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Hyundai's trump card
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The i10 and the upcoming i20 will be powered by the fuel efficient, smooth and quiet Kappa engine
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The new bestseller? The Hyundai Kappa
It has been less than a year
since Hyundai launched
the i10 and the Korean
company has already given
its new baby its first serious
upgrade - a brand-new
engine. In fact, the `Kappa'
engine is the latest Hyundai
motor that will power not
just the i10 but the upcoming
i20 or next-gen Getz as
well. The Kappa has been
developed to meet the latest
emission standards in all the
global markets the i10 and
i20 will be exported to but
the fallout of this is that Indian
consumers get to taste
the new motor before
anyone else.
Developed originally as a
1248cc engine for the export
markets, Hyundai has reduced
the engine's bore and
stroke to lower the cubic capacity
to under 1.2 litres (to
meet small car norms) or
1197cc to be precise. The engine
still develops a healthy
79bhp and 11.4kgm of torque
which is a huge 20 and 11 per
cent respectively greater
than the standard 1.1 or
`Espsilon' engine.
Impressive increase
The increase in power is
immediately apparent. The
i10 feels livelier with the
Kappa motor which is willing
to be revved.
The top end of the power
band is particularly impressive
and beyond 6200rpm,
the point when the Epsilon
motor runs out of steam, the
Kappa is good for another
300rpm. In this brief drive
we could not test the acceleration
but expect a 2-3 second
reduction in the 0-100
dash.
Top speed is much higher
as well and the Kappa, for its
size, is a terrific highway
cruiser. But for the speed
that the i10 is capable of, Hyundai
should have upgraded
the tyres, which are currently
the same size as the slower
Epsilon i10
In city driving, the Kappa
didn't feel substantially
quicker than the Epsilon i10
which develops its torque
and power much lower
down the power band.
Quiet engine
Besides, the Epsilon's legendary
pulling power in
third gear is something the
Kappa cannot easily beat.
However, as an overall package,
the Kappa is far better.
The engine feels smoother
and quieter and has a spring
in its step the Epsilon did
not. The Kappa's trump card
is expected to be fuel efficiency
and it could be the
class best.
The surprise package
however is the automatic
i10. The four-speed automatic
gearbox is carried over
from the Santro but it works
surprisingly well with the
Kappa. It is pretty responsive
and the surplus of power
from the Kappa motor
ensures that you never
struggle to keep up with the
traffic. Starting at Rs 4.44
lakh (ex-showroom, Delhi),
the automatic i10 Magna
though expensive is decent
value but it remains to be
seen how thirsty it is in comparison
to the manual.
With the Kappa motor,
Hyundai has introduced two
new variants - the Asta and
the Sport -- which have
higher trim levels. Spec-forspec
there's around a Rs
12,000 increase in price between
the older Epsilon and
the Kappa. The price hike
isn't substantial and for a
new and sophisticated motor
is well worth the extra
cash.
The Epsilon i10 continues
in the base D-lite and Era
trims with the smaller 1.1 engine
and this gives the i10 an
extremely wide range. With
this iteration, the i10 moves
further away from its rivals
and into a class of its own.
Expect this Hyundai to become
a best-seller.
OUSEPH CHACKO
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