By Edward Niedermeyer on October 3, 2009

Ten years ago... for context (courtesy:atozautolights.com)

Hyundai is awesome. They are undoubtedly a threat because their products are cheap, and the quality is improving

Honda CEO Takanobu Ito in the Canadian Press. “Hyundai is the biggest threat for the Japanese automakers,” adds Nissan senior VP Shiro Nakamura. “We have to offer the equivalents of sushi, tempura and kaiseki to compete against Korean barbecue.” Now imagine the reaction these quotes would have received ten years ago.

76 Comments on “Quote Of The Day: Meet The New Upstart Edition...”


  • GS650G
    GS650G

    Honda let Hyundai import Acuras into Korea as knockdowns back in the 90’s and sell them rebadged. This probably educated Hyundai in how to build better cars.

    In hindsight this was a mistake. Since Japanese cars were hated in Korea they felt this was a way around the animosity felt towards Japan.

    The scene is roughly the same one we had in the 80’s when Japanese cars were cheap, high quality, and in demand. Who would have thought it could happen again.

  • NulloModo
    NulloModo

    Interesting and odd quote from the Nissan VP. Nothing against Sushi, but I’ll take Korean BBQ and kimchi over Sushi and Tempura anyday (from a purely culinary point of view).

  • dwford
    dwford

    The Japanese slowly lost their way chasing US marketshare, offering larger and larger cars, giving up the small car high mileage fun to drive street cred they had, all the while also dumbing down their products with cheaper and cheaper components. Meanwhile, Hyundai was doing the opposite. Compare the interior quality of a 2009 Civic vs a 2009 Elantra.

  • porschespeed
    porschespeed

    I don’t know that the rise of Hyundai was really a surprise to anyone (outside the Tubes anyway).

    They were doing the right thing for the last 10 years – tends to get results.

    Acknowledge your shortcomings, then fix them.

    If only GM could ever learn that lesson…

  • ohsnapback
    ohsnapback

    Driving a Hyundai, rightly or wrongly, still has negative connotations.

    I see Hyundai risking quite a bit now as they have raised the prices of their cars to near Toyota/Nissan/Honda levels.

    Also, Hyundai, new, from the vantage of resale value, makes no comparative sense relative to Honda or Toyota.

    We’ll see if they can carry their momentum forward while pricing their offerings closer and closer to the Japanese counterparts.

    I for one don’t think they’ll grow as fast.

  • Strippo
    Strippo

    If Hyundai would offer a clone of the small Japanese pickups that everyone else stopped offering here years ago, they’d corner that market immediately. I still see those small pickups zipping around in these parts all the time, and while they’re apparently going strong, they aren’t getting any younger. I want one, but I want a lightly used one. That’s not going to happen until someone starts selling them again.

    What I really want is a street-legal Kei truck. Is that so wrong?

  • Strippo
    Strippo

    Also, Hyundai, new, from the vantage of resale value, makes no comparative sense relative to Honda or Toyota.

    True, but what difference does that make to the Great Recession buyer who is looking for the best decade plus bet on a value-oriented new car.

  • ohsnapback
    ohsnapback

    Strippo:

    Regardless of what people say when buying a car, few hang on to one for 10 years or longer after buying it.

    I have no doubt that this number rises, however, as you say, when economic times are bad, much less terrible and looking more terrible going forward, as now.

  • sonic_bang
    sonic_bang

    @ GS650G

    You are completely wrong.
    Hyundai has never had any ties with Honda. And the one you are talking about is actually Daewoo. Before Daewoo swallowed up Ssangyong for its Mercedez Benz derived executive luxury sedan Chairman, Daewoo built Acura Legend(the 2nd gen.) as Daewoo’s top of the line Arcadia model.

    Also, Japanese cars are not hated by Koreans. Lexus is always no. 1 or no. 2 import brand in Korea. When it’s about Japanese products, that animosity toward Japan that you wrote, somehow, doesn’t exist in most cases.

  • NulloModo
    NulloModo

    ohsnapback –

    Resale value has a lot of variables, miles put on per year, years kept, how well it is upkept, etc. For someone who drives far more than the average miles per year, or who keeps their vehicles for longer than four or five years, the differences in trade value diminish considerably.

    Also, from my experience, resale value is hardly ever a consideration in a customer’s mind. Most people care about the payment they are going to get and the amount of money they have to put down to get it, and that is about it.

