And the V6 gets better gas mileage. We’re a high-horsepower guys… but if we were going to buy a Genesis, we’d buy the V6.

Is there anything wrong with the Genesis? Sure, there are certain luxury trimmings they didn’t include: the turn signals don’t click three times (and even Volkswagens have that). You need to use the key or the button inside to open the trunk– there’s no release on the lid. And there are some places, such as the trunk, where the trim isn’t quite finished. But again, this is round one.

The real question: who will this car compete with? It’s being pitched as a competitor for the 5-series et al. Let’s not look at this as a luxury lifestyle proposition yet, where brand-brand-brand rules the day. Let’s look at this as a financial proposition, because, really, that’s what it is for the time being. We all know that Hyundai doesn’t have the brand equity to stand toe-to-toe with BMW. Yet. And we’re not saying they will — that’s up to them. But remember, at one time, even BMW didn’t have the brand equity to compete with today’s BMW.

If the Genesis is reliable and Hyundai stands behind it until can make an impact with the brand-conscious, it is going to sell. That is not in question. Based on what we know of the Genesis so far, anyone in the market to spend $35K on a luxury sedan must at least give the car a chance. After that, the question any potential buyer should ask is: Do I want to score a 9.5 out of ten on the European luxury scale and save myself $10,000 or more while doing it? We can only believe there are a lot of people out there who will answer “Yes” to that question.

Source: AutoBlog.com

Does the World Need Another Luxury Car?

At a time when auto sales are struggling, Hyundai is introducing its Genesis luxury car. The timing is bad, but the car is surprisingly good

Hyundai Motor, a little Korean startup company just over 40 years ago, grew into a global brand by selling inexpensive vehicles. Now the company is entering the highly competitive luxury-import market to go toe-to-toe with such automakers as BMW, Lexus, and Mercedes-Benz. Hyundai is offering startling prices, too.

There could not be a worse time to introduce a new brand of luxury car. Oil costs more than $130 a barrel, the economy is in a shambles, unemployment is rising, salaries are stagnating, the housing market is a disaster, and most industries are suffering. As the “R” word circulates broadly, the new car business is sluggish. “Stinks” is the description I’ve heard from some dealers.

Despite the obstacles, Hyundai will start selling a new luxury car in just a few weeks! A new luxury car?

Do words like “nuts,” “gutsy,” and “crazy” come to mind? Obviously not to the Koreans. “It’s just challenging,” Dong Jin Kim, Hyundai’s vice-chairman, said at a recent meeting in Seoul. “We have invested a significant amount in time, resources, and money to assure the Genesis is a successful marketing launch.”

More Than a Word

“Luxury” is a disruptive, troubling term with significant socioeconomic resonance. The go-go 1980s and ’90s firmly established the credo: “You are what you eat, drink, wear, think, read, and of course, drive.”

Arguably, the most opulent automotive brands are Rolls-Royce and Bentley–now owned by BMW and Volkswagen (VOWG), respectively. With sticker prices ranging from $25,000 to $400,000 depending on the extras, these are the epitome of high-priced wheels. For most drivers, though, luxury begins north of $35,000.

Mike Jackson, president and CEO of Fort Lauderdale’s AutoNation (AN), one of the nation’s biggest sellers of luxury cars, detailed in a speech earlier this year the benchmark characteristics customers seek in a luxury automobile.

Starting with many of AutoNation’s specifics, I’ve added a few details to capture the vagaries and subtleties that collectively contribute to a customer’s appreciation of the luxury cars previously mentioned. There is no ranking order, merely a simple thumbs-up for yes, or a thumbs-down for no.

