As a current Hyundai customer who's owned three of they're vehicles, I feel confident in saying that I like there products. I think they're cars are reliable, durable and somewhat stylish. So it's because of this admiration that I've decided to re post CNET's review of the 2013 Hyundai Veloster Turbo...
CNET Review
The 2013 Hyundai Veloster Turbo's biggest gimmick -- aside from the
eponymous turbo, which we'll get back to shortly -- is its asymmetrical
design. Viewed from the driver's side, the Veloster appears to be a
three-door hatchback. However, viewed from the passenger side, it looks
like a five-door. The truth is somewhere in between: Hyundai's Veloster
is an unconventional four-door hatchback with one door on the driver's
side, two doors on the passenger's side, and the lifting hatch out back.
The doors
Aside from just looking weird and being a conversation piece, there are
advantages to this uneven configuration. Firstly, the second, smaller
door on the passenger side allows for easier access to the rear seat
without having to tilt the front seat forward. Two doors are shorter
than one long door and swing out a shorter distance from the side of the
vehicle, so a Veloster driver cramming into a tiny parking space can
get closer to a wall or other obstruction on the passenger side without
inhibiting the swing of the doors. (By comparison, the driver's side
door is almost ridiculously long.)
The Veloster's hatchback form
factor with fold-flat rear seats also allows city dwellers to cram a lot
of cargo room and stuff-carrying capacity into a relatively small
parking space, which is a treat for city living. During my week with the
Veloster, I purchased two road bikes and was able to fit the boxes of
both of them into the cavernous rear hatch with plenty of room to spare.
But that's all form and function stuff, what about the design?
Well, the Veloster uses Hyundai's Fluidic Sculpture design language, which -- as seen in the Sonata,
for example -- usually manifests itself in organic curves and flowing,
windswept looks. The Veloster Turbo, however, is a good deal more
aggressive.
Massive swept-back bug-eyed headlamps flow from the front end of the
vehicle and up the fenders. They are joined to the housings of the
circular fog lamps by deep creases that echo the hexagonal blacked-out
grille that is both larger and more sinister-looking than the non-turbo
Veloster's. On our Ultra Black test car, the scale of the grille is
visually minimized, but on more brightly colored models, it looks
downright massive.
The rear end is characterized by a huge center
exhaust with dual round tips that are surrounded by a matte black
plastic "diffuser" that generates more second glances than downforce and
the same high rump and beetlelike taillamps as the non-turbo model.
There's also the same gun-slit rear glass that offers very poor rearward
visibility and makes a compelling case for the optional rearview
camera.
The turbo
Beneath the Veloster Turbo's sculpted hood spins
a 1.6-liter, four-cylinder engine that is augmented with a twin-scroll
turbo and gasoline direct-injection technology. This is, as I
understand, the same 1.6-liter block that every Veloster is powered by,
only with the addition of the turbocharger and upgrades to handle the
increased air intake pressure.
Output is rated at 201 horsepower
and 195 pound-feet of torque, up 63 ponies over the model that we tested
last year and 72 pound-feet of torque. Almost all of that power lives
in the upper ranges of the tachometer; thankfully the "twin-scroll" tech
in the turbo helps to minimize lag (but not totally eliminate it), so
you're not stuck waiting for the torque to pile on. We called the last Veloster
to pass through the Car Tech garage out on its inability to back up its
aggressive looks with performance. On paper, at least, that's no longer
the case.
The engine is paired with a standard six-speed manual transmission
that features gear ratios that are unique to the Turbo model. The
shifter has nothing on the stick you'll find in a Honda Fit or Mini Cooper, but it feels nice enough in the hand and its gates are reasonably well-defined with one very heinous exception.
The
Veloster's manual shifter is equipped with what's called a first-gear
lockout mechanism, the purpose of which is to prevent careless drivers
from shifting into first gear when they mean to go to third and
potentially damaging the transmission. In theory, this is a good thing.
In practice, the Veloster's first-gear lockout is a nightmare in itself,
occasionally getting stuck shut or half shut and preventing me when it
was time to get moving again from shifting into first gear without much
jiggling and mangling of the shift lever -- that's if you haven't
stalled because you've ended up in third gear. This made our Veloster
Turbo tester almost maddeningly difficult to enjoy on the streets of San
Francisco, where stops are frequent and often on an incline.
A
quick dive into a few Veloster enthusiast forums revealed that, while
this is a known issue, not every Veloster Turbo driver has experienced
it. However, I feel this issue is something that potential owners should
be aware of and beware of.
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