  • rockit
    rockit

    Hyundai’s are improving,..”quality is improving”

    But they ain’t no Toyota or Honda for that matter. They ain’t no GM or Ford either.

    At auctions in my area there are always Hyundai’s (2002-2005+) that have 60,000 miles or more with serious mechanical problems. Mostly engine, tranny, suspension.

    Also my friends have a 03 Tiburon and 02 Sonata which are loaded with suspension and hardware issues.

  • Strippo
    Strippo

    Regardless of what people say when buying a car, few hang on to one for 10 years or longer after buying it.

    It doesn’t matter what people actually do. What matters is what they have a mind to do. This is why people still prefer 30 year fixed mortgages to the 5/1 ARMs that statistically make more sense.

  • V6
    V6

    i like Hyundai, i’d sooner buy one than a Toyota

  • HEATHROI
    HEATHROI

    Strippo

    is this the KEI truck you’re looking for?

  • jmo
    jmo

    http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/money/shopping/ways-to-save-on/save-on-wheels-new-or-used/reliability-snapshot/save-on-wheels-new-or-used-reliability-snapshot.htm

    As for Hyundai we need to see where that green line goes going forward.

  • John Horner
    John Horner

    “Driving a Hyundai, rightly or wrongly, still has negative connotations.”

    That only matters to people who buy a car for its perceived status value. Besides, in my eyes, the Hyundai buyer is someone who demands maximum value for their money. Nothing negative about that.

    “I see Hyundai risking quite a bit now as they have raised the prices of their cars to near Toyota/Nissan/Honda levels.

    Also, Hyundai, new, from the vantage of resale value, makes no comparative sense relative to Honda or Toyota.”

    Comparably equipped, Hyundai actual new vehicles transaction prices at least 10% below those from Honda or Toyota.

    Resale value only matters to frequent traders. For people who buy a new car and run it ten years or more, resale is a non-issue.

  • jmo
    jmo

    That only matters to people who buy a car for its perceived status value

    There was a time when Hyundai signaled to friends, family, customers and most importantly potential mates, that you were poor and had bad credit. Those days are pretty much over.

    That being said if I were Hyundai or the Korean government I’d up the brand building advertising. They still need to build the brand – there is still some reluctance among the general population.

  • Facebook User

    It may sound strange to the commentariat, but I would rather buy a Ford than Hyundai. I think the only decent car they made was Santa Fe.

  • ohsnapback
    ohsnapback

    Those are all fair points made about Hyundai in response to my earlier comments.

    Having said that, my personal experiences with Hyundai, and recent ones at that, is they’re still an ‘also ran’ to their competitors.

    I’d take a Fusion, Camry, Accord or even the new Malibu over the suspension ‘o rattle-matic Sonata any day of the week.

    For all the progress Hyundai has made, they’ve gotten bad press (rightfully so) for basic suspension issues on the Sonata, Veracruz and Tuscon (from Canadian Driver, Consumer Reports, etc.).

  • niky
    niky

    Not quite there yet, in terms of suspension, but they’re getting there. Every new generation of Hyundai I’ve driven gets better and better in this regard… except the Veracruz… the older Santa Fe is a much better car, suspension-wise.

    -

    In terms of engines… not quite there yet, either… when compared to Toyota or Honda. But then… in terms of gasoline four-bangers… hardly anyone is, anyway. Hyundai diesels, on the other hand, are a match for most anything out there.

  • DisturbedDriver
    DisturbedDriver

    Nothing against Sushi, but I’ll take Korean BBQ and kimchi over Sushi and Tempura anyday

    Hah! I swing both ways. Some days, I’m in the mood for a sushi and tempura fix. On those days I’m not so big on portions. But when I’m hungry and in the mood for some nice marinated ribs hot off the grill, it’s Korean BBQ all the way. $10 all you can eat in LA!

    I’d take a Fusion, Camry, Accord or even the new Malibu over the suspension ‘o rattle-matic Sonata any day of the week.

    You should try test-driving one of the newer Sonatas. Engine’s super quiet.

  • Facebook User

    Their 2.0, 2.4 GEMA engine share with mitsubishi, chrysler.

