Hyundai’s European hatch is obviously functional, surprisingly fun
Sharing the front subframe with its 4-door cousin, a chassis engineer explains the underlying reason why the Elantra GT is related to the sedan. A blast though the swerving, curving roads near Santa Ysabel outside San Diego and we’re convinced he’s either an idiot or a liar. And yet he’s neither, the GT riding on shared underpinnings, though delivering surprising levels of driving enjoyment.
FAST FACTS
1. Compared to the sedan, the Elantra GT is 9-inches shorter overall with a 2-inch shorter wheelbase.
2. Starting at $18,395 a $2,750 Style Package includes a panoramic roof, leather seats, a power driver’s seat, plus 17-inch wheels with 215/45/17 tires and stiffer rear spring rates.
3. Cargo room is rated at 23 cu-ft or 51 cu-ft with the rear seats folded flat.
4. One engine is available, a 1.8-liter with 148 hp and a 28/39 mpg rating.
4. The Elantra GT is the first Hyundai product to come with the Driver Selectable Steering Mode button with three levels of responsiveness: Comfort, Normal and Sport.
One of three new Hyundai products made available to the motoring press during the brand’s largest ever press drive, the Elantra GT stands out as a genuine surprise and a blast to drive, even when driving options included the 201 hp Veloster Turbo.
Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised. After all, the Elantra GT is a 5-door hatchback designed for the European marketplace and looks it. The car is an admission by Hyundai that it is tossing away any old Toyota Matrix ambitions it had with the Elantra Touring. Instead, the GT is positioned as a competitor to cars like the Mazda3, VW Golf and Ford Focus.
STICK-SHIFT AVAILABLE ON TOP-TRIM
Powered by the same 1.8-liter 4-cylinder found in the sedan, the Elantra GT makes an identical 148 hp and 131 lb-ft of torque. Available with the same choice of a six-speed manual or six-speed automatic, it comes as just one trim level with two choices of option packages. Targeted at a smaller segment of the marketplace than the sedan, the GT gets more standard equipment, and costs a few thousand above a base sedan as well. A unique quality of the one-trim selection is that you can have a fully-loaded model, with a stick-shift.
And that’s exactly what we drove, experiencing a level of enjoyment no front-drive Hyundai has ever before offered. Slap that boosted 1.6-liter from the Veloster Turbo under the hood and we’d have the first ever Hyundai-Speed GT.
With the current engine it’s still capable enough, and delivers a perfectly acceptable amount of around-town juice. Slicing up steep canyon roads, however, it’s hard not to notice the excessive ratio gap from 2nd to 3rd gear, meaning that even if you push the revs past the redline, once in 3rd, the engine drops outside its ideal powerband.
Making it a particular shame is the fact that the stick-shift is actually an excellent unit, with short and precise throws.
CHASSIS AND SUSPENSION COMPONENTS
Provoking wild fits of driving shenanigans, understeer is far less than we’d expect for a non-performance vehicle while the intervention of the stability control is unintrusive, or at least extremely smooth in its application.
Measuring 9-inches shorter in length than the sedan with far less overhang, it also has a 2-inch shorter wheelbase making it impressively agile. Despite what Hyundai calls a V-Beam (a fancy version of yet another solid rear axle) even less-than-ideal road surfaces don’t unsettle it.
We did notice a good deal of bobbing and bouncing on the suspension, but the entire time the car’s wheels remained planted and in tune with the road. Helping in this department is the GT’s 2,745 lb curb weight, the lowest in its class and a solid 150 lbs less than even the Mazda3.
As mentioned, out test car was fully kitted out, including the $2,750 Style Package, which is about far more than just cosmetics. Along with the panoramic roof, leather seats and power driver’s chair, there are 17-inch wheels with 215/45/17 tires as well as higher rear spring rates, while all GT models get Sachs shocks.
CHOOSE YOUR STEERING STYLE
Aiding in delivering all this fun is a surprising standard feature, Hyundai’s new Driver Selectable Steering Mode (DSSM). With a button on the steering wheel, the driver can at any time switch between Comfort, Normal and Sport modes, tightening responsiveness of the steering, which we’re happy to report is not plagued by the numb on-center feel of recent Hyundai products.
