Just got back from spending
two solid days trudging down every aisle of the gazillion Frankfurt show halls, dodging
rain running between them and way overdoing the currywurst.
You’re welcome.

But top to bottom, inside
and out, Hyundai and Kia ruled
Frankfurt ’15.
Blasphemous, you say? Allow
me to explain.
Kia’s booth was packed with
its new Sportage SUV and Optima sedan, an updated cee’d range, a new 1.0-liter
direct-injection three-cylinder and a new seven-speed dual-clutch trans.
Whew!
The new Sportage looked
excellent, not that today’s is bad. Kia said previous concepts, the Provo and
Niro, inspired the Sportage’s new styling, done at Kia’s European studio with
input from Irvine, California. The fourth-generation SUV is sleeker, the grille
bigger and the interior quality -- whoa! -- is wayyyyy up.

Kia calls the cee’d a
“comprehensive upgrade,” including the 1.0-liter three.
Meanwhile, Hyundai’s
headliner by a wide margin was the N 2025, and not just because it looked like
a fighter jet on wheels -- there’s more to it: The N in the name represents
new, sporty upscale Hyundais -- think BMW M, Audi S and RS, Ford ST, Jaguar R …
While the N 2025’s
pipe-dreamy 872-hp powertrain is based on Hyundai’s hydrogen fuel-cell system,
to bring the N idea down to street level, so to speak, we saw the RM15 concept.
Roughly based on the Veloster, the RM15 is a mid-engine hot hatch boasting 295
hp, lightweight construction -- aluminum spaceframe, carbon fiber-reinforced
body -- and a 4.7-second 0-60 time. Hyundai says future N cars --
it plans a full line -- have powertrain and material tech borrowed from its
factory World Rally Championship program. The RM15 was a great example of how
those kinds of goodies could be produced.
Speaking of WRC, the company
also made clear it’s getting serious about its program, taking the wraps off
next year’s i20 racer. Hyundai ran WRC from 2000-2003 before dropping the
program, returning in 2014 with a new in-house team. The idea was to tiptoe in
slowly, learn what’s changed in 11 years and build a reliable car for 2014 and
’15.
The 2016 WRC car looks
vastly more serious with what Hyundai
says is better aero and weight distribution. Looks like the gloves come off
next year in WRC; and based on the Frankfurt displays, Hyundai and Kia continue
taking the road-car gloves off, too.
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