2015 Hyundai Sonata Review

2015 Hyundai Sonata - The redesigned 2015 Hyundai Sonata Sport 2.0T is refined and well-equipped.

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The 2015 Hyundai Sonata has been given a more refined design, inside and out, to draw additional mid-size sedan buyers.

This seventh-generation front-wheel-drive Sonata swaps the previous model's ultra-sporty look for a more conservative one. However, this four-door sedan has a purposeful shape, with a coupe-like roofline and horizontal lines in the rear that underscore the car's width and give it a planted (spell "road-hugging") look. Hyundai likens the styling to an athlete in a well-tailored suit.

The new Sonata has a stiffer body structure, better ride quality, less noise, vibration and harshness and advanced safety and convenience features. A revised multilink rear suspension design enhances responsiveness, handling and stability while reducing impact harshness. Reinforced side and cross members strengthen sub-frame mounting points and improve suspension responsiveness.

In short, the new Sonata is more fun--and safer--to drive.

A new upscale interior has intuitive buttons and controls on the center stack, which is angled toward the driver to help keep him focused on the road. There's a mixture of large and clearly marked small controls. I especially liked the digital speedometer, which backs up a conventional one, in such areas as speed trap zones.

Still, despite much sound-deadening material and a body with an admirably low drag coefficient of .27, my test car had above-average wind noise at highway speeds in the otherwise quiet, upscale cockpit, which has lots of storage areas.

All Sonatas are designed for the fiercely competitive mid-size sedan market. They   easily seat four tall adults, who can slip in and out through wide-opening doors.

Safety features include seven air bags, including a new driver's knee air bag.

The sportiest 2015 Sonata is the Sport 2.0T, which I tested. It has a unique interior with such things as a D-cut steering wheel and paddles for manually shifting its responsive six-speed automatic transmission. A sport instrument cluster has six o'clock needle positions that hint at track driving.

Hyundai hasn't overlooked the small things. For instance, the Sport 2.0T has a unique rear bumper fascia with four horizontal-shaped exhaust tips beautifully integrated into it. Good attention to detail here.

Although it's no sports sedan, the Sport 2.0T also has a sport-tuned suspension with low-profile 45-series tires on 18-inch alloy wheels and larger 12.6-inch front brakes. The new electric power steering is accurate and provides a more natural steering feel. The ride is supple. The brake pedal likes to bite down early, but generally has good linear travel.

A smaller turbocharger drops horsepower rating of my test car's advanced turbocharged 2-liter engine to 245 from  274 in the 2014 Sonata. Hyundai says the 2015 engine has been optimized for lower-rpm driveability with the smaller turbo, which provides better responsiveness and more torque in the low and mid-rpm range most drivers use.

The 0-60 mph time drops a little, but it's doubtful that drag racing will be on the minds of most Sport 2.0T buyers.  

Estimated fuel economy of the 3,505-pound car is 23 miles per gallon in the city and 32 on highways. Fuel tank capacity is 18.5 gallons.

Despite the power loss,  I found the engine provides strong acceleration in town and fast 65-75 mph passing on highways, besides easy 80 mph cruising.

There are various Sonata models, starting at $21,150 and going to $33,525. My test Sonata 2.0T had a $28,875 sticker price, although options such as a panoramic sunroof, navigation system, easily read electroluminescent gauges, heated rear seats, forward collision warning and rear parking assistance and lane departure warning systems upped the bottom line price to $34,460.

Standard were a rearview camera, vehicle stability management with traction control, electronic brake force distribution, a 5-inch color touchscreen audio display, hands-free phone system and blind-spot detection system with a rear cross-traffic alert.

The Sport 2.0T has leather-covered and heated supportive power front seats, pushbutton starter, dual automatic temperature control and a decent AM/FM/CD/MP3 sound system.

The large trunk has a wide, but rather high, opening. Rear seatbacks sit flat as pancakes when flipped forward to increase cargo capacity, but the pass-through area between the trunk and backseat area is only moderately large.

All new mainstream cars last a very long time if driven sanely and get proper maintenance. But many may find it's comforting to know that the new Sonata has Hyundai's 10-year/100,000-mile powertrain warranty.



Dan Jedlicka

Dan Jedlicka's Website

Dan Jedlicka joined the Chicago Sun-Times in February 1968 as a business news reporter and was named auto editor later that year. He has reviewed more than 4,000 new vehicles for the Sun-Times--far more than any newspaper auto writer in the country. Jedlicka also reviewed vehicles for Microsoft Corp.'s MSN Autos Internet site from January, 1996, to June, 2008.

Jedlicka remained auto editor at the Sun-Times until October, 2008, and continued writing for the newspaper's AutoTimes section, which he started in 1992, until February, 2009. While continuing his auto writings at the Sun-Times, he served as assistant financial editor of that newspaper from 1970 to 1973, when he began his automotive column.

He has appeared on numerous radio and television shows, including NBC's "Today," ABC's "20/20" and "The CBS Evening News." He was a host, consultant and writer for Fox-TV Channel 32's 1991 New Car Preview show and that Chicago-based station's 1992, 1993, 1994 and 1995 Chicago Auto Show Previews.

Jedlicka's auto articles have been printed in national magazines, including Esquire and Harper's. His auto columns have been reprinted in U.S. government publications and economic textbooks and he is profiled in the "World's Greatest Auto Show" history book about the Chicago Auto Show. In late 1975, Jedlicka was host and technical advisor for three one-hour television specials, "Auto Test 76," which aired nationally on PBS and were the first nationally televised auto road test shows.

In 1995, Jedlicka was the recipient of the Better Business Bureau of Chicago and Northern Illinois Inc.'s Consumer Education Award, given annually to a person who has gained distinction in the field of consumer education. He received a Lifetime Achievement Award in the Media category and inducted into the Legends of Motorsports Guild at the Carquest World of wheels custom car show in Chicago in January, 2006.

Jedlicka was a member of the North American Car and Truck of the Year jury, composed of a select number of auto journalists from throughout the country, from 1995 until 2009. From 2010 to 2012, he was a member of Consumer Digest magazine's auto experts panel that gave Best Buy new vehicle recommendations.

He is a 1987 graduate of the Bob Bondurant Race Drivers School and later of the BMW "M" and Skip Barber Advanced Driving schools. He was a member of the U.S. team that participated in the 1987 1,000-mile Mille Miglia race/rally in Italy and has been a race winner at the Chicago area's Santa Fe Speedway.

Jedlicka has owned 25 classic cars, including 1950s and 1960s Ferraris and 1950s and 1960s Porsches, a 1965 Corvette, a 1967 Maserati and a 1957 Studebaker supercharged Golden Hawk. Jedlicka resides with his wife, Suzanne, in the Frank Lloyd Wright historic district of Oak Park. They have two children, James and Michele.

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