Test Drive: 2021 Hyundai Sonata N-Line

2021 Hyundai Sonata N-Line

2021 Hyundai Sonata N-Line in Portofino Gray

Consumer Guide Automotive 2021 Hyundai Sonata N-Line

Class: Midsize Car

Miles driven: 462

Fuel used: 18.7 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B
Power and Performance B+
Fit and Finish B+
Fuel Economy B-
Value A-
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy B
Tall Guy B
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 290-hp 2.5-liter
Engine Type Turbo 4-cyl
Transmission 8-speed dual-clutch automatic
Drive Wheels FWD

Real-world fuel economy: 24.7 mpg

Driving mix: 60% city, 40% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 23/33/27 (city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Regular gas

Base price: $33,200 (not including $995 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Summer tires ($200); carpeted floor mats ($169)

Price as tested: $34,564

Quick Hits

The great: Lively acceleration; excellent, easy-to-use control layout

The good: Striking styling; innovative technology features; crisp handling with respectable ride quality

The not so good: A tad less spacious inside than some class rivals; some torque steer is apparent in aggressive driving

More Sonata price and availability information

John Biel

The Hyundai Sonata N Line is here to show that good things can come in midsized packages. This 2021 addition to the South Korean automaker’s intermediate-size sedan product line turns the Sonata into an eminently entertaining driver’s car while not taking anything away from its practicality as a family car.

A 2.5-liter turbocharged 4-cylinder engine and 8-speed dual-clutch automated-manual transmission make the Sonata N Line Hyundai’s most powerful front-wheel-drive sedan to date. With the turbo and a distinct head design that incorporates the exhaust manifold, this version of the brand’s 2.5 engine makes 290 horsepower at 5800 rpm and 311 lb-ft of torque from as low as 1650 revs up to 4000. It’s enough strain that Hyundai felt obliged to pluck the wet-clutch transmission from the toybox of rambunctious little brother Veloster N. (The clutches, one for the even-numbered gears and one for the odd, are coated in oil to cool their faces.)

2021 Hyundai Sonata N-Line

After its redesign for 2020, the Hyundai Sonata gains a performance-focused N-Line model for 2021.

This is a powerteam that builds speed nicely from the start without discernible turbo lag, and has the torque to deliver a delightful burst of power in the midrange. The responsive throttle acts even quicker in “Sport” mode. The gearbox races through crisply defined (but not jerky) upshifts, especially in the lower gears, working to keep the engine in the choice part of the power band. However, there’s also enough power to wake up the echoes of something this driver hasn’t felt in a long while: torque steer. He detected the N Line pulling slightly to the right several times during his time with the car. Stand-on-it types will be interested to know that launch control is included.

People who pay for the gas may be more excited by the reviewer’s 30.8 mpg from a 110.5-mile drive composed of 43 percent city-type operation. That favorably matches up with EPA estimates of 23 mpg in the city, 33 mpg out on the highway, and 27 combined.

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Hyundai Sonata N-Line

The Sonata’s basic dashboard layout is attractive and functional. N-Lines get sporty-looking aluminum-trim pedals. The push-button shifter doesn’t really add to the “high-performance” vibe, but it works well.

Accompanying the zesty powerplant is a chassis with stouter engine mounts, dampers, and antiroll bars; upsized brake discs; and electric power-assist unit moved from the steering column to the steering rack. The standard 19-inch alloy wheels on the test car were wrapped in 245/40R19 summer tires (a $200 replacement for the base all-season skins) that fortunately did not cause us any worries on rain-slicked expressways. While Hyundais generally may not match the levels of suppleness and composure some other cars do, the ride quality of the N Line is admirably high. Steering is responsive and nicely weighted, and the brakes are strong and sure. Summoning “Sport+” through the console-mounted toggle shuts off traction control for more fun on the kind of bendy roads that were not available to Consumer Guide testers.

