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Hyundai i30CW CRDI: week 3

  • By Paul Pottinger
  • The Sunday Telegraph
  • image

    Paul Pottinger reckons "you can be supremely confident that The Hyundai i30 will do all that?s reasonably asked of it every day you own it." Photo Gallery

Why can?t you ? some of you at least ? just get over it?

If I had a buck for each conversation I’ve had since picking up the i30 CW that hinged on the dread lines: “Aw, yeah, Hyundai, they made that Excel, didn’t they?” Or “I dunno about Korean cars,” I’d have $17.50. The half dollar’s due to the last git getting thwacked with a rolled-up hard copy of Carsguide before they could finish.

Yes, indeed Hyundai once did churn out a driveaway device of that name. And it shocked complacent Australian-based car makers.

Fat and smug behind the then formidable ramparts of tariffs, they were dismayed to find that not only was someone able to market a $13,990 new car with a five year warranty, but tens of thousands of their previously captive audience were embarrassingly eager to throw over the Falcodores that apologists feebly continue to insist are as dear to Strayans as Skippy. They shoot kangaroos, don’t they?

Meanwhile in the 21st century, people spending their own money have been spending it this year on Hyundais to an unprecedented extent, not only here, but in Europe where the marque’s sales have increased some 25 per cent. The i30 hatch and wagon are at the crest of that wave and those whose heads aren’t stuck either in the past, or somewhere the sun don’t shine, can see why.

Low emissions, low running costs, high quality and highly practical. Not by any means an exhilarating drive, but where (except on the rarefied routes mapped out by car makers for car hacks to indulge themselves on model launches for the edification of impressionable readers) is there any exhilaration in modern Australian driving conditions?

This i30 diesel has sufficient open road performance, underwritten by the full array of active and passive safety measures. You can be supremely confident that it will do all that’s reasonably asked of it every day you own it.

Of course, there are some who are simply incapable of making the kerb-size perception climb to accept cars from that country. Like the proud owner of a new Captiva that a chap from another Korean car company told us of recently. Seems this bloke was preening himself on supporting local car manufacture with his choice of soft roader. Made by Holden, don’t you know. Just wouldn’t, or couldn’t, believe that it’s made in Korea by Daewoo.

Poor fool. I know which Korean import beginning with “H” I’d rather own.

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 4 comments

  • I own a i30 Diesel and until it had done between 90,000 and 100,000 it was a very good car. Since I have had the auto transmission blow up. The ESP keeps tripping a sensor which puts the car into safety mode, on Main Roads. Hyundai have not been helpful, quite the opposite and I had to pay for replacement transmission myself. Have taken it back for the ESP problem once and it has done it again the day after I got it back from having transmission replaced and less than 24hrs later the ESP goes again. What a poor car for such an award winner.

    Julie Webb of Newry Posted on 01 October 2011 9:50pm
  • I own a Korean car (Kia) and am basically happy with it.  What I can’t understand is how can Hyundai and Kia charge what they do for their cars in Australia. The i30 SLX CW diesel auto is priced at between $30,000 and $33,000 driveaway and competes directly in price with the likes of Skoda’s excellent Octavia wagon with its superior materials, quality, and size.  Things like galvanized bodywork, 2-pack paint, etc., make the Skoda a long-term proposition.
    Economy, with the diesels, is line-ball.
    I know which one I will buy, especially as the Skoda regularly comes in the top 5% of the quality and reliability surveys.
    Kia’s Soul and Rondo are also grossly overpriced, which is a pity as they are good products (except the Rondo is sold in Australia without the diesel option).

    Darcy Dunbar Posted on 11 December 2010 5:49pm
  • Looking forward to seeing how the i30 Diesel goes at Rally South Australia this weekend.

    Andrew Posted on 24 June 2010 6:28pm
  • We’re converted - got a Kia Rio as a city hack for a Sydney project in 07, $14,990 drive away and been absolutely reliable, unlike previous Commodores.
    Then was time to replace darling’s VZ - more unreliability, soo took Golf 103 TDI for a run - verry nice but too dear (our money remember). What else asks darling? Must look at an i30 says I, so we did and immediate result is she ordered a white manual hatch with spoiler. Mid range as it has all the bags and great value.
    Result is we have two cousin cars and have not found anything to fault at all; zilch, zip nil. Try that falcadore!
    Bye the way, we are both in our early sixties, dismissed the auto boxes and thought the DSG unrefind - we both rerfer punting manuals instead.
    Ray
    p.s. try premium 98 in a 1.6l manual Rio and plant the right foot, great fun if you let it rev a bit or good economy

    Ray White of Brisbane Qld & Newcastle NSW Posted on 06 May 2010 10:28pm
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