    And, Their high end 4.6L Tau engine listed as 2009 world 10 Best Engines.(by wards auto)

    http://wardsauto.com/reports/2009/tenbest/best_engines_2009_081205/

  • Facebook User

    In 2003, According to Consumer Reports, Hyundai’s reliability rankings tied Hondas.
    http://www.usatoday.com/money/autos/2003-03-11-cr-picks_x.htm
    Hyundai’s reliability rankings already tied with Hondas 6 years ago.

    In 2006, JD Power and associates quality ranking, overall the Hyundai brand ranked 3rd, just behind Porsche and Lexus, and beating long time rival Toyota.
    http://www.usatoday.com/money/autos/2006-06-07-iqs_x.htm

    Their quality, reliability are improving.
    ———————-
    IntelliChoice, which tracks automotive ownership data, has chosen Hyundai’s Sonata sedan as one of its “2009 Best Overall Values of the Year.”
    http://www.intellichoice.com/best_values/bovy/year/2009/bovy_category/Large

    Hyundai was also ranked ‘third’ as having America’s best certified pre-owned program.
    http://www.forbes.com/2008/10/22/best-CPO-cars-forbeslife-cx_jm_1022cars.html

    Their resale value are improving.

  • sfdennis1
    sfdennis1

    I’m impressed with the tremendous progress that Hyundai has a made in the last decade, and thought their quality was getting to be on par with Toyonda, etc..,

    Then last week, the auto trans on my friend’s Elantra (2003, 64K mi) failed. Luckily, she was the original owner, had the 10yr/100K warranty protection, and Hyundai just picked up the $2300 tab for transmition repairs. She had to make a few angry calls (just a few) to Hyundai, but they did honor their warranty claims.

    Good to know that they honor their 10/100 warranty (for original owners), but now I beleive all the stories about 5-6 year old, 50-70K mi Hyundais crapping out are for real…and would make me hesitant to consider a new or used one.

    Hope the Genesis proves more durable, or else Hyundai really will be the next Toyota (i.e., “in trouble”.) If their 5 year old vehicle quality continues to suck, they are gonna slide back to the bottom rungs pretty quickly.

  • Facebook User

    So, this means that Chrysler uses awesome Hyundai engines? Tsk tsk.

  • Facebook User

    And suspension issue,
    1. In America, Hyundai Motor America (HMA) change suspension and handling to US market.

    2. Sonata and Santa Fe are ‘made in usa’ cars. And maybe US version santa fe and sonata use US made component.

    If you don’t like suspension and handling, it mean american engineer and american made suspension parts are bad.

  • Facebook User

    In 2009, Hyundai/Kia vehicles were named as “least expensive vehicles to insure”. Hyundai/Kia vehicles were the least expensive to insure and occupied the ‘top five’ least expensive slots, said Insure.com.
    http://usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/cars-trucks/daily-news/090603-The-Most-Expensive-Cars-to-Insure/

    In 2009, 6 models of Hyundai/Kia cars earned Top Safety Award by IIHS, better than Nissan/Infiniti.
    http://www.iihs.org/ratings/default.aspx

  • craiggbear
    craiggbear

    Resale value??? Look at the resale value of a GM or Chrysler product these days – make Hyundai’s look like a pretty good investment.

    It is all comparative to the cost per mile, not the final recovery price. If you bought a Hyundai for $8000 less than a comparably equipped Toyota, but its final resale value 5 years later is $5000 less – all other things being equal, you come out $3000 ahead. In my books anyways.

  • Matt51
    Matt51

    Korea has cheaper electricity than Japan, as Japan went almost entirely nuclear. Electricity is a large part of the total cost of a car. Korea will be the low cost producer for the foreseeable future. Korea has a massive supply of well educated engineers. Therefore, Japan Inc is in trouble, and they know it. Any product Japan can engineer, Korea can copy or improve upon. Japan is now seeing what they did to the US, happen to them. Life is a bitch.

  • mtymsi
    mtymsi

    The resale issue of Hyundai while a valid point vs. Toyota and Honda is only valid for the first five years more so in the first three. After five years resale value is primarily determined by mileage and condition for any vehicle.

    Hyundai/Kia have come a long way, from vehicles I would not have considered several years ago to vehicles I would buy today. According to the Consumer Report’s link their longterm reliability is middle of the pack and I’m pretty sure the more recent/current models are even better than that.

