Hyundai I20 3-Door Car Review
Facts At A Glance
Car: Hyundai i20 3-door
Prices: £7,800-£11,200 – on the road [est] INSURANCE GROUPS: 2-6 [est]
Emissions: 116-133g/km [est]
Performance: [1.2 petrol] 0-60mph 12.9s / Max Speed 106mph [est]
Fuel Consumption: [1.4 D 90] (combined) 64.2mpg [est]
Safety: Twin front, side and curtain airbags / ABS with EBD. [est]
Dimensions: Length/Width/Height 3950/1980/1480mm [est]

LESS DOORY, MORE SPORTY

Our Rating: 6.3 / 10

Hyundai’s i20 looks a strong contender in three-door form. Steve Walker takes a look.

In car terms, Korean used to be a byword for tiny prices and dreary design but that’s changing. The big European marques are looking to Hyundai and its sister brand Kia with growing concern as their products mount a powerful challenge to the status quo in the European market. Cars like Hyundai’s i20 supermini have shown that the Koreans can do quality almost as well as they do value and in the next stage they’ll be trying to master sporty and desirable too. The 3-door version of the i20 is a useful marker of how far Hyundai and Korea have come.

A low price excuses a multitude of sins and Hyundai will vouch for that more strongly than most car manufacturers. It’s not that the Korean marque’s products have ever been particularly sinful, although there has been the odd stinker along the way. It’s that Hyundai’s concerted drive upmarket has brought its vehicles under greater scrutiny. In the past, ropey plastics, wayward handling and early learning design were overlooked because Hyundais were cheap. Today, cars like the i20 supermini can challenge the best as equals and it’s meant that observers are going to greater lengths to identify chinks in its armour. It’s to Hyundai’s credit that significant flaws are hard to come by.

The i20 3-door is available with a range of petrol and diesel engines, the petrol line-up opening with Hyundai’s advanced 1.2-litre Kappa unit. With 77bhp, it’s not the punchiest engine fitted to a three-door supermini but its all-alloy construction and high-tech combustion system give a useful blend of performance and economy. In three-door form, the i20 shares the same dimensions and wheelbase as the five-door car and despite its edgier looks, customers can expect a similarly polished driving experience.

With suspension that’s on the firm side and reasonably quick steering, the i20 is fun to punt around. The ride can jiggle you about a little too much on bumpy roads but the car corners with minimal body roll and feels nimble when threading through the traffic. The gear change isn’t the most precise you’ll come across in a supermini but forward visibility is very good. The view out the back of the three-door car will be restricted by the thicker C-pillars resulting from the tapering side window line.

The three-door version of a supermini tends to be the sporty one and the i20 model is no different. It’s the same size as the five-door and the front and rear are identical but it does feature elongated doors which aid access to the rear along with a tweaked side window line that tapers off to a point at the rear. Inside, practicality shouldn’t be affected too much by the conversion. Access to the rear seats is obviously trickier but Hyundai’s memory front seats slide a long way forward to allow rear seat passengers to step inside before returning to their original position.

From an interior design perspective, the i20 plays it quite safe and there’s the suspicion that the people behind it paid close attention to modern Volkswagen offerings. The plastics are hard in places but overall quality is impressive and a world away from Hyundai products of a few years ago. The sharply contoured dash and chunky steering wheel are design highlights, though the way the fabrics stretch a little too tightly over the seats is a let down.

The three-door version of the i20 is significant for more than its injection of a sportier flavour into the range. It also makes the i20 that little bit cheaper. Hyundai’s pricing strategy isn’t straight out of the bargain basement these days. The brand knows its latest products can sell at levels that are more in tune with the class leaders but value for money remains a central part of the marque’s strategy. A five-year warranty, generous equipme

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