I just can't find myself driving behind the wheel of a logo that looks like this. My rental car on my biz trip this past week was an Elantra and for me, the quality just wasn't there. It felt and handled like a really cheap build. The interior was made of cheap plastic, road noise was awful, and there were a lot of squeaks and rattles. YMMV
they sell pretty well. some here love them, and some don't. i've never felt the desire to sit in one since they fluffed the mpg ratings.
Last time I looked at Hyundai/KIA was 2012 (for my Mother-In-Law) and didn't buy then. She got a RAV4 instead.
In their defense, it wasn't intentional, and likely due to the vagueness of the EPA's rules. Part of the reason for the new rules we are hearing about is to make them clearer.
Re: Eliminating the spare tire.... So, they are eliminating it in the 2-Eco, and the 4 and 4T, to save on weight? Why don't they go further, and offer a 'Super Eco'.....eliminate the rear seat? Think of all the weight that would save, and what a huge storage capacity it would have..... And they might as well eliminate the rear doors as well......
I know you're joking, but that's what ecomodders do; Strip out has much weigh as possible. The rear doors won't come off, horrible aero, but some have removed the alternator and run off a deep cycle 12 volt. Likely posted here at the time, but there is a Costa Rico company working on a local kit car that would use balsa wood for the frame.
Well at least you get to drive yours. My Elantra rental had a loose rearview mirror that came off its mounting when I was adjusting it. I got a Sonata as a replacement and it was nice to drive. You mean like this? 2004 Prius GT. No back seats, spare tire and adds a roll cage . Oh and the engine is replaced with the Otto cycle version so it pumps out 140 ish horsepower.
Yes, I was trying to be funny with my suggestion....but when I said eliminate the back doors, I didn't mean remove them, but rather, build the car as a two-seater hatchback coupe....