Hyundai NZ goes heavy with hydrogen
/Fuel cell big rigs are the future, brand proposes, but commercial availability is still years away.
Read MoreFuel cell big rigs are the future, brand proposes, but commercial availability is still years away.
Read MoreNow Hyundai’s high-brow division has three battery-pure products as potential candidates for local sale.
Read MoreMassive electric sports utility sister ship to Ioniq 5 is fully revealed.
Read More'Parametric Pixel' lights and a lounge inside are features of a design study that previews the make’s next member of the Ioniq electric car family.
Read MoreSign-off to allow new model to act as a mobile power station almost reached.
Read MoreEven with it being given build prioritisation, solid supply of the latest electric car from Hyundai to Kiwis is far from certain.
Read MoreHyundai explains why it’s not yet making much of a local song and dance about the Ioniq 5.
Read MoreThis electronic device has facial recognition and fingerprint recognition smarts … and it isn’t your phone.
Read MorePricing of the Kona N raises potential for sibling rivalry within Hyundai’s expanding ‘N’ performance model family.
Read MoreSouth Korea’s biggest carmaker has dropped a seriously large H bomb.
Read MoreFirst look at the car that might bring Hyundai’s premium marque back to New Zealand.
Read MoreHyundai’s new van arrives in two eight-seat formats for family use and three commercial models.
Read MoreSEVERAL legislative amendments tied to Government’s push to clean up vehicle emissions might be impossible to enact in the cited timeframes and will cost consumers and hugely disrupt vehicle supply, Hyundai’s NZ boss contends.
Read MoreAN entry version of Hyundai’s crucial new Ioniq 5 electric car will achieve eligibility for Government’s EV feebate, according to pricing and information on the brand’s website.
Read MoreTHE Hyundai equivalent of a popular Kia sports utility, now pulling mainstream media interest as result of its recall, is also at risk of catching fire due to an electronic fault in the engine bay.
A remedial action for the current generation Hyundai Tucson sold here posted nationally in early April, so almost five weeks ago, though the brand was taking questions about it much earlier – MotoringNZ.com first publicised the matter in a story on February 11.
Read MoreAN Australian team has, by driving a Hyundai Nexo fuel cell electric vehicle somewhat conservatively, broken the world record for the longest distance travelled in a hydrogen-powered vehicle on a single tank.
Brendan Reeves, an Australian rally driver, drove a production specification Nexo for a claimed distance of 887.5km, exceeding the previous world record of 778km set by a Frenchman, Bertrand Piccard, also at the wheel of a Nexo, and the manufacturer-claimed range of 666km (measured on the WLTP scale).
Read MorePOTENTIALLY more than half of the 800 electric Hyundai Konas so far sold in New Zealand are set to require a battery transplant, with surgery unlikely to start before August.
Even this is still something of a guesstimate for Hyundai New Zealand, with the Auckland-based distributor admitting it is still chasing up vital information from the factory, two months after Seoul announced a worldwide plan to replace the drivetrain-vital battery pack.
Read MoreTHAT look of excitement you should feel when driving a steroidal performance model?
Hyundai reckons it’s worthy of a special button in its latest N model.
Revealed internationally overnight and set for New Zealand introduction later this year, for an as yet undisclosed price, the high-performance edition of the Kona crossover has many features to distinguish itself from the mainstream models – including what they taken to call the ‘N Grin’ button.
Read MoreONE of New Zealand’s most popular electric cars, the Hyundai Kona EV, has reportedly been withdrawn from sale, but only in its home market.
Media in South Korea are reporting today that Hyundai is discontinuing the model’s local availability, saying the decision to “phase the car out” locally is as a result of a massive recall due to a fire risk in the battery pack, an issue that first became public in news reports last October.
Yonhap News Agency reports that the car’s image has been tainted by a series of battery fires, which prompted the maker to recall more than 75,680 units in February jointly with battery maker LG Energy Solution Ltd.
They say the five-seater medium sport utility will continue to be built for export.
Comment about the situation and any implications for this market has been sought from the brand’s national distributor.
Hyundai New Zealand has enjoyed great success with the model, which it introduced in 2018 and sells in $76,000 and $86,000 formats. It is poised to release a mid-life update variant with performance and range improvements plus styling and specification changes.
