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Benefits of Having A Hyundai Elantra Rochester NY

Modified new Hyundai Creta with Audi style matrix lights

Hard cell on safety from Hyundai with the NEXO

Driven: The New Hyundai i10, Best City Car On The Market?

2015 Hyundai Genesis Sedan

Hyundai’s 2014 Santa Fe Sport earned the distinction of “Family Car of the Year”

New Generation Hyundai i10 Gets You From A to B
Hyundai ix 35 TV Commercial for the 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil™ Final Draw
Hyundai TV Commercial for the 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil™ Final Draw
It looks good. It feels good. And it’s packed with equipment to make life easier. Because choosing a car that looks great on the outside shouldn’t have to mean giving up your creature comforts on the inside. Available in 5 trim levels, the New ix35 takes so much in its stride and thanks to our Blue Drive technologies, it’s also surprisingly efficient.
The New ix35 is available in 2WD with the 1.6 GDi and 1.7 CRDi engines. The 2.0 CRDi engine includes a torque on demand 4WD system. This provides power to all wheels only when driving conditions require it, resulting in greater efficiency than permanent 4WD.
Watch the beginning of Hyundai’s ix 35 glorious journey to the 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil™.
Hyundai will come to all the football fans around the world, starting with the Final Draw. Feel Hyundai’s passion towards football fans through this film.
Hyundai Motors – Rhys Millen Racing – Testing time with 2013 Genesis Coupe
HYUNDAI MOTORSPORTS – RHYS MILLEN RACING – TESTING TIME with 2013 Genesis Coupe
In preparation for Pikes Peak, Rhys Millen and his custom-built Hyundai racer head out to the proving grounds in Mojave, California. Are you ready ? 😉

2014 All New Hyundai Equus …
School children teach Hyundai a lesson in Quality Testing
School children teach Hyundai a lesson in Quality Testing
Playtime got serious this week when pupils from Holmer Green First and Junior Schools in Buckinghamshire taught car manufacturer Hyundai a lesson in quality testing. School children became the brand’s ‘Next Generation Testers’ and put its i30 Tourer through an extreme durability test to assess its suitability as a family car.
Recognising that little people can provide big insights, Hyundai went back to school. The car brand recruited a panel of 25 children aged between 4 and 10 to carry out a series of quality tests on its New Generation i30 Tourer and see if it really is tough enough to stand up to the challenges of everyday family life.
Responding to customer feedback that their ‘little monkeys’ would be much harder on a car than 40 baboons, we decided to put the theory to the test.
Specially-designed for families and their children, the i30 has been made using extra strong materials, easy-wipe plastics, tough fittings and special high-quality steel for the bodywork.
We parked our car in the school’s playground and then let eight times as many children as in the UK’s average family subject it to some rigorous testing. Six hours later, the tough tourer cleaned up as new and was driven out of the playground fully intact and virtually unscathed.
The children simulated the typical car punishment that parents dread but sometimes have to deal with: jumping and bouncing up and down on seats (in muddy wellies on this occasion), prodding buttons and opening storage compartments, repeatedly putting windows up and down, dropping crisps, squashing bananas into fabrics and spilling orange juice on the seats.
The i30 Tourer’s gadgets were also inspected, with the children pulling faces to their friends in the reversing camera and making calls to their teacher using the car’s hands-free Bluetooth system.
Outside, the paintwork was put to test after magnets were thrown onto the car and mud smeared all over the body panels. The children investigated whether the i30 really was ‘made of steel’ by using the bonnet as a slide and thumping the doors with drumsticks. Thankfully, the hard-wearing paint protected the car from significant scratches and chips.
As well as confirming the robust quality of our New Generation i30 Tourer, we’ll use the findings to inform the research and development of our future cars.