    A good example is the new Kia Forte, IMO the styling and features surpass the Civic/Corolla and the fact that the price is less is an added bonus.

    The September sales figures indicate many recent car buyers see the value in Hyundai/Kia vehicles and like the vehicles themselves. I tend to doubt price is the only reason driving their sales.

    They have without question become a formidable competitor in highly competitive market segments and I think will continue to gain marketshare in the US market.

  • ronin
    ronin

    You may not have been around in the early to mid-70s.

    Toyota and Datsun/Nissan had zero status. Drivers were teased as slightly off-mainstream. Japanese cars were priced far cheaper than American cars. There was certainly no quality premium.

    Over time something became obvious. The Japanese cars had better quality at lower prices than the competition. Over the years that quality was reflected in higher original and higher reselling prices.

    Perceptions of quality and resale pricing of Japanese cars did not spring out of thin air. It took a decade or two for their reputation to become something more than “made in Japan,” an obsolete phrase popularly used to refer to low quality items.

    And Hyundai today is exactly where the Japanese were then. Especially Hyundai of the last 5 years.

    That 10 year warranty has gone a long way to soothe people’s original concern about quality.

    In the meantime, Chrysler and GM a have been talking about quality for the last few decades. It’s much easier to talk about quality than to deliver it. And why should they deliver it? They don’t need to deliver expensive quality; they don’t even need to sell car; they don’t need to sell cars, since they exist directly on free money taken by force from unwilling (majority was well against it) taxpayers.

  • Gardiner Westbound
    Gardiner Westbound

    As for Hyundai we need to see where that green line goes going forward. -jmo

    Consumer Reports’ historical reliability information is largely irrelevant. Recent Toyotas, Hondas and Nissans are much less reliable. CR no longer recommends Toyotas without supporting model specific data and rates the Ford Fusion more reliable than the Camry. Customer satisfaction scores are plummeting.

    Years of value engineering, decontenting, TSBs and recalls do well deserved, evil things to an automaker’s reputation for quality and integrity. Ask GM how it worked out for them! Hyundai’s year over year 26% sales growth while others flounder reflects widespread belief Japanese Big-3 purchase premiums cannot be rationalized.

  • IGB
    IGB

    To what extent are those sales figures buffed by fleet sales as for GM/ChryCo/Ford in years past?

    They are gaining ground but all the negative comments above are valid as are the positive ones.

    The rental darling issues that now plague the American companies will come back around for the Koreans however.

  • highrpm
    highrpm

    Hyundais are not bulletproof cars at all. Search the hyundai forums for many, many Elantras with transmission and electrical issues. The first owner is not affected due to the 10/100 warranty, but a second owner is pretty much screwed.

    Like somone else already mentioned, I also see many low-mileage Hyundais at the auctions with major issues. Never on Hondas or Toyotas.

    These are still cheap cars.

  • Chicago Dude
    Chicago Dude

    And suspension issue,
    1. In America, Hyundai Motor America (HMA) change suspension and handling to US market.

    2. Sonata and Santa Fe are ‘made in usa’ cars. And maybe US version santa fe and sonata use US made component.

    If you don’t like suspension and handling, it mean american engineer and american made suspension parts are bad.

    Ah yes, the old-reliable blame-Americans argument.

    Never mind that Honda, Toyota, Nissan, Mercedes Benz, BMW, Ford, GM, etc all build cars in America with no suspension or handling problems.

  • don1967
    don1967

    Dear Mr. Ito,

    As a former repeat Honda owner who now drives a Hyundai, I suggest that you take care not to choke on that sushi.

    People like barbecue, and in an economic depression they are not likely to be impressed by hoidy-toidy attitude. With the world economy turning upside down and Hyundai rapidly emerging as the new “people’s car”, you should be afraid, Mr. Ito. Very afraid.

    As for Hyundai quality “improving”, you are several years out of date with that statement. I chose my 2008 Santa Fe because it is superior to any current Honda product. It is more robustly constructed and better-finished, as any side-by-side comparison will reveal. And so far, after two winters and thousands of kilometers of towing a camper, it has proven utterly reliable. Meanwhile, there are countless Hondas sitting on hoists waiting for transmission repairs as we speak. As far as I’m concerned, Mr. Ito, is Honda that needs to improve its quality up to Hyundai standards.

