NAMYANG ACADEMY OF FAST ARTS

The first high-performer to come out from Hyundai’s Namyang R&D centre is a Korean-German pocket rocket par excellence.

Portrait of Tammy Strobel

The first high-performer to come out from Hyundai’s Namyang R&D centre is a Korean-German pocket rocket par excellence.

HYUNDAI i30 N

STORY DR ANDRE LAM LOCATION NURBURGRING, GERMANY

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The hot Hyundai is willing to turn in, controls its corner-exits well, fights off understeer and sometimes exhibits a bit of lift-off oversteer.

UP till now, Hyundai seemed to be content making affordable cars for practical people. Well, that is about to change – fast.

Since 2012, Hyundai has been acquiring the talents of some top German engineers and executives in its effort to surpass the Japanese and perhaps even the Europeans.

Providing solid proof that the Korean automaker has stepped up its game is the Hyundai N programme, whose first product to hit the market is the i30 N.

This new model is not merely a badging exercise, with just the engine turbo boost of the regular i30 hatchback turned up.

 Hyundai says that N stands for Namyang, where their R&D centre is located, but more befittingly, N also means Nurburgring, where Hyundai has a department for testing and developing their cars.

I have come to the infamous Nurburgring to drive the i30 N, a hot hatch which has been garnering accolades in Europe, where it has been on sale since the beginning of 2018. I am the first Singapore journo to sample the i30 N before its local launch.

Of all its competitors, the closest in concept is the iconic Volkswagen Golf GTI, but the Hyundai seems to be more ready, out of the box, for a track day than the VW.

In standard form, the i30 N has a 250hp 2-litre 4-pot turbo motor, which produces a more aggressive 275hp with the optional Performance Package. 

The additional aggression doesn’t stop there – said package also includes a genuine e-differential for true torque vectoring, 19-inch Pirelli P Zero Trofeo tyres to improve both grip and agility, a tuned exhaust system and fiercer-looking front and rear spoilers.

Nurburgring is nicknamed The Green Hell for good reason. It is a demanding and challenging 20.8km stretch of country road in the forested Eifel mountain range that has been converted into a racetrack. The surface is uneven and has a 300m elevation change, 73 corners, and a long straight that will let really fast cars reach over 400km/h.

Not only do you have to remember all the corners, you also need to remember all the bad bumps as well.

Ironically, one of the reasons for enjoying the i30 N on the Nurburgring is its power, or to be precise, just enough power.

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ANOTHER N IN THE WORKS

There was an unexpected bonus at the Nurburgring, where I was to test the i30 N hatchback – a preview drive of the i30 N Fastback prototype, which will make its world premiere in November.

I drove the undisguised i30 N hatchback and disguised i30 N Fastback, one after the other, on the roads surrounding Nurburgring after the track session.

The Fastback variant is as entertaining as its hatchback sibling, if a bit more supple and resolved in its repertoire. While the hatchback is lively and a little aggressive, the Fastback is more mellow, and more sophisticated in its ride and handling. It feels even more positive than the already impressive i30 N hatchback.

I prefer the i30 N Fastback, by a whisker. But it’s still a prototype at this stage, so there are several caveats. I was told by the Hyundai engineers present that they brought the car to the Nurburgring to confirm the final settings for the steering, chassis and suspension.

This is good news, because the i30 N Fastback potentially fills a niche of the market currently occupied by the Audi S3 Sedan and, at the extreme end of the segment, the Mercedes-AMG CLA45. The Hyundai should be able to undercut the two German rockets by a significant margin. – DR ANDRE LAM

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"THIS NEW MODEL IS NOT MERELY A BADGING EXERCISE, WITH JUST THE ENGINE TURBO BOOST OF THE REGULAR i30 HATCHBACK TURNED UP."

Unlike a supercar with 600hp, which is more than enough to sling it to corners frighteningly quickly, a hatchback with 250 or 275hp could be wrung out completely by the driver without fear.

In the case of the Hyundai hot hatch, its chassis has good balance, along with enough suspension travel and uprated damping to soak up the worst compressions without hitting the bump stops, so that fast progress from point to point is also fluid and calm.

