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Test Drive: 2017 Hyundai Ioniq Electric

2017 Hyundai Ioniq Electric Limited
2017 Hyundai Ioniq Electric Limited in Symphony Air Silver

2017 Hyundai Ioniq Electric Limited

Class: Electric Vehicle

Miles driven: 344

Fuel used: N/A

CG Report Card
Room and ComfortB+
Power and PerformanceC+
Fit and FinishB
Fuel EconomyA+
ValueB+
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide's impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big GuyA
Tall GuyB+
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. "Big" rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, "Tall" rating based on 6'6"-tall male tester.

Real-world fuel economy: N/A

Driving mix: 65% city, 35% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 124 MPGe

Base price: $32,500 (not including $835 destination charge)

Options on test car: Ultimate Package ($3500)

Price as tested: $36,835

 

Quick Hits

The great: Comfortable cabin, excellent control layout

The good: Composed road manners

The not so good: Battery range is at the low end of the scale among the latest wave of mainstream EVs

Check out our Electric Vehicle Best Buys

 

John Biel

With the dawn of the second age of the electric car having crested the horizon, one thing I can tell you about the EVs I have driven in recent years is that they didn’t let you forget that they were different. Compelled by the requirements of battery packaging, and the needs to pare weight and improve aerodynamics, they often had odd exterior shapes and/or offbeat interior layouts. And then there was the issue of range. Even in the most conventional EV that Consumer Guide® has tested, a long-term 2015 Kia Soul that basically looked like any concurrent gas-engine Soul, the knowledge that the distance I could cover was strictly limited—and “refueling” would take time—was always on my mind.

The Ioniq’s fastback roofline is a boon for cargo versatility, but the split rear window is detrimental to rearward vision.

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The new Hyundai Ioniq Electric seems to want to change that. While it has its own styling, the compact 4-door hatchback has a contemporary body shape that would look at home draped over the gas-engine platform of just about any of Hyundai’s competitors in the small-sedan market. (The lack of a radiator grille is the key clue to the car’s true identity.) It can hold five passengers—there’s no sacrifice of seating to accommodate battery packs. Then, too, there’s enough extra battery range to maybe let your awareness slide for a day with no harm to either the car or your need to get around with it.

For the time being, the only people who’ll be able tell you if what I just wrote is true are Californians. The all-electric version is one of three varieties of the all-new Ioniq (the others being a conventional gas/electric hybrid and a plug-in hybrid), but it is being sold exclusively in the Golden State “currently” Hyundai says—and I’ll assume the pun was unintended. The Ioniq Electric comes in two trim levels, a base model and a better-equipped Limited like the one CG editors tested.

The Ioniq has a pleasant, nicely finished interior and, for the most part, a refreshingly conventional control layout. The push-button gear selector and wrist pad take some getting used to, but most of our testers acclimated quickly.

The Ioniq’s 88kW electric motor is rated at a modest 118 horsepower but it makes 218 lb-ft of readily available torque, so it gets around easily in city driving and performs competently on the highway. Of course it is quiet. The single-speed transmission is a shift-by-wire device activated by push buttons that rest flat on the center console. You could say that’s an odd detail that suggests this is no mainstream car, but many gas vehicles are sporting shift-lever alternatives of their own these days.

A 28-kWh battery is large enough to give a manufacturer-stated range of 124 miles. However, varying temperatures, accessory usage, and driving styles will change that. Testing the car in Illinois around the start of the summer, CG was seeing full-charge range projections in the low 140s. Any other pure electric this driver has tested has pretty much been good for a single round trip between home and work before needing to be recharged, even if partially. However, with the Ioniq, I was able to make two full round trips for a total of 125.8 miles (some of which were inherited from a colleague’s drive), including some high-speed expressway driving, and some use of lights, air conditioning, and radio. At the end of my test, 18 miles of range and 14 percent of remaining charge were indicated on the car’s system monitor. When I plugged in to the 240-volt “level-2” charger at Consumer Guide® Supreme World Headquarters, the car reported it would take four hours, 35 minutes to “top off.” The Ioniq has DC “fast-charge” capability for quicker turnaround.

MacPherson-strut front suspension and a torsion-beam rear axle are nothing new to small front-wheel-drive cars. Rolling on standard 16-inch alloy wheels and relatively tall-sidewall tires, ride in the 106.3-inch-wheelbase hatchback is fairly unperturbed. Steering is light, and somewhat lacking in road feel, but the car is about as maneuverable as others of its size. Four-wheel disc brakes are standard for decent stopping power, though the Ioniq does display the soft initial braking that is common to hybrids and electrics that use regenerative braking to cycle a little bit of energy back to the battery.

The Ioniq Electric’s pure-electric powertrain is good for 118 horsepower and a healthy 218 lb-ft of torque–enough to move this compact car around with decent authority. The included charger cable comes in a canvas carrying case.

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Passenger space is good for a compact, and the rear seat is wide enough—and comfortable enough in the center—to accommodate perhaps three teenagers. A large glove box, a deep covered console box, door pockets, and pouches on the backs of the front seats are at the service of passengers. A sizeable floor-level opening at the front of the console seems like an ideal area for a purse. Cup holders are found the console and the pull-down rear armrest. Driving, audio, and climate controls display well and are easy to reach and use. Driver vision is good to most directions, with the possible exception of the rear corners. The sloped rear window continues down into the vertical space between the taillights, but like so many other such designs, a rear “spoiler” divides the panes and obstructs the straight-back view. There’s good flat-floor cargo space under the hatch. For more room, the rear 60/40-split seats fold, albeit not completely flat and with a very small gap between them and the cargo floor.

Standard in all Ioniq Electrics are a proximity key with push-button starting, automatic temperature control, a 7-inch color touchscreen with Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone connectivity and a rearview camera, door-handle-mounted approach lights, heated side mirrors, 6-way height-adjustable heated front seats, 7-inch instrument-cluster information display, leather-wrapped steering wheel, Bluetooth hands-free phone capability, Blue Link telematics system, satellite radio, and HD radio. The Limited, which at $32,500 to start costs $3000 more than the base electric model, tosses in blind-spot detection with rear cross-traffic alert, leather seats, power-adjustable memory driver’s seat with lumbar support, LED headlights, power-folding side mirrors with puddle lamps and turn-signal indicators, chrome-accented exterior door handles, auto-dimming rearview mirror, rear air vents built into the back of the console, front-passenger auto-down/up window, and exterior chrome window trim. The test car was “loaded” with the sole Ioniq Electric option, a $3500 package with a sunroof, adaptive cruise control, navigation, upgraded audio, and more.

In some ways, you’ll think you’ve seen it all before. However, in a moderately priced electric car, that might seem new.

Tom Appel

Regarding the Ioniq Electric’s stated range: The EPA has rated this pure-electric Hyundai at 124 miles of travel on a full battery charge. Despite sweltering temperatures hovering in the low nineties—which should diminish battery performance–I saw reported ranges of 130-135 miles during my turn in the car. Additionally, the in-car range reporting is consistently pessimistic, reporting range well below real-world results. Owners in mild climates will likely see 130-140 miles of range on a consistent basis.

Sadly, Hyundai is mum on when the Ioniq Electric will be available nationwide. Though the company confirms that expanding the sales footprint of its EV is part of its plans, Hyundai executives aren’t yet sharing a timeline for when a broader rollout of the Ioniq Electric will happen.

The Ioniq Electric’s bobtailed fastback profile is a bit unconventional, but its composed driving manners and respectable range make it a pleasant, practical choice for an everyday commuter car.

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