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Hyundai Ioniq
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Debut: 2016
Maker: Hyundai
Predecessor:
No |
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Published
on 20
Jul 2016
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All rights reserved.
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Toyota Prius has
been around for nearly 2 decades and achieved unprecedented sales
success. Strangely, nobody followed its footprints to build a dedicated
hybrid family car. Now Hyundai group finally breaks the silence by
introducing not one but two hybrids. One is Hyundai Ioniq, another is
Kia Niro. As the latter is designed as an SUV – although both sit on
the same platform – AutoZine can only concentrate on the Hyundai.
Depending on your viewpoint, you may call Hyundai Ioniq as “Prius
fighter” or copycat. The Korean giant seems to have studied Prius very
hard before designing its own version. Take the exterior styling for
example, its monospace shape clearly follows the Prius to enable the
same low drag coefficient of 0.24. Like the Toyota as well, its raised
tail needs a glass section to aid rearward visibility. I suspect these
visual similarities are made deliberately to promote its hybrid image.
The Ioniq also shares the same 2700 mm wheelbase with its rival.
However, it is slightly shorter, wider and lower, so it looks sportier
and less sleek than the latest Prius. The detailed design is more
angular but disappointingly conventional, lacking the Sc-Fi effect of
the new Prius. Likewise, the interior design is conventional to the
extent that indistinguishable from other production Hyundais. On the
flipside, it should be more intuitive to drivers migrating from
conventional cars.
Like Toyota, the
quality
of cabin plastics is so-so in order to offset the cost of its
hybrid powertrain, so it doesn’t feel as premium as the i-series
Hyundais. Cabin space is slightly tighter than Prius, especially rear
legroom. The sloping roofline restricts rear passengers to
sub-6-footers. No wonder while Prius is sold as a D-segment family car,
the Ioniq targets at C-segment family hatch buyers.
The steel monoque body has a high-strength steel content of 53 percent,
whereas front and rear crash beams are aluminum. It is dressed with
aluminum bonnet and tailgate like the Prius to cut weight. Aluminum is
also used to cast the suspension wheel carriers and front suspension
lower control arms. The suspensions are struts up front and multi-link
setup at the rear. The base Ioniq tips the scale at 1370 kg, again the
same as its rival.
Like the latest Prius, the heavy battery pack is placed underneath the
rear seat in front of the fuel tank to lower center of gravity and
improve front-to-rear balance. While Toyota offers NiMH pack on the
base model, Ioniq has Lithium-ion battery standard across its range.
More differences lie on the powertrain. The Hyundai employs a 1.6 GDi
Atkinson-cycle Kappa engine, whose combustion chambers are seriously
undersquare (72mm bore x 97mm stroke), said to improve thermal
efficiency. The latter is claimed to be 40 percent, matching the new
Prius. Despite of its smaller capacity, the Hyundai's high-pressure
direct injection allows it to extract higher output (105 hp) than the
Toyota (98 hp). Its 6-speed dual-clutch gearbox also responds faster
than Toyota's CVT.
Sandwiching between the engine and DCT is a slim permanent magnet
motor, which produces another 43.5 hp. It is significantly less
powerful than the Toyota's (72 hp), so its petrol engine kicks in
earlier, and the car runs in EV mode less frequently. This is perhaps
why its NDEC combined consumption is 83 mpg and CO2
emission is 79g/km, compared with Toyota’s 94 mpg and 70g/km. In terms
of efficiency, the Toyota is still the master.
On the road, despite of the superior combined output of 141 hp and 195
lbft, the Ioniq doesn’t feel much faster than the Prius. It still takes
10 seconds to sprint from standstill to 60 mph, while top speed is
limited to 115 mph. Its weaker electric motor means not much sensation
off the line. Nevertheless, this is still a more enjoyable powertrain
than Toyota’s because the DCT gearbox has none of the rubberband effect
of CVT. It enables a more linear acceleration and reduces engine noise
in harder acceleration, even though the engine itself is by no means a
good example for refinement.
Despite the high expectation for multi-link suspension, the chassis is
rather unremarkable in the real world. The suspension setting is soft
thus there is a lot of body motions in corner. Turn-in is relaxed,
lacking the agility of the latest Prius. The numb electric power
steering has a dead spot at the straight-ahead position. Turn either
side and it weighs up abruptly. There is a Sport button but it adds
only weight to the steering and nothing more. The soft suspension
returns mostly compliant ride, but on the largest 17-inch wheels it can
transmit a lot of shocks and noise over expansion joints on highway to
the cabin structure, hampering the sense of refinement. Overall, its
ride and handling leaves a lot to be desired.
Why does the above Ioniq has a sealed front grille? It is Ioniq
Electric. In fact, the Ioniq platform is possible for 3 different
powertrains – the aforementioned Ioniq Hybrid employs a 1.56kWh
battery; Ioniq Plug-in upgrades to a 8.9kWh battery for a 50-km range
before the petrol engine kicks in; Ioniq Electric is a pure EV, powered
by a 28kWh battery and a 120 hp electric motor. It claims a range of
174 miles (280 km). The instant torque of 217 lbft actually makes the
car feel faster than the Hybrid, and refinement is much improved by the
lack of engine noise. As the large battery pack is mounted low (under
the rear seats and boot which also robs the space for multi-link
suspension, so it turns to a space-saving torsion-beam axle), it has a
lower center of gravity thus corner better. The smaller wheels and
tires it employs also returns slightly better ride comfort, although no
Ioniq could be described as the last word for refinement.
The Electric is more expensive, of course. In UK, it costs
£29,000 before government incentives, whereas the base Ioniq
Hybrid costs only £20,000. Still, both cars represent great value
for money. The cheapest Prius asks for £23,000, but it is also a
better finished product – roomier, more refined, more frugal, more
distinctive to look and slightly better to drive. What Toyota learned
in the last 2 decades is not easy to be replicated by the first attempt
of Hyundai, even though the latter has taken the shortcut by copying a
lot of ideas from Toyota.
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Verdict: |
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Ioniq Hybrid
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2016
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Front-engined,
FWD |
Steel monocoque |
Steel, aluminum
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4470 / 1820 / 1450 mm |
2700 mm |
Inline-4, Atkinson-cycle +
electric motor
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1580 cc |
DOHC 16 valves
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DI |
105 hp + 44 hp = 141 hp
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108 lbft + 125 lbft = 195 lbft
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6-speed twin-clutch
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F: strut
R: multi-link
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225/45R17
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1370 kg
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115 mph (c)
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10.2 (c) / 8.9*
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Ioniq Electric
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2016
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Front-engined,
FWD |
Steel monocoque |
Steel, aluminum
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4470 / 1820 / 1450 mm |
2700 mm |
Electric motor
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-
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120 hp
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217 lbft
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1-speed
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F: strut
R: torsion-beam
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205/55R16
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1420 kg
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103 mph (c)
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9.3 (c) / 8.6*
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27.9* |
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Ioniq Plug-in Hybrid
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2017
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Front-engined,
FWD |
Steel monocoque |
Steel, aluminum
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4470 / 1820 / 1450 mm |
2700 mm |
Inline-4, Atkinson-cycle +
electric motor
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1580 cc |
DOHC 16 valves
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DI |
105 hp + 44 hp = 141 hp
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108 lbft + 125 lbft = 195 lbft
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6-speed twin-clutch
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F: strut
R: multi-link
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205/55R16
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1505 kg
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115 mph (c)
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8.9*
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25.4* |
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Performance
tested by: *C&D
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Copyright©
1997-2016
by Mark Wan @ AutoZine
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