Report: Hyundai Genesis won't get all-wheel drive until next gen
#1
Report: Hyundai Genesis won't get all-wheel drive until next gen
Report: Hyundai Genesis won't get all-wheel drive until next gen
According to the sleuths at Car and Driver, the current Hyundai Genesis won't come with all-wheel drive. Instead, buyers will have to wait until at least 2014 before the traction-adding tech shows up on the company's luxury four-door. That may also mean that the Genesis Coupe and the lengthy Equus will miss out on all-wheel drive for another few years until the Korean automaker can come up with a refreshed platform. Hyundai CEO John Krafcik has long made it clear that the Genesis twins and the Equus would receive an all-wheel drive option in the future, but we were hoping that we'd see a variant of the refreshed-for-2012 model that churns from all four wheels.
As Car and Driver points out, the Genesis Sedan has seen fairly strong sales since its introduction, and the addition of all-wheel drive will likely help the model inch ever closer toward that magic 30,000 unit-per-year mark. Unfortunately, with at least three years before an all-new model touches down, buyers will have to content themselves with the rash of more powerful engines, a reworked suspension and refined visuals that Hyundai recently unveiled.
http://www.autoblog.com/2011/05/13/r...ntil-next-gen/
#4
Lexus Fanatic
Hyundai, IMHO, should have been adding AWD to at least some of their regular passenger-cars some time ago. I've mentioned that to their reps several times. Subaru needs some good AWD competition in their price-class, and Hyundai would be one of the best brands for it. The Genesis, though, is beyond the price-range of most Subarus.
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#11
Lexus Fanatic
Originally Posted by mmarshall
Hyundai, IMHO, should have been adding AWD to at least some of their regular passenger-cars some time ago. I've mentioned that to their reps several times. Subaru needs some good AWD competition in their price-class, and Hyundai would be one of the best brands for it. The Genesis, though, is beyond the price-range of most Subarus.
Agreed, but the AWD hardware is there, and was developed long ago.....for the Tucson, Santa-Fe, and Veracruz. The Veracruz's AWD hardware, of course, probably would be the best-suited of the three for an easy conversion to the lower-stance Genesis sedan.
AWD seems to be growing with consumers for whatever reason
Last edited by mmarshall; 05-15-11 at 06:27 PM.
#13
Lexus Fanatic
Good point, Och. . I hadn't consided that....or just let it slip. The Genesis has a longitudinal (front-rear) engine-mount, rather than a transverse (side-to-side) one. The AWD system in the Kia Borrego (which Hyundai owns) might have some usable components, but it was primarily designed for a truck-based, body-on-frame SUV rather than a unibody sedan.
Last edited by mmarshall; 05-15-11 at 06:45 PM.
#14
Lexus Champion
iTrader: (3)
Maybe so. I can't say for sure, as I'm not an engineer. But I do know that most of the Hyundai/Kia car-based SUVs were done at least partly off of sedan platforms (the truck-based, body-on-frame, Kia Borrego may have been an exception). So the conversion, as I see it, shouldn't be that difficult. Mercedes, for example, uses modified forms of the 4-Matic hardware from its ML-series SUVs on its C, E, and S-class cars. BMW does the same with the X3/X5-derived AWD on its xi sedans/coupes. Ford found an easy way to put the Escape's AWD hardware on the Fusion/MKZ.
C, E, and S class are all RWD sedans and therefore they can borrow ML's hardware, which was originally based off a RWD truck platform. Ditto with BMW.
Its best to compared AWD RX to AWD LS/GS/IS - they are completely different setups, that cannot be interchanged at all.
#15
Lexus Fanatic
Mike, but those Kia/Hyundai/Ford SUVs ared base on FWD sedans, with engines placed sideways, and completely different transmission that is mounted to the side. You cant mate it to the pure RWD genesis.
C, E, and S class are all RWD sedans and therefore they can borrow ML's hardware, which was originally based off a RWD truck platform. Ditto with BMW.
Its best to compared AWD RX to AWD LS/GS/IS - they are completely different setups, that cannot be interchanged at all.
C, E, and S class are all RWD sedans and therefore they can borrow ML's hardware, which was originally based off a RWD truck platform. Ditto with BMW.
Its best to compared AWD RX to AWD LS/GS/IS - they are completely different setups, that cannot be interchanged at all.