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Hyundai Sonata N-Line

The N-Line comes standard with sport front seats with additional bolstering and grippy “Dinamica” faux-suede upholstery inserts. The Sonata’s rear-seat space is a bit cozier for tall passengers than the Honda Accord and Toyota Camry.

The greasy bits aren’t all that make a Sonata into an N Line. The front of the car bears a fascia with bigger air ducts. The gloss black of the unique “feathered” grille is reprised on the mirrors and window moldings. The wheel design is also specific to the sport model. In back there’s a black decklid spoiler and two pairs of bright exhaust outlets flanking an under-bumper diffuser. Model badges on the grille and front fenders are small and, for the most part, the car doesn’t call much attention to itself. The Sonata N Line is a Q-ship.

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Hyundai Sonata N-Line Trunk

There’s 16.3 cubic feet of cargo volume in the Sonata’s trunk–right on par with most midsize-sedan rivals.

The Nth degree of interior distinction starts with well-bolstered front sport seats embossed with an “N” logo and covered in Dinamica microsuede material and Nappa leather. The seats have red piping on the backrests and red stitching that’s carried over to the dash, armrests, and N-design leather-wrapped steering wheel. For a finishing touch, pedals are faced in aluminum.

With a starting price of $34,195 with delivery, the N Line is the point at which these features arrive as standard equipment: panoramic sunroof, LED taillights, 10.25-inch touchscreen with navigation, configurable 12.3-inch virtual instrument display, Bose premium sound system with 12 speakers, LED interior lights, 64-color ambient lighting, multiple device connection, parking collision-avoidance, and “Highway Drive Assist” that helps keep the car centered in its lane and maintain a safe distance from a vehicle ahead. That is on top of more widely applied items like LED headlights, dual-zone automatic climate control, heated front seats, 8-way power-adjustable driver’s seat, Hyundai Digital Key access app, Apple CarPlay/Android Auto integration, wireless charging, and satellite radio. The “SmartSense” safety suite packages forward-collision avoidance with pedestrian detection, adaptive cruise control with stop-and-go functionality, blind-spot and rear cross-traffic collision avoidance, lane-following assist, lane-keep assist, automatic high-beam control, driver-attention warning, and rear-occupant alert. “Safe Exit,” which locks the rear doors if sensors detect oncoming traffic, is added to most non-hybrid Sonatas for ’21.

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Hyundai Sonata N-Line

The N-Line’s special exterior trim touches are subtle–they include a unique front fascia with larger air ducts and a distinctive blackout grille design, and a rear fascia with an under-bumper diffuser and dual exhaust outlets.

Our views on passenger accommodations and cargo space carry over from our tests of Sonatas from 2020, the first year of the current design. The roomy interior has nominal space for three adults (certainly three teens) in the rear seat, and drivers will find good sightlines just about anywhere they glance. The infotainment touchscreen is easy to read and operate. This driver found the push-button transmission selector in the N Line to be a little faster acting than the one in the 2020 Limited that CG sampled. Soft, compressible materials are found throughout, even atop all four doors—something not all cars in the class provide. Glove and console boxes are big. There’s a net pouch on the back of the front passenger seat, an open bin ahead of the console and one on the passenger side of the console, four door pockets with bottle holders, and cup holders in the console and rear armrest. Trunk space is a generous 16 cubic feet. Rear seats fold in a 60/40 split. The seats rest flat but a little above the level of the trunk floor, and a bulkhead behind the seat shrinks pass-through space.

One of CG’s conclusions about the current Sonata after its first year was “its driving personality isn’t as dynamic as its looks might suggest.” The N Line is the new exception to the rule.

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2021 Hyundai Sonata N-Line

The Hyundai Sonata N-Line is a mainstream midsize sedan with a bit more spice. Its turbocharged 2.5-liter 4-cylinder puts out 290 horsepower–a boost of 110 hp over the base Sonata engine–and its upsized wheels and sport-tuned steering and suspension give it sharper handling as well.