Standard Luxury Features Roll-Royce Bentley Hyundai Genesis BMW 5 Series Lexus ES350 Mercedes E350
Distinctive styling Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Quiet ride Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Comfortable steering wheel Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Cup holders Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Loud horn Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Outside mirror(s) Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Inside mirror(s) Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Adjustable seating Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Good HVAC Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Heated/cooled seats Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Plush floor mats Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Special purse place Thumbs Down Thumbs Down Thumbs Down Thumbs Down Thumbs Down
Power windows Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Powerful engines Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Automatic transmission Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Glove box Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Interior lights Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Stability Control Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Spare tire Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Quiet ride Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
I-drive Thumbs Down Thumbs Down Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Thumbs Down
Easy to drive Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Powerful headlights Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Bright taillights Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Large trunk Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Windshield wipers Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
AM/FM/CD Audio Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Parking brake Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Roadside assistance Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Hidden umbrella Thumbs Up (1) Thumbs Down Thumbs Down Thumbs Down Thumbs Down Thumbs Down
Nice dashboard Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Easy to read dials day/night Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Famous Brand Name Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
Price over $40,000 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Thumbs Up Thumbs Up Thumbs Up

It seems the Genesis stacks up pretty well. As it should: In creating the Genesis, Hyundai closely studied the competition’s features and design cues. Many drivers may find the look derivative of more established luxury brands–but this charge has been aimed at automotive upstarts since the birth of the internal combustion engine.

But just because Hyundai wants to build a luxury car, that doesn’t mean it can. It takes more than clever copyists to deliver the goods. To find out for myself if the Genesis is the real deal, I traveled to Hyundai’s Namyang, South Korea, research and development center a few weeks ago to put the vehicle through its paces.

Here are my perceptions:

Visual Impressions

* Showroom stance: sleek and smooth. Stylish without being over the top. Looks distinctive, with vague reminders of something I can’t quite name. Looks expensive. Ready for snobbish valet parking attendants’ front row, but will probably start out in the second line.

* Interior on first glance: uncomplicated with nonglaring accents and accoutrements. Colors are quiet, but not boring. Appears spacious. Not ostentatious, but certainly distinctive.

* Amenities: technological playground. Big-sound HD audio with XM, iPod, and Bluetooth functions. Hands-free phone, nav system, rear camera, rain-sensing wipers, and lots more.

* Driver’s-seat perspective: instrument panel uncluttered, with a clear typeface on dials. Wish I’d inspected the car at night. Not overly complex. Good viewing area. Several seat adjustments to accommodate drivers of varying height.

* Passenger’s-seat perspective: similar to the driver’s.

* Rear seating: a big surprise. These seats are not just for munchkins, but for adults, too. I suspect my 6’5″ son would be unusually comfortable.

Driving Impressions

Driving was done in a sterile format on a variety of test tracks, with no urban challenges. There were a smooth surface for high-speed straightaways, cone courses, and sudden stops; a bumpy, rutted surface reminiscent of most bad roads in Michigan; a short, undulating surface designed to make the person in the rear seats sick; and not least, a high-speed oval. All of the benchmark competitors’ vehicles were on-site for comparison testing. My comments are based on driving and/or riding the rear-wheel-drive Genesis models in both the 3.8-liter V6 and the new 4.6-liter V8 versions.

* Engine startup: literally turn the key and go, without noticeable engine startup noise. Barely a whisper.

* Acceleration: kicked it at once to test speed and noise. Moved out quickly and quietly but not especially memorable or exceptional. After all, this is not a sports car, but a sports sedan. The Genesis will accelerate as needed to merge at high speed with traffic.

* Steering: during the acceleration test, made a quick switch halfway down the track to drive through a tightly spaced series of cones. This required weaving in, out, and around. Handling was light, quick, and responsive. Felt comfortable and confident, even on a very tight (over 30°) left turn of the wheel, and at a higher speed. Balanced, without heavy swaying, or side-to-side tossing, in the driver’s or rear seat.

* Handling: on a customized road course that included a variety of twists and turns–both right and left–and was several hundred yards long. Drove the course four times, first to get the general layout and then in three runs at ever-increasing speed. The electronic stability control on the tightest turns, at what seemed nearly unsafe speeds, straightened the vehicle out with little more than some tire squeal. That’s all. Very nice.

* Sudden stopping: fast and faster halting! During my acceleration test, the ride-along engineer ordered “Stop!” I did, without swerving or feeling at all loose.

* High-speed track: Unlike Nascar’s left-turn ovals, this was a banked, right-turn-only track, five lanes high and a mile long. This road’s rule is simply the faster one goes, the higher the groove. While a couple of velocity-obsessed writers favored speeds in excess of 140 miles per hour, I opted for a prudent 100-110 mph, feeling comfortable and in control throughout.

