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2006 Sonata Used Cars

2006 Sonata

Hyundai has already started trial production (in early June) of the Sonata in the Alabama plant by assembling two or three Sonatas a day," said CEO Kim Dong Jin. "Hyundai will produce a total of 300,000 units of the Sonata and Santa Fe SUV a year in the Alabama plant
Author's Rating: Rating: 4/5 stars
40 Reviews from Shopping.com

By:   mkaresh
May 30, 2005

First drive in the new Sonata

Author's Rating: Rating: 4/5 stars

Pros: Clean styling, roomy interior, low noise levels, low price, safety features, warranty

Cons: Forgettable styling, merely adequate performance, overly light steering

The Bottom Line: 
Recommended for anyone seeking thoroughly competent transportation at a decent price. I'd wait for the rebates, though.

Author's Review
This review covers only my first test drive. For my review of both the four and the V6, go here.

Hyundai doesn't want to get by on low prices and a long warranty alone. It wants to be ranked among the world's top five vehicle manufacturers, and to do this it must field thoroughly competitive products. With the recently introduced 2006 Sonata it claims to have done just this. The buzz is that other manufacturers have been shocked by just how good this car is. But should they be?

To find out I took two for a test drive. I initially wanted to drive only the 235-horsepower V6, but it was not yet available. So I instead got behind the wheel of the volume seller, a 162-horsepower four cylinder hooked to a four-speed automatic.

Styling

Last year's Sonata--with its oddly shaped headlights, scalloped hood, side skirts, and tapered flanks--is downright baroque in comparison to the 2006. Although the new car's extremely clean lines are certainly tasteful, and are certainly less likely to offend than those of the current Camry and Accord, their generic quality could harm sales. I am reminded of the 1993-97 Mazda 626, which was so tastefully styled that no one except me seemed to notice it.

Yet this is not the biggest issue with the car's styling. Although the new Sonata is two inches longer than the old one, it is also two inches taller. Combined with the ultra-clean lines, the new proportions yield a 2006 Sonata that actually looks much smaller than the 2005. I've seen the two side-by-side a few times, and each time I have been taken aback by this misleading perception.

Inside the vaguely classy but utterly forgettable tastefulness continues. The most prominent interior feature, a raised trim strip that organically undulates across the instrument panel, apes a common feature of many recent interior designs. (I think this aesthetic detail was first seen in the Mercedes S-Class.) In the Sonata it is faux metal in base and uplevel gray trims, faux wood in uplevel beige ones.

Materials are generally good, but clearly those of a car priced in the low 20s. While the instrument panel is made of a soft-touch material, many surfaces closer at hand--most notably the forward part of the door-mounted armrests and the center console--are made of hard plastic. While I'm on the subject of armrests, wider, more heavily padded ones would be welcome.

Accommodations

The 2006 is roomy enough to barely squeak into the EPA's "large car" classification. Hyundai will be making much of this fact. Although not as cavernous as a Ford Five Hundred or Chrysler 300, the new Sonata is certainly roomier than the old one and easily a match for the Japanese competition in this area. Heads and legs will find plenty of space front and rear. With the front seat adjusted where I like it (a bit further back than the average adult male), when seated in back my knees were nowhere near the front seatbacks.

Seat comfort is good but not outstanding. The front buckets have the moderately hard, marginally padded feel I've noted before in Hyundai sedans. Lateral support is insufficient for aggressive drivers, but then this car clearly isn't meant for them. The back seat isn't quite high enough to provide ample thigh support, but the amount of legroom easily compensates for this--legs can be stretched forward until thighs make contact with the seat cushion.

The trunk is about average in size for this sort of car. The rear seat folds to enable long items to be carried.

On the Road

Since a manual will only be offered with the four, and I won't personally own a car without one, I was somewhat interested in learning how well the four-cylinder performs. Just adequately, I'm afraid. If you want anything in the way of thrills, you want the six. I don't know why they bothered making a manual shift feature standard on the four's automatic.

My only significant issue with the powertrain was the transmission's overeagerness to upshift and reluctance to downshift. When turning, you can't give the engine too much gas or you'll just spin a front tire. But once you've made the turn the transmission is already in second, and flooring the accelerator doesn't get first back. The solution: put the shifter in the manual shift slot to select first and hold the transmission there.

Like its acceleration, the four-cylinder Sonata's handling is of rental car quality. Although the chassis feels laudably stable, the car leans quite a bit in turns. Worse, the steering is very light and devoid of feel at low to moderate speeds, and doesn't firm up all that much at higher speeds.

I think the building blocks are here for a great-handling car, Hyundai just needs to make an effort to tune the chassis right. Kias tend to be tuned for sportier handling, so those seeking an affordable sport sedan should probably wait for the next Kia Optima.

Ride quality feels on par with a Toyota Camry SE, and so softer than a Mazda6, Accord, or Altima. Noise levels are very low. This seems to have been a much higher priority than sporty handling.

Safety Features

The new Sonata hasn't been crash tested yet. But with stability control and six airbags standard, it certainly has a class-leading set of standard safety features.

Hyundai Sonata Price Comparisons and Pricing

For quick, up-to-date pricing, and especially user-specified price comparisons, check out the website I created: www.truedelta.com. Why yet another vehicle pricing website? Well, I personally lacked the patience to keep using the others. They were too slow and required too much effort, especially when trying to compare prices. So I taught myself some programming and created a site where there is no need to dig through option packages, prerequisites, and the like one by one -- the TrueDelta algorithm figures these out for you in one swift pass.

One thing TrueDelta makes clear is that the GLS is a better value than the GL. The former costs $600 more but includes roughly $1,000 more stuff.

Comparing the price of the GLS (others are 2005s with rebates):

Toyota Camry: $1500 more even after a $700 rebate. Only $650 more invoice to invoice. Too close for Hyundai's comfort, I see incentives in the Sonata's future.

Malibu: $500 more expensive, even after a $2,500 rebate. MSRP is $1055 lower, but it includes $1,600 less equipment than the Hyundai. Compared to the Sonata GL the Malibu is about dead even.

Kia Optima: $2,600 less. A $2,000 adjustment in the Hyundai's favor for its additional content is canceled out by the Kia's $2,000 rebate.

The price is lower than the mainstream brands', but not by as much as it had been. I see rebates in the car's future, but smaller ones than has been the norm.

Last Words

There isn't a whole lot here to get anyone excited in four-cylinder form. But then Toyota sells a bunch of four-cylinder Camrys, and Chevrolet has been doing pretty well with the Malibu. Anyone interested in one of these cars will find a lot to like, and very little to dislike, with the new Sonata.

A Note on Hyundai Sonata Reliability

I cannot practically cover reliability within the context of this review. However, many people are interested in such information, so I've started collecting my own data. Results, once they are available, will be posted to my site, www.truedelta.com, with updates every three months.

Unlike other sources, TrueDelta will clearly identify what difference it will make if you buy a Sonata rather than another vehicle by providing "times in the shop" and "days in the shop" stats (among others). You will be able to specify the number of years, annual miles, and types of repairs to include in Hyundai Sonata reliability comparisons.

Before I can report results, I need data on all cars--not just the Sonata--from people like you. To encourage participation, those who help provide the data will receive free access to the site's reliability information. Non-participants will have to pay an access fee.

For the details, and to sign up, visit www.truedelta.com.

A link to this website and alphabetized links to my other vehicle reviews can be found on my profile page.

Some of my reviews of related vehicles:
Chevrolet Malibu review
Honda Accord review
Mazda6 review
Mitsubishi Galant review
Nissan Altima review
Toyota Camry review
 


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