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2021 Hyundai Sonata N-Line Gallery

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Cheap Wheels: 1990 Pontiac Grand Prix STE Turbo

Pontiac Grand Prix STE Turbo

Pontiac Grand Prix STE Turbo

Cheap Wheels

by Don Sikora II

Note: The following story was excerpted from the Februry 2020 issue of Collectible Automobile magazine.

From the Pontiac Grand Prix’s 1962 introduction through 1989 it was exclusively a two-door car. That changed with the addition of four-door sedans for 1990. More-door GPs continued through 2008, but perhaps the most interesting one of them all came from that inaugural season: the little-remembered STE Turbo. 

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This story starts with the 1988 Grand Prix that switched to a front-wheel-drive unibody design on the brand-new GM10 platform. The next year, Pontiac introduced a limited-production Grand Prix Turbo. (We talked it up in an August 1990 Future Collectibles piece.) McLaren tweaked the car’s 3.1-liter V-6 engine, adding a Garret turbocharger, intercooler, and other hardware like a stouter crankshaft. It was good for 205 horsepower and 220 pound-feet of torque. ASC performed final assembly with additions that included unique lower bodywork, functional hood louvers, and beefy Goodyears on eight-inch-wide wheels tucked under add-on fender flares.

When the ’90 Grand Prix sedan made its debut, base LE and top-of-the-line STE models were available. The STE (Special Touring Edition) nameplate already had credibility from the well-regarded sport-sedan version of Pontiac’s 6000. The GP STE ran a 140-horse 3.1-liter V-6, and could be had with a five-speed manual transmission or four-speed automatic. A specially tuned suspension, quick-ratio steering, and STE-specific 16.5-inch wheels were included too. 

STE’s exterior styling differed somewhat from the LE sedan. The most obvious change was full-width headlight and taillight treatments. Front and rear fascias and the bodyside were unique too. STE’s face included a rectangular eggcrate grille integrated into the front bumper and divided into three sections by two vertical bumper-guard ribs. Somewhat surprisingly, the result wasn’t a variation of the traditional Pontiac split grille, even though all other Grand Prixs of the day included that expected design element.

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Sometime during the model year—the Chicago Tribune’s Jim Mateja narrowed it down a bit to “spring”—Pontiac added the STE Turbo to the lineup. Predictably, it included the Turbo coupe’s 205-horse V-6 and mandatory four-speed automatic. Equipment and appearance closely followed the lead of its naturally aspirated sibling, but “STE Turbo” badges on the front doors and the coupe’s functional hood louvers were added. It benefitted from standard antilock brakes but made do with STE’s wheels. A Pontiac sales folder quoted a 0-60-mph time of eight seconds for STE Turbo.

While the STE stuck around through 1993, the Turbo disappeared with the ’90 model year. From then on, the stoutest engine was a new dohc 3.4-liter V-6.

According to the Encyclopedia of American Cars, the Grand Prix STE started at $18,539, with the Turbo ringing in at a lofty $23,775. (The GP Turbo coupe was dearer still at $26,016.) The same source lists combined STE and Turbo sedan production of just 5773.

1993 Twin Dual Cam GT: The Last Manual-Transmission Pontiac Grand Prix

Pros:

  • Previewing the STE Turbo in its October 1989 issue, Car and Driver thought it a quick, comfortable performance sedan, bigger but better than the old favorite 6000STE.
  • These GPs were well equipped. Options were largely limited to leather, radio upgrades, and a sunroof.

Cons:

  • The Turbo’s 205 horsepower isn’t impressive today—still, consider the cotemporary Tuned Port 5.0-liter V-8 in Pontiac’s Firebird Formula and Trans Am made 200 ponies.
  • Even by Pontiac standards of its era, to our eyes the STE Turbo’s appearance is overwrought.

Final Drive:

Available for just months in 1990, the Grand Prix STE Turbo might be as obscure as Nineties Pontiac performance gets. A nice survivor could be compelling cheap wheels.

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Pontiac Grand Prix STE Turbo


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