The car’s handling is benign, with a willingness to turn in, mild understeer in midturns, and well-controlled exits from corners even when gunning hard. The car does not mind being chucked into corners, always fighting off understeer rather well and occasionally exhibiting a bit of lift-off oversteer.

During manufacture, the five-door body has been specially strengthened with extra welds and reinforced with high-tensile steel underneath and around the front strut mounts.

While piloting the i30 N on a full lap of the Nurburgring is a petrolhead’s dream come true, driving it on the country lanes surrounding the ’Ring after the track session reveals a clearer picture of how the Hyundai will behave in the real world.

It is not that the Nurburgring is irrelevant, but rather, a pocket rocket honed to handle and ride well on the Nurburgring will usually do exceedingly well on your favourite stretch of road anywhere else.

At this point in time, only a manual 6-speed gearbox with rev-matching function is available. There is no rumour or mention of a dual-clutch transmission for the i30 N as yet.

The manual 6-speeder is pleasingly slick in its operation, with a short throw and a slightly notchy feel to it.

The car comes with launch control, but in a manual vehicle, one variable makes a standing-start launch a hit-or- miss affair – the human being behind the wheel.

While there is traction control once the clutch is engaged and the engine revs per minute is maintained by the software at around 4000rpm, the rate of clutch engagement needs to be just right for the traction control not to cut power or brake too much.

Get it right and zeroto- 100km/h takes just 6.1 seconds (6.4 seconds without the Performance Package).

Surprisingly, there is little torque-steer, thanks to the optimised geometry and software controlling the electrically assisted steering.

For the brakes, Hyundai did not go the Brembo route, but took a set from a large, heavy Hyundai like the Santa Fe SUV, modified them and added a pre-fill function to work in the 1.4-tonne i30 N. The rear discs are big at 300mm and the front discs are bigger still at 330mm (314mm and 345mm respectively if car is specified with the Performance Package).

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Equipped with the essentials of a practical hot-hatch, but i30 N interior is less interesting than the exterior and the driving experience.

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BIERMANN WENT FROM M TO N

Hyundai’s N division is headed up by Albert Biermann, formerly from BMW’s M GmbH. He joined the Korean giant at the end of 2014.

His first major project at BMW was the iconic E30 M3. This is a good clue as to the direction he wants to steer Hyundai’s drive-faster performance programme.

Biermann insists that N is not just a carbon copy of the M story and will forge its own path to create respectable sporting cars, through the optimal use of the resources already available in Hyundai.

Biermann is not alone in this quest. Hyundai has also hired Thomas Schemera, ex-BMW, to be head of the company’s newly established High Performance Vehicle & Motorsport Division; and Klaus Koster, ex-AMG, to be director of High Performance Vehicle Development at Hyundai Motor Europe Technical Centre.

Biermann recognises the important role played by motorsport in supporting a sporty image for a car company. This has led to Hyundai participating in the World Rally Championship with their i20 and the World Touring Car Cup with their i30 N TCR, both racecars doing very well this year.

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"THE i30 N WITH PERFORMANCE PACKAGE IS MORE FOCUSSED THAN THE VW GOLF GTI – I NEVER THOUGHT I WOULD EVER SAY THAT OF A HYUNDAI."

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Performance Package for i30 N includes a grippier set of 19-inch Pirelli tyres with a modelspecific compound, bigger brake discs, and an electronic LSD.

The adaptive suspension comes from Hyundai’s Genesis model range, but it has been carefully tuned for this application with sporty spring-and-damper settings.

As you have noticed, most of the hardware is cherry-picked from Hyundai’s vast parts catalogue, with a small number of components redesigned for durability and robustness.

The magic lies in how these different parts are packaged and finely tuned by the dream team, consisting of ex-AMG and ex-BMW M engineers, to create a performance car greater than the sum of its modest parts. And this is exactly how the i30 N feels on the road.

The car’s Normal drive mode provides the best comfort, but nobody would buy one of these just to drive “Normally”. The Sport drive mode proves to be the best all-rounder, with a good compromise between comfort, control and outright handling.

To get the car into the sportiest mode called N, press the checkered-flag button on the right side of the steering wheel boss, across from the left-side button that switches between the other drive modes.