  • Facebook User

    Nissan’s dependability below than industry average.

    3 years data.

    http://www.jdpower.com/corporate/news/releases/pressrelease.aspx?ID=2007130

    http://www.jdpower.com/corporate/news/releases/pressrelease.aspx?ID=2008115

    http://www.jdpower.com/corporate/news/releases/pressrelease.aspx?id=2009043

  • Facebook User

    @Chicago Dude
    “Never mind that Honda, Toyota, Nissan, Mercedes Benz, BMW, Ford, GM, etc all build cars in America with no suspension or handling problems.”

    @highrpm
    “Never on Hondas or Toyotas.”
    ——————————–
    LOL. Toyota/Honda/Japanese makers are bulletproof cars?

    OK. I will show you evidence.

  • Facebook User

    Death and devastation…Iraq troop reduction…Big Toyota recall…
    http://www.kxmc.com/News/445159.asp

    Toyota recall and distracted drivers
    http://www.examiner.com/x-4026-Minneapolis-Autos-Examiner~y2009m10d1-Toyota-recall-and-distracted-drivers

    Toyota: 3.8 million cars with risky floor mats
    http://money.cnn.com/2009/09/29/news/companies/toyota_lexus_floor_mats/?postversion=2009093007

  • Facebook User

    Some air bags spontaneously deploy; Honda blames drivers
    9NEWS.com – ‎Aug 30, 2009‎
    http://www.9news.com/news/article.aspx?storyid=122340&catid=339

    Toyota recalls Scions, Corollas
    http://www.wqow.com/Global/story.asp?S=11007839

    Toyota Recalls 95700 Small Cars
    New York Times – Christopher Jensen – ‎Aug 28, 2009‎
    http://wheels.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/28/toyota-recalls-95700-small-cars/

  • Facebook User

    Toyota Dealers Will Inspect Floormats Following Fatal Accident
    http://blogs.cars.com/kickingtires/2009/09/toyota-dealers-will-inspect-floormats-following-fatal-accident.html

    Mitsubishi Endeavor Recall for 2010 Vehicles Over Defective Airbags
    AboutLawsuits.com – ‎12 hours ago‎
    http://www.aboutlawsuits.com/mitsubishi-endeavor-recall-defective-airbags-6062/

    Toyota Steering Defect Lawsuits Consolidated in California
    http://www.aboutlawsuits.com/toyota-steering-defect-lawsuits-in-california-5932/

  • Facebook User

    Mitsubishi Endeavor Recall for 2010 Vehicles Over Defective Airbags
    AboutLawsuits.com – ‎Sep 23, 2009‎
    http://www.aboutlawsuits.com/mitsubishi-endeavor-recall-defective-airbags-6062/

    Honda China JV recalls 9,464 Accords over airbag defects
    http://www.theautochannel.com/news/2009/09/29/479420.html

    Runaway Toyota Recall
    In its biggest recall ever, carmaker warns that floor mat could jam accelerator.
    http://www.forbes.com/2009/09/29/automobiles-toyota-reca
    spx?storyid=67914&provider=top

  • Facebook User

    Valley dealership deals with Toyota recall
    http://www.valleycentral.com/news/story.aspx?id=357697

    Toyota recall has Solano
    http://www.thereporter.com/ci_13469396?source=most_viewed

    Fatal Accidents Prompt Massive Toyota Recall
    http://english.ntdtv.com/ntdtv_en/ns_bus/2009-10-02/319586124937.html

  • Facebook User

    Local family’s tragedy leads to Toyota recall
    http://www.timesheraldonline.com/ci_13469362?source=most_emailed

    2001 Honda Accord, Civic recalled due to airbags that are even more explosive than normal
    http://www.autoblog.com/2009/07/21/2001-honda-accord-and-civic-recalled-due-to-airbags-that-are-eve/

    Nissan recalling 26,000+ 2009-2010 Altima and Maxima sedans over faulty struts
    http://www.autoblog.com/2009/09/22/nissan-recalling-26-000-2009-2010-altima-and-maxima-sedans-over/

  • Facebook User

    Carsumer Advocacy? Nissan refuses to replace GT-R owner’s busted transmission
    http://www.autoblog.com/2008/10/13/carsumer-advocacy-nissan-refuses-to-replace-gt-r-owners-busted/

