Hyundai Ioniq6 Revealed: Personalization Personified

Tim Healey
by Tim Healey

Hyundai’s next EV is here, and the press release is persistent in its pushing of personalization.

Questionable alliteration aside, the Hyundai Ioniq 6 really does intrigue, at least on paper, and not just because of a bunch of buzzy marketing BS about how owners can use the car in ways that best fit their unique personalities.

Let’s start with some specs. The battery here is a 77.4-kWh unit, and range is promised at over 610 kilometers or about 380 miles.

Hyundai is promising available ultra-fast charging that can take the battery from 10 percent to 80 percent in 18 minutes.

The car has a wheelbase of about 116 inches and a length of about 191 inches and will offer either 18- or 20-inch wheels.

“IONIQ 6 is designed and engineered to seamlessly enhance our daily lives as space to awaken your potential,” said Thomas Schemera, Executive Vice President, Global Chief Marketing Officer and Head of Customer Experience Division, Hyundai Motor Company, in a press release. “The innovative interior is meticulously thought out as a cocoon-like personal space, enhanced with the latest technologies to create a safe, fun, and stress-free driving experience. The spacious interior, with sustainability and usability at its heart, once again represents a step forward for electric vehicles, in line with the values of our customers.”

Inside, available ambient lighting gives the customer 64 colors and six pre-set themes to pick from. The brightness of the lights can even change with the car’s speed. Optional front seats promise to increase comfort via a simple change in seat angle — though Hyundai doesn’t say how. All available seats are thinner, allowing for more space, and the car offers four Type-C ports and one Type-A.

Back to performance — drivers can adjust power, steering effort, accelerator-pedal sensitivity, and driveline mode, all with a few button presses.

“IONIQ 6 connects an emotional convergence of functionality with aesthetics,” said SangYup Lee, Executive Vice President and Head of Hyundai Design Center, in the release. “The distinctive streamlined design is the result of close cooperation between engineers and designers, with obsessive attention to detail and customer-centric values at the core. We have created the IONIQ 6 as a mindful cocoon that offers [a] personalized place for all.”

The car will be either rear-wheel drive or have a dual-motor, all-wheel-drive setup. The latter version will make about 320 horsepower and 446 lb-ft of torque, with Hyundai claiming a 0-100 km/h (about 0-62 mph) time of 5.1 seconds.

Vehicle-to-load, or V2L, tech allows the owner to use the car to charge other electronic devices.

The dash has a 12-inch gauge cluster and 12-inch infotainment screen, and of course Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are part of the features list. The Bluetooth system allows for the pairing of more than one phone, and there’s a Bose audio system with subwoofer. Hyundai’s BlueLink connected-car service helps keep the navigation system up to date, and over-the-air updates keep the whole system current.

Advanced driver-assist systems include smart cruise control that learns how you drive, highway driving-assist 2 (centers the vehicle, maintains distance from the car ahead), and forward collision-avoidance assist. Upper trims will have junction-crossing assist and systems that help the driver avoid crashes when changing lanes. There will also be available high-beam assist, driver-attention warning, and intelligent speed-limit assist, which matches the car’s speed with that of the limit.

Blind-spot monitoring and collision-avoidance assist systems are also available, as is rear cross-traffic collision-avoidance assist, safe exit warning, and a 360-degree camera.

Production is slated to begin this fall.

Did we mention personalization way up top? We did. Well, Hyundai’s launch materials included a video of three characters working eye-rolling jobs such as metaverse designer, showing how each character can customize the car and driving experience to best fit his or her lifestyle.

Excuse me while I go refund my lunch after that bit of unpleasant marketing babble.

It gets worse — Hyundai is promising virtual test drives in the metaverse.

Back here in the real world, the Ioniq 6 looks intriguing, no matter how cringe the outreach to Millennials and Gen Z the marketing is.

The performance specs alone seem nice and strong. We’ll see where the pricing falls, but Hyundai may just have itself an EV flagship sedan — one that’s very nice but no so nice that it has to get Genesis branding.

The EV future is going to be interesting

[Images: Hyundai]

Tim Healey
Tim Healey

Tim Healey grew up around the auto-parts business and has always had a love for cars — his parents joke his first word was “‘Vette”. Despite this, he wanted to pursue a career in sports writing but he ended up falling semi-accidentally into the automotive-journalism industry, first at Consumer Guide Automotive and later at Web2Carz.com. He also worked as an industry analyst at Mintel Group and freelanced for About.com, CarFax, Vehix.com, High Gear Media, Torque News, FutureCar.com, Cars.com, among others, and of course Vertical Scope sites such as AutoGuide.com, Off-Road.com, and HybridCars.com. He’s an urbanite and as such, doesn’t need a daily driver, but if he had one, it would be compact, sporty, and have a manual transmission.

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  • Jimbo1126 Jimbo1126 on Jul 16, 2022

    That's the most revoltingly ugly vehicle I've seen since [insert any SSangYong]. Likely $90K worth of ugly.

  • Conundrum Conundrum on Jul 18, 2022

    This thing was revealed by other automotive media outlets earlier last week. It seems to have one good photographic angle, but unfortunately the rest of the photos show it for what it is, a brokeback car. Bloody 'orrible, mate! Some rather basic styling design cues seem to have been jettisoned for an ultralow CdA. Like the bigger Mercedes cars, they and this EV6 remind me of a beached dead whale. Distressing and depressing to gaze upon, let alone having to sniff the pong that arises from the decaying carcass. A double vane wing/trunk lid in profile at the rear is not a strong enough visual cue to lift that sad sack rear end off the apparent floor. Now be good lads -- go home and try again.

  • MaintenanceCosts In Toyota's hands, these hybrid powertrains with a single motor and a conventional automatic transmission have not been achieving the same kind of fuel economy benefits as the planetary-gear setups in the smaller cars. It's too bad. Many years ago GM did a group of full-size pickups and SUVs with a 6.0L V8 and a two-motor planetary gear system, and those got the fuel economy boost you'd expect while maintaining big-time towing capacity. Toyota should have done the same with its turbo four and six in the new trucks.
  • JMII My C7 isn't too bad maintain wise but it requires 10 quarts of expensive 0W-40 once a year (per GM) and tires are pricey due size and grip requirements. I average about $600 a year in maintenance but a majority of that is due to track usage. Brake fluid, brake pads and tires add up quickly. Wiper blades, coolant flush, transmission fluid, rear diff fluid and a new battery were the other costs. I bought the car in 2018 with 18k in mileage and now it has 42k. Many of the items mentioned are needed between 20k and 40k per GM's service schedule so my ownership period just happens to align with various intervals.I really need to go thru my service spreadsheet and put track related items on a separate tab to get a better picture of what "normal" cost would be. Its likely 75% of my spend is track related.Repairs to date are only $350. I needed a new XM antenna (aftermarket), a cargo net clip, a backup lamp switch and new LED side markers (aftermarket). The LEDs were the most expensive at $220.
  • Slavuta I drove it but previous style. Its big, with numb steering feel, and transmission that takes away from whatever the engine has.
  • Wjtinfwb Rivaled only by the Prowler and Thunderbird as retro vehicles that missed the mark... by a mile.
  • Wjtinfwb Tennessee is a Right to Work state. The UAW will have a bit less leverage there than in Michigan, which repealed R t W a couple years ago. And how much leverage will the UAW really have in Chattanooga. That plant builds ID. 4 and Atlas, neither of which are setting the world afire, sales wise. I'd have thought VW would have learned the UAW plays by different rules than the placid German unions from the Westmoreland PA debacle. But history has shown VW to be exceptionally slow learners. Watching with interest.
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