2002 Hyundai Elantra Compact Car Reviews & Ratings

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2002 Hyundai Elantra Reviews

 

Welcome to the car reviews section of UsedCarsChannel.com, where you can search for consumer 2002 Hyundai Elantra car reviews for all trims! How does this car handle? What kind of 2002 Hyundai Elantra ratings did the car receive? How large is in the interior? Is it comfortable to drive? Learn all of this and more in each of the consumer 2002 Hyundai Elantra reviews at UsedCarsChannel.com.

 
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Hyundai Elantra Interior Review

Often, inexpensive cars try to make up for their economy ambience with strange, garish interior design. The Elantra GT's interior is subdued, clean and efficient, with the gauge binnacle and control panel sweeping in front of the driver and down toward the center console.

The gauges themselves are backlit with a purplish light. It's interesting, and the speedometer and standard tach are quite legible at night or in full mid-afternoon sunshine. Heating, ventilation and air conditioning are now adjusted with rotary controls, rather than the cheaper, more difficult sliding type, and the dials are set in the preferred location-below, rather than above, the stereo. The stereo buttons are on the small side (we've rarely found buttons that are too big), but they are as large and easy to operate as those in some more expensive cars (the Volkswagen Jetta, for example). Light, wiper and cruise control switches are stalk mounted. A remote hatch and fuel-door release are standard.

The interior in our test car was finished in dark gray and basic black, and we found it surprisingly appealing. There's very little hard plastic in the Elantra GT, and the soft stuff has a richer feel than we've been conditioned to expect in cars of this ilk.

The front seats are larger than before, neither too soft (lacking proper support) nor too hard (bordering on painful). The driver's seat is height adjustable both front and rear, and both front seats have adjustable lumbar support. The front shoulder belts are height adjustable---a feature shorter people will appreciate-and the center position in back has a combination lap/shoulder belt (the class standard remains lap belt only). Certainly, rear passengers will be happier if the center spot is empty, but the same can be said for much more expensive cars such as the BMW 3 Series and Audi A4.

In our view, the real beauty of the Elantra GT is its five-door design, particularly for young families that will only own one car. After a week running errands in this car, we can't understand why Americans have never been particularly fond of four-door hatchbacks. With the rear seat up, there's room enough in the cargo compartment for beach gear or the sundry kid stuff required for a day trip. With the seat folded, the rear side doors make access to cargo much easier.

It's remarkable what you can squeeze into an Elantra GT, We fit a dozen 10-foot pieces of wood molding and a couple of two-by-fours entirely inside the car, with the hatch closed. The same with plywood sheets cut to 40 X 70 inches, including the remnants. With the hatch tied partway open, the possibilities include full sheets of plywood or a 27-inch TV in its carton. And Elantra doesn't suffer from the bane of some five-doors: a flexing, rattling body. It's decently screwed together and satisfactorily solid.



Hyundai Elantra Road Test

We drove the Elantra GT as the typical owner might--back and forth to the work, for family outings and trips to the home-improvement store. The car didn't hiccup once, and we were never dissatisfied.

For years Hyundai borrowed its engine designs from other manufacturers. It now develops and manufactures its own, and the Elantra's 2.0-liter inline four-cylinder has most of the latest technology, including dual overhead cams, four valves per cylinder, multipoint electronic fuel injection and coil-direct ignition. Major improvements for 2001 were intended to reduce mechanical noise and control vibration. They include a cast aluminum oil sump, a stiffer engine block and eight crankshaft counterweights.

With 140 horsepower and 133 pounds-feet of torque, there's more than enough power to hustle the 2600-pound Elantra GT through traffic, pass with confidence or drive through mountain passes faster than posted speeds. We estimate 0-60 mph times in the mid eight-second range-respectable performance in any subcompact.

But beware. There isn't much grunt at lower engine speeds. Most of Elantra's power comes in the last 2000 revs before the 6400-rpm redline. That means you'll need to work the engine and shift often to get the most from this power plant. Enthusiast drivers prefer to do exactly that. But if you're used to an engine with more low-end power, and you don't give Elantra its legs, you might wonder where the goods are. And when you find them, you might be disconcerted by the ruckus of a hard-working four-cylinder running near 6000 rpm.

