I remember the base Kona being on a "10 cars that are quicker than you'd expect" list. 276hp isn't mind blowing, but I bet it will surprise a lot of other commuters
This is the Kona N, not the Kona N Line. The difference? The Kona N–the one tested here–gets the 276-horsepower engine, an 81-horsepower boost.
Really thought I’d love the Kona N. After all, it’s one of my favorite smaller SUVs but with more power.
But the Kona N just felt nervous–like nervous going in a straight line.
Alignment or diff? I’m honestly not sure.
Otherwise, I loved it. Takes everything that makes the Kona so good–the right size, crisp shifting, well-appointed interior, traditional controls, a real shifter and even good looks–but add more power and sportier seats.
And the Kona N looks even meaner than the standard Kona. Looking for the polar opposite of the Ford Escape? This could be your droid.
The extra power: Yes, it’s there. No waiting, no lag.
And thank you, Hyundai for the twin-clutch transmissions. Where the standard Kona gets a seven-speed unit, this one gets eight, making it, in a sense, one better.
And the chassis is there, too. Not saying it’s your next track car, but it felt composed.
But there is a price for this: The Kona N starts at $34,200 whereas the front-drive Kona Limited and N Line start at $28,600 and $25,850, respectively. Yes, you get more power–and more everything–with the Kona N, but is it worth the price premium?
I remember the base Kona being on a "10 cars that are quicker than you'd expect" list. 276hp isn't mind blowing, but I bet it will surprise a lot of other commuters
calteg said:I remember the base Kona being on a "10 cars that are quicker than you'd expect" list. 276hp isn't mind blowing, but I bet it will surprise a lot of other commuters
Funny and awesome that in 2022, a 276hp 4 cylinder is considered "not mind blowing". As a comparison, a base Macan produces 261hp. Dodge's new Hornet starts at 265hp.
Truly fun times.
-Rob
In reply to rob_lewis :
I think it's more of a telling stat about expectations of cars vs SUVs. There's a very, very long list of LS powered trucks and SUVs that have made 300hp for the last 20 years. With few exceptions, none of those were marketed as hotrod SUVs
In reply to 759NRNG :
Nope. Only N cars are the now discontinued veloster, the elantra and the Kona.
bobzilla said:In reply to 759NRNG :
Nope. Only N cars are the now discontinued veloster, the elantra and the Kona.
shoot.....but still uh er pretty dang strong.....would ya?
rob_lewis said:calteg said:I remember the base Kona being on a "10 cars that are quicker than you'd expect" list. 276hp isn't mind blowing, but I bet it will surprise a lot of other commuters
Funny and awesome that in 2022, a 276hp 4 cylinder is considered "not mind blowing". As a comparison, a base Macan produces 261hp. Dodge's new Hornet starts at 265hp.
Truly fun times.
-Rob
They also have AWD standard on the turbo models. Id bet the Hornet is going to be the quickest "little" SUV you can buy once it comes out.
rob_lewis said:calteg said:I remember the base Kona being on a "10 cars that are quicker than you'd expect" list. 276hp isn't mind blowing, but I bet it will surprise a lot of other commuters
Funny and awesome that in 2022, a 276hp 4 cylinder is considered "not mind blowing". As a comparison, a base Macan produces 261hp. Dodge's new Hornet starts at 265hp.
Truly fun times.
-Rob
Dial that back and in the late 80's to early 90's that would have been more power than anything the big 3 were producing. ANYTHING. The corvette in that era was 230hp, the Syclone was 260. Mustangs/Fox body's were at 220-ish.
Displaying 1-8 of 8 commentsView all comments on the GRM forums
You'll need to log in to post.