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Creta impresses with spaciousness

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HYUNDAI recently launched its Creta SUV range in South Africa, to feed the country’s seemingly insatiable appetite for station wagons with raised ride heights.
Hyundai Creta is 20cm shorter than the Tucson, but still impressively spacious.
The Creta fills a slot, both price and size-wise, below the Tucson and the larger Santa Fe. Built in India, the three-model line-up sells in South Africa for between R319 900 and R369 900, offering a more affordable alterna­tive to the Tucson, which will set you back be­tween R379 900 and R543 900.
Like the Tucson, the Creta comes with a five-year or 150 000km warranty and five-year or 90 000km service plan.
The three Creta variants are Executive mod­els with above-average levels of comfort and gizmos for this segment, including naviga­tion, dual-tone leather seats, cornering lights, a parking camera, and a MP3/USB/Bluetooth infotainment system operated by a 20.3cm touchscreen, supplemented by buttons on the multifunction steering wheel.
The large touchscreen is easy to use and legible, and I really liked its high-definition clarity. You can pipe music through the sys­tem via Bluetooth, USB and AUX ports, and families don’t have to fight over who gets to charge their cellphone, as there are also two 12V power sockets.
Standard safety features across the Creta range comprise six airbags and ABS brakes (but no traction control) and the vehicle achieved a four-star rating in Latin NCAP crash tests.
The hard dashboard doesn’t have the squishy plastics that help to raise the level of perceived smartness in modern cabins. It doesn’t radiate quite the upmarket feel of the Tucson, but in general the Creta’s interior is neat and modern, and there aren’t too many shortcuts, in terms of build quality.
Storage space inside the cabin is not only plentiful, but well thought out, in terms of practicality; for example, the nook in front of the gear lever, which is perfectly-sized for a large smartphone – much better than having the phone sliding around in a door pocket, as you have to do with some cars.
Rear passengers get the comfort of their own rear air vents and a rear centre arm­rest with cup holders, along with prodigious amounts of legroom. Though the Creta’s smaller than the new Tucson (4.27 metres vs 4.47 metres long) it’s impressively spacious, and people aren’t squeezed together like sar­dines. There’s also a full-sized spare wheel in the decent-sized 402-litre boot, and the back seats flip down to accommodate larger shopping expeditions.
The Creta is available with a choice of two engines: a 1.6 pet­rol with outputs of 90kW and 150Nm (in six-speed man­ual or auto choices), and a 1.6 turbodiesel (auto only), which sends 94kW and 260Nm to the front wheels. No all-wheel drive version is available.
We test-drove the die­sel version, in our view the better choice for its big torque advantage and supe­rior fuel consumption. The petrol auto is rated at 8.4 li­tres per 100km, while Hyun­dai claims the diesel auto sips 7.4 litres per 100km. Interest­ingly, our diesel test vehicle easily beat that, recording 6.9 litres – it’s almost unheard of to beat the factory-quoted fuel-con­sumption claims.
Along with its ‘unthirsty’ na­ture the diesel Creta has a decent turn of pace. It gets going without any notable hesitation, never feels underpowered around town, and cruises easily on the freeway. The gutsy torque will also deal with heavier passenger/luggage loads easier than the petrol.
Lofty ride height
The vehicle’s a generally quiet performer, except for the engine sounding a little gruff under acceleration, but it settles into a more refined hum when cruising.
The front-wheel drive Creta doesn’t have any cross-country aspirations, but at a lofty 190mm, it has superior ground clearance to most crossover vehicles in its class (it’s even higher than the 172mm Tucson). This, com­bined with its high-profile 16” tyres, gives this Hyundai a better-than-average appetite for gravel roads where it has good bump-smooth­ing ability.
The elevated ride doesn’t turn it into a slop­py handler, and it gets through turns fairly neatly, without excessive body roll.
Driving it is easy, even for the dainty-armed, with electric power steering that makes light work of cornering and parking this fair-sized vehicle. However on straight roads the steer­ing has the slightly annoying characteristic of not self-centring completely, requiring small corrections to keep the vehicle in a straight line.
Verdict
The Hyundai Creta is a roomy, well-specced and well-priced (particularly in petrol guise) alternative to the larger Tucson.
The range-topping R369 900 Creta diesel is a tough one to call, however, as its price strays quite close to Tucson territory. This vehicle’s competitively priced against oil-burner rivals from other brands, and although the engine is superior to the Creta petrol, it’s at R30 000 extra.
Those not particularly hung up on the dark­er fuel or an auto gearbox may opt to rather spend ten grand more on the entry-level Tucson 2.0 Premium petrol manual (115kW/196Nm).
–iol.co.za


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