We didn't try the Elantra with an automatic, but experience testing hundreds of automobiles suggests that a car with similar power characteristics is better suited to a manual transmission. Unless you hate shifting, or do most of your driving in heavy traffic, we'd recommend the manual.

What impressed us must was the Elantra GT's balance of ride and handling, which replicates the style of a good European sedan. Some cars that cost $25,000 don't have speed-sensitive steering or a sophisticated multi-link rear suspension. The power steering requires only a light touch during parking maneuvers or in tight quarters, yet it firms up at travel speeds and still gives the driver a good idea of how well the front tires are gripping. The rear suspension keeps the rear tires firmly on the pavement, even on bumpy roads, and helps keep the rear of the car from bouncing around.

The net result in the Elantra GT is maneuverability in traffic, secure, reasonably precise handling on curving two-lane highways and a ride that is neither floppy nor buckboard stiff. Only on freeways with excessively uneven expansion joints in rapid succession does the car tend to get bouncy. If you put a premium on handling, then the weak link in Elantra GT's package is the hard, wear-resistant all-season tires. A set of speed-rated performance tires would make this subcompact even better.

At the bottom line, Elantra is comfortable and enjoyable to drive. There's very little about it that seems cheap. The subcompacts from more established manufacturers might surpass it in certain respects. The doors on the Ford Focus, for example, thunk shut with more authority. Elantra is a bit noisier inside than a Toyota Corolla, but not by much, and if you're enjoying the Elantra GT's 100-watt CD player, you probably won't notice. The Honda Civic turns into corners with a bit more precision, but you probably won't notice that unless you plan to autocross.

In the workaday grind the Elantra GT is better than acceptable. It's good. It can run with comparably equipped competitors in nearly every respect except the size of the monthly payments.



Hyundai Elantra Lineup

The Elantra GT (MSRP $13,999) joins the Elantra GLS sedan ($12,499). The new GT model essentially replaces the Elantra wagon, which was dropped from Hyundai's 2001 lineup. No real problem there. With its rear hatch and split folding rear seat, the GT is remarkably versatile for a car its size.

The GT shares the four-door GLS's 2.0-liter, 140-horsepower four-cylinder engine. The most obvious difference between the two is the GT's five-door body style.

Both Elantra models have an impressive array of standard features, including air conditioning, power windows, mirrors and locks and a center console with armrest. The standard safety features are anything but economy grade: front and front-passenger side-impact airbags, rear headrests and three-point harnesses at all five seating positions.

Still, the Elantra GT expands on the GLS sedan's standard-equipment list. The five-door GT was fashioned in the tradition of compact European sport sedans, and in that spirit comes with a firmer sport-tuned suspension and five-spoke aluminum alloy wheels. Four-wheel disc brakes are included (the GLS has rear drums). Leather seating surfaces are standard, too (try finding those on another car in this price range), as are a 100-watt, six-speaker stereo with CD player, cruise control, remote keyless entry and rear-glass wiper and washer.

The GT is geared toward the young and young at heart-those who seek maximum involvement in driving-so Hyundai is promoting it with its standard five-speed manual transmission. Yet there is an automatic available. It's actually considered a separate model, identical to the Elantra GT except for its four-speed automatic and $14,799 sticker.

Our $14,572 test car had full-carpet floor mats-a $78 option. Beyond the mats, the only factory options available on the GT are a slide-and-tilt power moonroof ($650), antilock brakes with electronic front-wheel traction control ($1175, including the moonroof) and a cargo net ($38).

The warranty, by the way, is one of the best available. The basic warranty lasts five years or 60,000 miles for the original owner, with free roadside assistance throughout. The engine and transmission are warranted for 10 years, 100,0000 miles, and Hyundai protects Elantra from rust-through for five years or 100,000 miles.



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