Now for price: The Genesis will make its debut in a few weeks at several thousand dollars less than its rivals cost. The V6 will sell for $33,000, and the V8 for $38,000. In comparison, the BMW 535i commands just under $50,000, while the Mercedes-Benz E350 goes for a little more than $52,000.

Frankly, it will take time for Hyundai’s name to become synonymous with luxury, privilege, and quality–if it ever does. But the team that designed the Genesis has taken a commendable leap into the luxury market. Assuming people are still buying luxury cars in 10 years, I’d love to see what Hyundai will be producing then. Some people once laughed at Lexus and Acura.

Marty Bernstein is a contributing editor at the American International Automobile Dealers Assn.

by Marty Bernstein
Business Week

2009 Hyundai Genesis Luxury Sedan Review

Unapologetically and unequivocally, Hyundai has taken off its gloves. Its new Genesis is a no-holds-barred assault on luxury and near-luxury sedans from Japan, America, and Europe. Seriously, folks. Oh, we know what you’re thinking. You’ve heard that the second-generation Hyundai Santa Fe is a decent little competitor to the Honda CR-V, and you’ve read in these pages that the Hyundai Veracruz mid-size crossover introduced last year need not hide from the Toyota Highlander, the Honda Pilot, or even the Lexus RX350.

But front-wheel-drive-based people movers are one thing, and rear-wheel-drive sedans that might actually quicken your pulse are another. After all, cars like that have never been the province of the Korean automakers.

But now they are. My heart rate was certainly above its normal level as I circled Hyundai’s test track at 150 mph in a Genesis equipped with Hyundai’s advanced new 375-hp, 4.6-liter V-8 engine. The big sedan was composed, predictable, and vigorous as the high banks dumped us onto the long straights and the scenery blurred. Yes, I was driving a Hyundai. What is this world coming to?

“We set a number of high development goals for ourselves,” admits Bong-hwan Lee, executive vice president of Hyundai’s Vehicle Development Center. “We wanted to achieve the same scores as other premium sedans, including Lexus, in the J. D. Power Initial Quality and Vehicle Dependability Surveys.

Another priority was to attain the highest level of crash protection. We benchmarked the BMW 5-series, the Lexus GS and LS, and the Mercedes-Benz E-class.” Although Hyundai says that the Genesis’s body-in-white (the basic body structure, without paint, powertrain, suspension, or interior) is larger than those of the Lexus LS460 and the Mercedes S-class, the automaker claims that it is lighter than them and stiffer in torsion and bending properties.

In terms of size, the Genesis is bigger and roomier than most mid-size luxury sedans (see chart) and, in fact, is classified by the EPA as a “large” sedan. Its wheelbase is 115.6 inches, compared with 113.7 inches for the BMW 5-series, 112.4 inches for the Mercedes E-class, and 113.4 inches for the Cadillac CTS. With an overall length of 195.9 inches, it’s several inches longer than those three cars and only 2.5 inches shorter than a short-wheelbase 7-series. Although rear-seat room falls short of what you’d find in a long-wheelbase 7-series or a Lexus LS, the rear seats in the Genesis are still very accommodating, with plentiful legroom that outpaces the 5-series, the E-class, and the CTS.

Design editor Robert Cumberford delivers his verdict on the Genesis’s styling in the August issue of Automobile Magazine, but there is no question that the car has real road presence. If Hyundai’s designers borrowed from the Mercedes S-class, the Infiniti M35/M45, and the 5-series-and they most certainly did-the net effect is at worst benign, the car assuming a kind of generic upscale visage. At the Namyang test track, jumping among V-6 and V-8 Genesis models and also among competitor cars, I would peer across the sprawling slalom course, trying to figure out which car I’d drive next, and would continually do double-takes as the Genesis test cars were wheeled back onto the course, because from fifty yards away I mistook them for Mercedes-Benz E-classes.