As long as the road is fairly smooth, you can enjoy the added sense of control and sharpened handling of the i30 N in N mode. However, the ride becomes too stiff for bumpy country roads like the ones I drove on near the Nurburgring.

Though Sport mode suits these roads better, only the N mode has the louder, more entertaining soundtrack. Thankfully, Hyundai provides a solution – press the N button a second time and the system goes into a custom setting which lets the driver choose how to set up the car exactly the way he wants it.

Fortunately, the standard i30 N squeezes under the 160g CO2 mark by a single gram, which will park it in the neutral band (no rebate or surcharge applicable) of the VES.

Unfortunately, the higher tune of the i30 N Performance Package will put it into the C1 band of VES and incur a penalty of $10,000.

For that reason, the first batch of i30 N hot hatches arriving in Singapore will be the standard 250hp version with 18-inch Michelin Super Sport tyres, but the agent is bringing in the look-faster parts as N Line accessories.

The go-faster bits such as the engine power upgrade and the e-differential cannot be retrofitted, but Komoco is looking into how they can import the higher-power version.

Waving a cheque to place a deposit on the i30 N Performance Package may convince them.

Dyed-in-the-wool driving enthusiasts like myself didn’t get excited in the past whenever a Korean automaker introduced a so-called sporty model. But this introduction of the i30 N was different.

Instead of Korean executives, there was an entire contingent of German engineers at the Nurburgring event to explain the N performance philosophy and the newly minted N cars. They even asked us journos what we thought.

Indeed, things are changing fast at Hyundai.

In my opinion, the i30 N with Performance Package is more focussed than the VW Golf GTI. I never thought I would ever say that of a Hyundai.

HYUNDAI i30 N 2.0 WITH PERFORMANCE PACKAGE

ENGINE 1998cc, 16-valves, inline-4, turbocharged

MAX POWER 275hp at 6000rpm

MAX TORQUE 353Nm at 1450-4500rpm

POWER TO WEIGHT 196.4hp per tonne

GEARBOX 6-speed manual

0-100KM/H 6.1 seconds

TOP SPEED 250km/h (governed)

CONSUMPTION 14.1km/L (combined)

CO2 EMISSION 163g/km

PRICE INCL. COE To be announced

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"THE DREAM TEAM HAS CREATED A PERFORMANCE CAR GREATER THAN THE SUM OF ITS MODEST PARTS, WHICH ARE CHERRY-PICKED FROM HYUNDAI’S VAST CATALOGUE."

HYUNDAI i30 N 2.0

DRIVETRAIN

TYPE Inline-4, 16-valves, turbocharged

CAPACITY 1998cc

BORE X STROKE 86mm x 86mm

COMPRESSION RATIO 9.5:1

MAX POWER 250hp at 6000rpm

MAX TORQUE 353Nm at 1450-4000rpm

POWER TO WEIGHT 178.6hp per tonne

GEARBOX 6-speed manual

DRIVEN WHEELS Front

PERFORMANCE

0-100KM/H 6.4 seconds

TOP SPEED 250km/h (governed)

CONSUMPTION 14.3km/L (combined)

CO2 EMISSION 159g/km

SUSPENSION

FRONT MacPherson struts, coil springs, electronically controlled dampers

REAR Multi-link, coil springs, electronically controlled dampers

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BRAKES

FRONT / REAR Ventilated discs

TYRES

TYPE Michelin Pilot Super Sport

SIZE 225/40 R18

SAFETY

AIRBAGS 6

TRACTION AIDS ABS, ESC

MEASUREMENTS

LENGTH 4335mm

WIDTH 1795mm

HEIGHT 1451mm

WHEELBASE 2650mm

KERB WEIGHT 1400kg

TURNING CIRCLE 11.6m

BUYING IT

PRICE INCL. COE To be announced

WARRANTY To be announced

+ POINT-TO-POINT PROGRESS IS FAST, FLUID AND CALM; PERFORMANCE IS GREATER THAN THE SUM OF ITS PARTS

- N MODE’S RIDE WOULD BE TOO STIFF IF THE ROAD ISN’T SMOOTH; COCKPIT SHOULD LOOK/FEEL SPORTIER