Sharing the front subframe with its 4-door cousin, a chassis engineer explains the underlying reason why the Elantra GT is related to the sedan. A blast though the swerving, curving roads near Santa Ysabel outside San Diego and we’re convinced he’s either an idiot or a liar. And yet he’s neither, the GT riding on shared underpinnings, though delivering surprising levels of driving enjoyment.
FAST FACTS
1. Compared to the sedan, the Elantra GT is 9-inches shorter overall with a 2-inch shorter wheelbase.
2. Starting at $18,395 a $2,750 Style Package includes a panoramic roof, leather seats, a power driver’s seat, plus 17-inch wheels with 215/45/17 tires and stiffer rear spring rates.
3. Cargo room is rated at 23 cu-ft or 51 cu-ft with the rear seats folded flat.
4. One engine is available, a 1.8-liter with 148 hp and a 28/39 mpg rating.
4. The Elantra GT is the first Hyundai product to come with the Driver Selectable Steering Mode button with three levels of responsiveness: Comfort, Normal and Sport.
One of three new Hyundai products made available to the motoring press during the brand’s largest ever press drive, the Elantra GT stands out as a genuine surprise and a blast to drive, even when driving options included the 201 hp Veloster Turbo.
Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised. After all, the Elantra GT is a 5-door hatchback designed for the European marketplace and looks it. The car is an admission by Hyundai that it is tossing away any old Toyota Matrix ambitions it had with the Elantra Touring. Instead, the GT is positioned as a competitor to cars like the Mazda3, VW Golf and Ford Focus.
STICK-SHIFT AVAILABLE ON TOP-TRIM
Powered by the same 1.8-liter 4-cylinder found in the sedan, the Elantra GT makes an identical 148 hp and 131 lb-ft of torque. Available with the same choice of a six-speed manual or six-speed automatic, it comes as just one trim level with two choices of option packages. Targeted at a smaller segment of the marketplace than the sedan, the GT gets more standard equipment, and costs a few thousand above a base sedan as well. A unique quality of the one-trim selection is that you can have a fully-loaded model, with a stick-shift.
And that’s exactly what we drove, experiencing a level of enjoyment no front-drive Hyundai has ever before offered. Slap that boosted 1.6-liter from the Veloster Turbo under the hood and we’d have the first ever Hyundai-Speed GT.
With the current engine it’s still capable enough, and delivers a perfectly acceptable amount of around-town juice. Slicing up steep canyon roads, however, it’s hard not to notice the excessive ratio gap from 2nd to 3rd gear, meaning that even if you push the revs past the redline, once in 3rd, the engine drops outside its ideal powerband.
Making it a particular shame is the fact that the stick-shift is actually an excellent unit, with short and precise throws.
CHASSIS AND SUSPENSION COMPONENTS
Provoking wild fits of driving shenanigans, understeer is far less than we’d expect for a non-performance vehicle while the intervention of the stability control is unintrusive, or at least extremely smooth in its application.
Measuring 9-inches shorter in length than the sedan with far less overhang, it also has a 2-inch shorter wheelbase making it impressively agile. Despite what Hyundai calls a V-Beam (a fancy version of yet another solid rear axle) even less-than-ideal road surfaces don’t unsettle it.
We did notice a good deal of bobbing and bouncing on the suspension, but the entire time the car’s wheels remained planted and in tune with the road. Helping in this department is the GT’s 2,745 lb curb weight, the lowest in its class and a solid 150 lbs less than even the Mazda3.
As mentioned, out test car was fully kitted out, including the $2,750 Style Package, which is about far more than just cosmetics. Along with the panoramic roof, leather seats and power driver’s chair, there are 17-inch wheels with 215/45/17 tires as well as higher rear spring rates, while all GT models get Sachs shocks.
CHOOSE YOUR STEERING STYLE
Aiding in delivering all this fun is a surprising standard feature, Hyundai’s new Driver Selectable Steering Mode (DSSM). With a button on the steering wheel, the driver can at any time switch between Comfort, Normal and Sport modes, tightening responsiveness of the steering, which we’re happy to report is not plagued by the numb on-center feel of recent Hyundai products.