Inside, the Genesis also plays to widespread notions of luxury, with a big sweep of an S-class-inspired dash, pleasingly lit instruments, and substantial, cushy seats astride a center console with a BMW iDrive-style spinning knob sprouting from it. There are lots of hits in here, plus a few misses. Fit and finish and material quality are very good, both in the plastics and in the standard leather seating. The instrument panel can be fitted with stitched leather as an option or with standard faux wood, but the former would be more convincing if it were French stitched, with two rows of stitching rather than one, which leaves a tiny flap of folded-over hide that’s ripe for collecting dirt.

Tradition dominates in the Genesis cabin, as there is no aluminum or aluminum-look trim. The headliner, a familiar polyester-knit fabric, is largely inoffensive, but it’s a long way from Alcantara. Double-glazing for the windows in the driver’s and front-passenger’s doors is a nice touch, though, as are fold-out map pockets in the doors and the available brown-and-black interior color scheme. The trunk is large, with a low liftover and sheathed hinges, but the interior grab handle for pulling the lid closed is mounted too far inward, making it awkward to use. And the cheap trunk lining is old-school Hyundai; surely they noticed the richly trimmed trunks in the cars they benchmarked?

Hyundai calls its iDrive-style controller DIS, or Driver Information System. The Koreans have had time to digest similar setups from BMW, Mercedes, Audi, and Acura and presumably have integrated what they thought were the best features of those systems while avoiding many of their pitfalls. We’ll have to wait until we have more street time in the Genesis to render a full verdict on DIS, but it seems intuitive, the knob feels good in the hand, if perhaps with not quite enough tension in it as one might like, and it’s easy to scroll among menus to control navigation and the stereo. The iPod connection works well, and the touch-screen function is as good as anyone’s. An optional 500-watt Lexicon stereo might not be the equal of the Mark Levinson system offered by Lexus, but it will meet the expectations of all but the pickiest audiophiles, and there’s easy access to the equalizer function.

Originally, Hyundai planned to offer the Genesis with both its 3.3-liter and 3.8-liter V-6s, which currently serve in the front-wheel-drive Azera, as well as the Tau V-8. But then it came to its senses and realized that the choice of three engines is a bit much for a vehicle with a modest annual sales goal of 30,000 units in the United States and only 80,000 units worldwide. (It’s interesting to note that, although Hyundai eagerly apes European sedans with the Genesis, it is not offering the car in the hypercompetitive Western Europe market; it’s already on sale in Korea and will be sold in China and Russia, among other markets.) And the 3.8-liter DOHC V-6 powertrain, no slouch with variable valve timing, 290 hp, and a six-speed automatic, handily allows Hyundai to boast that the Genesis offers more standard power than the Infiniti M35, the Pontiac G8, and the Chrysler 300C.

“We’ve tuned the Genesis to fall somewhere between the Lexus GS and the Infiniti M,” explains Wendell Collins, Jr., engineering manager for the ride and handling group at Hyundai Motor America. “We definitely wanted it to be sportier than the GS, but not as brutal as the M.” The suspension is by unequal-length control arms at the front, with a multi-link rear setup. V-6 models get seventeen-inch tires as standard, with eighteen-inchers optional; eighteens are standard with the V-8. The Genesis made pretty smooth work of lane-change and slalom courses at Namyang, with body control well in check, but the V-6 model is let down by a disappointing lack of steering feel, an old Korean-car bugaboo. Thankfully, V-8 models have electrohydraulic power steering, “which allowed us to define the steering curve for a very linear feel,” claims Collins, and which we found to provide a far clearer line of communication between the front wheels and the palms of our hands. We’re not talking BMW-like steering here, but it’s a far cry from the Toyota Camry’s or, for that matter, the Hyundai Sonata’s.

Both engines are very refined, eager to rev, and work seamlessly with their respective transmissions (the V-6 unit is from the Japanese supplier Aisin, while the German company ZF supplies the V-8’s six-speed box). There’s a manual-mode shift gate for both, but there are no steering wheel paddles in sight. Hammer the V-8, and some pleasing induction and valvetrain resonances will drift back into the cockpit, but more impressive is the strong torque band and the nice whack of acceleration that the Tau provides. We’ll wait until we can drive a Genesis stateside before running performance numbers, but Hyundai promises a 0-to-60-mph time of well under six seconds. And even the V-6 model stormed around the high-speed oval with little drama, the speedo needle swinging around to 100 mph in no time and then rising steadily to 135 mph.