    Toyota’s totally bizarre recall
    Why would Toyota issue a recall designed to make vehicles less safe?
    http://money.cnn.com/2006/07/11/autos/bad_recall/index.htm

    REPORT: Nissan GT-R class action suit over transmission failures settled
    http://www.autoblog.com/2009/09/20/report-nissan-gt-r-class-action-suit-over-transmission-failures/

  • Facebook User

    Nissan Recalls 26000 Altimas and Maximas
    New York Times – Christopher Jensen – ‎Sep 18, 2009‎
    http://wheels.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/18/nissan-recalls-26000-altimas-and-maximas/

    Toyota Orders Inspection Of Lexus Floormats After Tragic Crash Kills Family Of Four
    http://www.attorneyatlaw.com/2009/09/toyota-orders-inspection-of-all-lexus-floor-mats-after-fatal-accident/

    Toyota Steering Defect Lawsuits Consolidated in California
    http://www.aboutlawsuits.com/toyota-steering-defect-lawsuits-in-california-5932/

  • Facebook User

    RAV4 Owners Fume Over Toyota’s Handling of Transmission Glitch
    http://wheels.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/26/toyotas-reaction-to-transmission-woes-draws-customers-ire/

    Toyota’s Recalls Put Reputation at Risk
    Source:Chinadaily
    http://english.rednet.cn/c/2009/08/25/1814084.htm

    NHTSA investigating Honda over airbag recall
    http://abclocal.go.com/wls/story?section=news/consumer&id=6997875

  • Facebook User

    Reports of Toyota RAV4 gearbox woes mount as owner anger grows
    http://www.autoblog.com/2009/08/28/reports-of-toyota-rav4-gearbox-woes-mount-as-owner-anger-grows/

    Im not surprised, in the last five years no one has had as many recalls a s Toyota.
    over a half a million just in 07!
    Which Automaker Has Had the Most Recalled 2007 Models? You Might be Surprised
    http://www.thetorquereport.com/2007/08/which_automaker_has_had_the_mo.html

    Ex-Toyota Lawyer Accuses Automaker of Destroying Rollover Evidence
    According to CBS News, an ex-lawyer for Toyota of North America has filed a racketeering suit against his former employer. ToMoCo’s former managing counsel Dimitrios P. Biller accused the automaker of illegally withholding evidence in hundreds of rollover death and injury cases, in a “ruthless conspiracy” to suborn evidence of its vehicles “structural shortcomings.
    http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/08/29/cbsnews_investigates/main5273636.shtml

  • ConejoZing
    ConejoZing

    Yeah… hmm… the world is changing. It would seem.

    Hyundai/Kia mean business.
    Is it true that Hyundai also controls major shipping routes? Or is that a different Hyundai?

  • BD
    BD

    This is nothing new, 4-5 years ago, the then CEO of Toyota (he got at least one thing right regarding the automotive future) stated that Hyundai was the biggest threat to Toyota.

    @ohsnapback – Resale value is largely a reflection of discount from MSRP.

    Most Hyundai/Kia models are still sold w/ significant discounts under MSRP and thus have lower resale values than Hondas and Toyotas (tho, Hyundai/Kia have seen some of the largest increases in resale value over the past 5 yrs).

    Hyundai, otoh, hasn’t offered any special discounts for the Genesis sedan and its resale value reflects that w/ its 3 yr resale value being on par w/ the Lexus GS and significantly higher than the Infiniti M.

    W/ the next gen Hyundai/Kia models, I would suspect that discounting by Hyundai/Kia would not be as deep – resulting in higher resale value (the downside being having to pay more upfront at time of purchase).

    As for the average time of ownership, people nowadays hang on to their autos for about 8 years.

    @GS650G

    Aside from the error about Hyundai building rebadged Acuras, not only has Lexus been near the top in import sales in Korea, Honda, for the past couple of years, has led the way in import sales.

    @rockit – Hondas are known to have suspension issues.

    @zaitcev – that was DaimlerChrysler, and the GEMA engine (Hyundai supplied the basic engine block) is also used in the Mitsu Evo (btw, Mercedes approached Hyundai regarding jointly developing small engines).

    As for reliablity, Hyundai places in the top 1/4 for not only JD Power and Consumer Reports, AutoBild, which probably does the most comprehensive analysis of reliability in the industry, placed Hyundai in its top 5.


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