dtech
Well-Known Member
I think I read putting a turbo in it jacks the price over $40k , Hyundai used to be much cheaper than other makes but their prices have increased . As far as those lights on the Tucson and the KIA nightfall edition with the yellow driving lights - those things work to attract a certain buying segment. Many of their vehicles lag the competition in mpg ratings, not by a whole much but it reflects the engineering approach as I don't think they use much if any alloy in the suspension and the have greater drive train losses, esp in their AWD models. I bought my daughter a 2007 Elantra some yrs back and it was reliable and decently equipped but a lot of things were worn out at 90k - suspension parts especially. Against my recommendation she bought a 2017 Hyundai Tucson, it's underpowered, not great mpg, but it has a nice interior and good features for the price - which was slightly less than $22k for the AWD . Many buyers don't care about the engineering, focusing mostly on features like those bling front lights on the newer Tucson and the interiors - which are well done on Hyundais and KIAs.I thought about one for a few days. Then I saw it in person. Then realized that for the same price I had my Maverick on order for/what I got my Ranger for (28k).. You only get the naturally aspirated 2.5 at a mighty 191hp... pulling over 4k curb weight and with no real gain in mpg. Ew.
Weirdly enough they did have 4 in my area when I bought my Ranger that could have maybe got my attention if they would have done what Ford did and throw the turbo in all trims. Then I would have seen that front grill again and been a bit sick.
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