The fire danger issue for Kona EV also implicated the smaller Ioniq hatchback in its fully electric format and has made headlines in South Korea for some months.
It was acknowledged by Hyundai New Zealand on February 25, a day after Hyundai Korea announcing intention to replace the batteries in 82,000 vehicles, the majority of them Konas, at cost of around $US900 million. It’s been called the biggest and most expensive recall for any electric car.
Since then Hyundai distributors around the world have progressively initiated recalls to undertake the intensive and time-consuming process of a battery swap, but it is still not clear if Hyundai NZ has started this process.
Last November it recalled 724 Kona EVs in NZ ownership – examples built between September 29, 2017, and March, 20, 2020 - having been advised by the factory that "the lithium-ion battery may have internal damage or the battery management system control software may cause an electrical short circuit after charging" which could result in a fire.
The immediate remedy for this was to change the battery management system and, if that did not work, Hyundai advised the same procedure it proposes for the global recall – pulling out the battery, a hefty and large item which completely fills out under the floor and is all but a structural component, and replacing it.
When last approached for comment, in late February, a spokesperson for the Auckland-based distributor said it was aware of the situation “however, (we) are waiting for official communication from Hyundai Motor Company with regards to this recall and the number of EVs affected here in New Zealand.
“Safety of our customers is paramount, so as soon as we have a list of affected vehicles we will contact those customers to advise next steps.”
As of mid-afternoon today, no action for the problem had been notified on the national new vehicle recalls register.
When the story broke, a major South Korean news outlet, Business Korea, reported 15 individual incidents of battery-related fires as having been recorded in Kona EVs. Similar fires have also been reported in Ioniq electric cars.
Since this matter first aired Hyundai has announced a new generation electric car, the Five, produced under a freshly-established sub-brand that it (confusingly) also calls Ioniq.
The Ioniq 5 will release in New Zealand late this year; it is a larger, more powerful car than the Kona EV and, being based on a new bespoke platform and having more technology, is expected to be rather more expensive.
Korean news agencies said today that Hyundai will from now on promote the Ioniq 5 as its primary electric offering in South Korea.
Hyundai will only sell Kona EVs in stock for the domestic market, while continuing to export them to overseas markets, company officials said.
Yonhap reported that the production of Kona EVs has been halted since March “in consideration of the domestic demand and to realign the assembly line for new EVs."
Hyundai sold more than 10,000 Kona EVs in South Korea in 2018 and 2019, but sales dropped to about 8000 units last year following the fires and what Yonhap has described as “the maker's mishandling of the recall programme.”
Hyundai sold only 984 units in the domestic market in the first quarter, a 40 percent drop from a year earlier, while its overseas sales fell 17.9 percent on-year to 7428 units, its financial reports showed.
The brand has high hopes for Ioniq 5, saying it has received strong responses in the domestic market alone, drawing over 40,000 preorders so far.
TWO, five and eight-seat configurations will apply in Kiwi market versions of the Hyundai Staria, a van whose styling is definitely out of the box.
Aside from provisioning the seat counts – which suggest a pure commercial/speed camera version, plus two that will potentially set to act in family-sized people carrier and potentially a luxury minivan mode – Hyundai New Zealand is giving little away in respect to the model.
It says specifications for this market will be released closer launch, though the date for that is also undetermined. The best the Auckland-based distributor can offer is that arrival is due in “the second half of this year.”
Staria’s bold styling has attracted a lot of attention but so has its sheer size; the full length is 5.2 metres and it has a 3.2m wheelbase.
The chair configurations for this market seem to be different than those cited by Hyundai headquarters. They have also spoken of a seven-seater in a plush Premium layout, above, which offers reclining armchairs in the second and third row. They also configure an 11-seater. Hyundai NZ says that one is not on their wish list.
Insofar as powertrains go, it gets the 2.2-litre four-cylinder turbodiesel and 3.5-litre V6 petrol that serve in the super-sized Palisade sports utility, these respectively outputting 129kW and 431Nm and 199kW and 331Nm.
There’s no suggestion that it is in line for the hybrid drivetrains that Hyundai has also developed, for Santa Fe.
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