Review of the new Hyundai i30 CRDi

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HYUNDAI I30 CRDI

star rating 7.3 out of 10 (7.3 out of 10)

REVIEW DATE: 25 Feb 2008

Once in every few years a Korean car arrives that further closes the gap between South East Asia and the best of Europe. The Hyundai i30 is the latest such car and it's at its best in CRDi diesel form. Andy Enright reports

Hyundai I30

HYUNDAI I30 CRDI NEW CAR ROAD TEST

"It offers a lot of metal for the money." There in one simple, slightly hackneyed phrase, is the historical justification for buying a Korean car. Put rather more cynically, quantity over quality. Well forget about all of that. The Hyundai i30 just changed the ground rules. It's still competitively priced but its manufacturer has realised that there's only so far a stack 'em high, sell 'em cheap mentality will get you. Building brand equity is a tough job and probably the best way to do so is by building consistently excellent products.

The i30 is but one step in a very long path towards what Hyundai hopes will be a place at the very top table of car makers. When it was first revealed at the 2007 Geneva Motor Show, most thought of this car as a rebadged and soon to be overpriced version of the Kia cee'd and missed its true significance.

Spark up a Hyundai i30 CRDi diesel and you'll be pleasantly surprised at its lack of diesel clatter at idle. There are two versions of the 1.6 engine, the mainstream one generating 89bhp and the more powerful one topping the range with 113bhp. The 113bhp unit I tried is very well-mannered with no nasty lag and lunge effects, instead delivering a linear stream of power. The manual five-speed gearchange is a little clunky and there's a fair amount of wind and tyre noise at motorway speeds but other than that, it generates a very favourable report card. The steering is very good, body control through corners is exemplary and the pedals are nicely weighted.

"It offers a lot of metal for the money." There in one simple, slightly hackneyed phrase, is the historical justification for buying a Korean car. Put rather more cynically, quantity over quality. Well forget about all of that. The Hyundai i30 just changed the ground rules. It's still competitively priced but its manufacturer has realised that there's only so far a stack 'em high, sell 'em cheap mentality will get you. Building brand equity is a tough job and probably the best way to do so is by building consistently excellent products.

If there's one area where the i30 comes up conspicuously short of the top family hatchbacks, it's styling. The car is neat and inoffensive on the eye but there's little to excite about its shape or detailing. A certain measured blandness never hindered the MK2 Ford Focus or the most recent Toyota Corolla however, and inside the i30 fares better. It's still hardly what you would call avant garde design-wise but the quality of the materials and the construction is convincing. Nice touches include blue illumination for the dials that also extends to steering wheel controls and ignition key slot so you won't be fumbling around at night. Dim the illumination and the wheel-mounted controls dim too, which is very slick. Space is plentiful for the rear seat occupants and the huge boot suggested by the car's bulging rear end is only a mild disappointment. It's a good size for the class rather than enormous, with 340 litres available. Fold the rear bench and this rises to 1,250 litres.

The i30 has been designed specifically for the European market and benchmarked against class leaders like the Volkswagen Golf and Ford Focus. Like those two cars but unlike many of the other established names in the sector, the i30 has fully-independent suspension all round or at least a version of it. In fact, the rear suspension is a kind of independently suspended torsion beam, a kind of halfway house solution between proper independently sprung models and those that settle for an old fashioned torsion beam.

The diesel engine range comprises an important part of the i30 line-up with trim levels starting with Classic and rising through Comfort to Premium. Comfort models can also be had with an automatic gearbox for an additional sum, while Estate variants cost £700 extra.

The popular Comfort trim isn't too badly appointed with air conditioning, alloy wheels and integrated steering wheel audio controls as standard. You'll also find a single CD stereo with six speakers and MP3 compatibility as well as USB/iPod and auxiliary connections in the centre console.

The Hyundai i30 diesel is a winner when it comes to cost of ownership, the 114bhp 1.6-litre unit managing 60.1mpg on the combined cycle with the 89bhp version faring even better at 61.4mpg. Carbon dioxide emissions for these two engines are rated at 115 and 125g/km respectively. Complicating matters further is the ISG Stop & Go system which cuts the engine when the car is not moving. It's available as an option and improves the economy of the 89bhp engine to 67mpg.

The burgeoning reputation for quality that Hyundai is developing, and which the i30 is an integral aspect of, will doubtless boost residual values far in excess of that which the old Accent ever enjoyed but that process will take time and early adopters will need to bear that in mind.

The i30 is a landmark car for Hyundai in the same way the old Coupe and the second generation Santa Fe have proved. Each has progressed common perceptions of the Korean company and with every incremental ratcheting up of its brand equity, Hyundai gets closer to its goal. Drive an i30 back to back with the European rivals - cars like the Renault Megane, Ford Focus, Peugeot 308 and Vauxhall Astra - and you'd have to say that on talent alone it's near the head of that pack, especially in CRDi diesel form. It's left behind the sort of budget fare we've come to expect from Chevrolet and Chrysler and move into a new realm of sophistication.

It doesn't receive a wholly favourable scorecard though. The manual gearchanges are clunky, refinement at speed isn't as good as the best Europeans and there remain some residual concerns, despite obfuscating the respective trim and engine choices, about whether the i30 is better value than its Kia cee'd sister car. These sticking points aside, it's a formidable achievement and one that looks set to sell extremely well.

TOP 4 I30 DEALS

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Hyundai I30 1.6 CRDi Comfort 5dr Diesel Estate
Price £14,667 Save £2,503 Hyundai I30 1.6 CRDi Comfort 5dr  Diesel Estate
Hyundai I30 1.6 CRDi Premium 5dr Diesel Estate
Price £15,931 Save £2,819 Hyundai I30 1.6 CRDi Premium 5dr  Diesel Estate
Hyundai I30 1.6 Comfort 5dr [6] Estate
Price £13,711 Save £2,289 Hyundai I30 1.6 Comfort 5dr [6]  Estate
Hyundai I30 1.6 Comfort 5dr Auto Estate
Price £14,578 Save £2,442 Hyundai I30 1.6 Comfort 5dr Auto  Estate
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RATING OUT OF 10

For i30 CRDi
OVERALL 7.3 OUT OF 10
Performance star rating 6 out of 10 6
Comfort star rating 7 out of 10 7
Handling star rating 7 out of 10 7
Economy star rating 7 out of 10 7
Space / Versatility star rating 8 out of 10 8
Styling star rating 8 out of 10 8
Equipment star rating 8 out of 10 8
Build star rating 7 out of 10 7
Depreciation star rating 6 out of 10 6
Insurance star rating 8 out of 10 8
Value star rating 8 out of 10 8
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