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2005
HYUNDAI NEW VEHICLE MODEL GUIDE |
Hyundai,
the largest automaker in South Korea,
draws a bead on the American market
with a new assembly plant in Alabama,
a design and technical center in Michigan
and a test track under construction
in the California desert. Models in
Hyundai's extensive line for 2005 include
a pair of plush sedans, two economical
subcompact hatchbacks, a zippy 2+2 sports
coupe and a crossover sport-utility
wagon that drives like a car. Then Hyundai
rolls out a new small-class SUV called
Tucson with extensive safety features
aboard plus two powertrain options.
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Hyundai
XG350 |
Flagship sedans from Hyundai reflect
sedate styling on a package of generous
scale for the mid-size class with power
supplied by a V6 engine and the passenger
compartment -- featuring leather-lined
seats and automatic everything -- rivaling
a refined luxury car. Exterior styling
seems subtle but elegant with a series
of flat horizontal and vertical surfaces
united by crisp angled surfaces that
form etched character lines across the
hood and along each side as shoulders.
Power
for XG350 stems from Hyundai's dual-cam
3.5-liter V6 engine that delivers 194
hp in concert with a sophisticated five-speed
automatic transmission with Shiftronic
manual shift mode. There are two trims
-- XG350 and the luxury-laced XG350L.
XG350 continues to offer an extensive
list of standards including leather
seating and 16-inch alloy wheels, with
a CD changer for eight discs new on
2005 issues.
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Hyundai
Sonata |
The value-packed mid-size sedan in Hyundai's
fleet carves out room for five in a
spacious cabin. It supports bold exterior
styling with unusually smooth shapes
contrasted against definitive creases
and crisp edges. The look is elegant
and dressy but also aggressive -- and
clearly different from typical sedans
from other Asian automakers. Sonata
also has spacious headroom in a cabin
dressed with features for comfort and
luxury, along with safety systems extending
to frontal and side-impact air bags.
The series for 2005 shows up in three
trims, beginning with the base Sonata
GL and climbing to GLS and deluxe LX
models, the latter two rolling on 16-inch
alloy wheels. Sonata's optional 2.7-liter
V6 engine hits 170 hp, while the base
2.4-liter in-line-four generates 138
hp.
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Hyundai
Accent |
Hyundai's smallest car for the economy
club forges a passenger compartment
with generous headroom for front riders
and respectable legroom in the rear.
This year, the variations include a
three-door hatchback and four-door sedan
with three trims and all versions packing
side-impact air bags as standard safety
gear plus anti-lock brakes (ABS). The
hatch trims out as Accent GLS and sporty
GT, with the sedan cast strictly as
GLS. Accent GT has a sport suspension,
front fog lamps and body color rocker
moldings on the body, and the cabin
fixed with a leather-wrapped steering
wheel and white-face gauge package.
All Accents pull from Hyundai's 1.6-liter
dual-cam four-cylinder engine, which
achieves 104 hp plus fuel economy numbers
as high as 35 mpg.
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Hyundai
Tiburon |
Hyundai's low-slung sports coupe goes
by the name of Tiburon. Muscular fender
bulges flanking an extended hoodline
and a hatchback roofline, which tapers
to a stubby tail capped by a flying
spoiler wing, make it stand out. New
models sport a revamped face with slot-style
grille plus restyled headlamp clusters
and fog lamps. And there's a new top
trim - the Tiburon SE -- which arrives
later in the year in limited numbers.
It carries a dual-cam V6 sized at 2.7
liters and racked to 172 hp with Hyundai's
pliable six-speed manual shifter aboard,
plus red front brake calipers and a
tall spoiler on the tail.
The
cockpit is set with aluminum pedals,
extra gauges in the instrument cluster,
leather-wrapped steering wheel and Kenwood
audio system with CD/MP3 player. Hyundai's
four-cylinder Beta engine, which displaces
2.0 liters and reaches 138 hp, drops
into a new entry-level Tiburon GS with
five-speed manual shifting. The Tiburon
GT stocks the V6 and adds the option
of a four-speed electronic automatic
tied to a Shiftronic manual. |
Hyundai
Santa Fe |
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The compact-class sport-utility vehicle
from Hyundai, with four doors and two
rows of seats for five riders, is built
upon the front-wheel-drive (FWD) platform
of a sedan for a smooth ride quality.
Power flows from one of two V6 engine
options this year and there's optional
all-wheel-drive (AWD) traction with
the larger V6. The full-time AWD system
employs a unique Dual Drive front differential
with planetary gears plus viscous coupling
and it sends as much as 60 percent of
the engine's muscle to front wheels
and 40 percent to the rear. Despite
car-like drive characteristics, the
Santa Fe looks tough like a sturdy wagon
rigged for work yet it's also stylish
with a bold face and shapely contours
on the sides. The cabin layout consists
of bucket seats and a center console
in front of a bench seat for three and
a bay in back measuring 30 cubic feet
for cargo and sports equipment. Two
trims work in 2005 as GLS and LX. The
GLS gets the 2.7-liter V6 from the Sonata
with 170 hp as standard plant, or an
optional 3.5-liter dual-cam V6 worth
200 hp through Hyundai's five-speed
Shiftronic automatic. The 3.5-liter
V6 is standard to the LX. |
Hyundai
Elantra |
This is the name of Hyundai's best seller,
fashioned as a four-door sedan or five-door
hatchback wagon. Elantra GLS is the
mainstay model as a well-equipped four-door
sedan, although a four-door GT sedan
is available plus the sport-tuned Elantra
GT five-door hatchback. For 2005 Hyundai
adds a new GLS five-door to the mix.
Standard gear for the GLS trim ranges
from air conditioning; front and side-impact
air bags; power operation for windows,
door locks and mirrors; a tilting steering
column; AM/FM stereo with cassette deck;
and a keyless remote entry device tied
to an alarm. GT models contain leather
seats and a leather-wrapped steering
wheel, firmer suspension settings, four-wheel
disc brakes and fog lamps plus 15-inch
alloy wheels and a six-speaker audio
system with CD/MP3 player. The engine
for all Elantras is Hyundai's 2.0-liter
four-cylinder with continuously variable
valve timing (CVVT) and an output of
138 hp. |
Hyundai
Tuscon |
Hyundai's new SUV, sized one step under
the Santa Fe, presents an athletic package
and a flexible passenger compartment
with five seats and room for gear. The
bay at the rear has an easy-to-clean
floor and multiple tie-down points to
secure cargo. Hyundai adds standard
passive safety gear including frontal
and seat-mounted side-impact air bags
for front seats and curtain-style air
bags above outboard seats in front and
back. Active safety features extend
to ABS and a traction control system
(TCS) plus electronic stability program
(ESP).
The
Tucson brings two engine options shared
among three trims. The base GL employs
a 2.0-liter four-in-line with CVVT.
It produces 140 hp and ties to a five-speed
manual or optional four-speed Shiftronic
automatic. The Tucson GLS and top-trim
LX rate Hyundai's 2.7-liter V6 for 173
hp. With the V6 aboard, the Tucson offers
four-wheel-drive (4WD) equipment by
Borg-Warner. Standard on all trims are
items like air conditioning, power controls
for windows and door locks, a heating
element for each exterior mirror, roof
rack rails, remote keyless entry system
with alarm, and an audio kit with CD
deck and six speakers. Options range
from leather seats to a power sunroof
and upgraded audio packages. |
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