Unfortunately, the Genesis has not shed that layer of isolation that so characterizes Lexus cars and, of course, most Hyundais. This car, especially in V-8 guise, has the power and the presence to hold its own with cars costing much more. But those looking for pure tactility will be disappointed, as I was reminded when I ran the 530i and the M35 through the same paces that I’d driven the Genesis. Especially around the handling track, those two cars were far more in tune with the driver’s intentions and better at communicating what was happening at the tire’s contact patches. We’ll grant Hyundai that the Genesis is more involving to drive than the Lexus GS (and certainly more so than the ES350), but for a sedan that so unabashedly aims for the best from Germany, it still needs a more Teutonic tilt to the chassis tuning: more road feel and steering feel, please. And although the brakes in both V-6 and V-8 Genesis models were responsive and progressive, they could use a more positive-feeling pedal.

Hyundai has a lot of irons in the fire. Between it and Kia, its subsidiary, it controls 75 percent of the Korean home market, and its sales are burgeoning in China, India, and other emerging markets. In fact, the United States comprises only 20 percent of Hyundai’s worldwide sales, so it’s little surprise that Hyundai decided, at least for now, not to launch a luxury sales channel here like Toyota and Nissan did two decades ago.

Instead, it is essentially dipping its toe into the luxury-car waters with the Genesis. If it is a success, more luxury products are likely to follow, and Hyundai co-chairman and CEO Dong-Jin Kim does not rule out the possibility of a luxury arm for the future: “Some day, when we are strong enough. But for now, we have concluded that a separate premium brand is premature.”

This means that, at least for the time being, the Genesis does without some of the baubles of the luxury-car establishment. No optional all-wheel drive. No direct injection or variable valve lift for the engines, no air suspensions or dual-clutch gearboxes, and more than likely, no special dealer treatment, just “a special, well-decorated corner [of the showroom] to display the Genesis,” says Kim. Hyundai Motor America will, however, take pains to ensure that salespeople more accustomed to pushing Elantras and Sonatas out the door are properly trained to sell the Genesis and to deal with its potential customer base.

That customer base, if Hyundai’s research proves accurate, will be a disparate group. “We will get people who normally graduate from an Accord type of car and make the leap to a luxury brand,” says Joel Ewanick, Hyundai Motor America’s vice-president of marketing, “but we’ll also get people coming down from the luxury brands. We already get buyers like that for the Azera, people who do a lot of research on cars who then realize, ‘this [a Hyundai] is a car that hasn’t been on my radar screen, but should have been.’?” As for pricing, Hyundai is positioning the Genesis squarely on top of the BMW 3-series and the Mercedes C-class, meaning the V-6 model starts at about $33,000 and stretches up near the V-8 model’s starting price of $38,000. Fully optioned, the V-8 will be priced in the mid-$40,000s. Bold strokes, these, since in reality the Genesis is also going to be cross-shopped with the Pontiac G8 and the 3.5-liter Chrysler 300C, which start at $27,595 and $29,290, respectively, and since Hyundai has yet to prove itself over the long haul in J. D. Power surveys and in resale values, although there has been recent progress on those fronts.

Hyundai might not be entering the luxury-car world with a new brand and shiny new dealerships, but there is nothing tentative about the Genesis itself, a car that represents the most ambitious engineering undertaking ever for the Korean automaker. Hyundai is a company that is very much looking forward but is also keenly aware of how far it has come. It didn’t even have the wherewithal to build its own engine until 1991, when it introduced its Alpha four-cylinder and no longer had to license engines from Mitsubishi. Now, here it is making its own, high-powered V-8 engine. The company insists that it will make money on every Genesis it sells, unlike Toyota, which sold its first Lexus cars at a loss to establish its luxury-car bonafides. In Hyundai’s case, it’s clear that, while the Genesis is a commodity product that will increase the bottom line, it’s also an emotional milestone for the company, a way to mark its place in the world. And there’s no need to apologize for that.

By Joe DeMatio
Automobile Magazine