2001 Hyundai Santa Fe Review
Expert Reviews:
AutomobileOverviewThe questioner, an airport shuttle driver, had...
Cars.comSanta Fe is a great name for an SUV. The eponymous...
Cars.comAlthough little Hyundai hasn't been gobbled up in the...
I have
a slightly Machiavellian view of Hyundai's decision to name its newest vehicle
Santa Fe. After all, Santa Fe was a thriving economic center of, first, Spanish
Louisiana and later Mexico. By means of the Santa Fe Trail, however, low-balling
U.S. traders from Missouri so persistently supplanted Spanish/Mexican commercial
interests that Santa Fe residents addicted to yanqui-priced goods
surrendered willingly to U.S. forces during the opening gambits of the Mexican
War. Korea's Hyundai, I propose, is equally hopeful to
insinuate its all-new SUV into the
hearts and garages of U.S. auto buyers who are themselves now virtually addicted
to the sport-utility premise.
It's a crowded poker game, but Santa Fe is holding a decent
hand. Hyundai's top card is this ace: Santa Fe is a full featured, car-derived
sport/ute with a starting price of just $16,499. Many smaller SUVs--notably the popular new
Ford Escape/Mazda Tribute twins
--start at
several hundreds, even thousands of dollars more. Combine Santa Fe's sticker
with its industry-leading powertrain warranty of 10 years/100,000 miles and its
bumper-to-bumper warranty of five years/60,000 miles, and Hyundai's sport-ute is
in a good position to call a few bluffs.
The least expensive of Hyundai's eight different Santa Fe
versions is a front-wheel-drive GL model with a 150-horsepower in-line four and
a five-speed manual transmission. For $800 more, you can get a four-speed
automatic; and $1000 yet again gets you the 2.7-liter V-6 making 181 horsepower.
A four-wheel-drive
powertrain is available only with the V-6 models (for a $1,500 premium). The
model designation GLS refers to an option package costing $1,000 over the GL V6
base price. The super-deluxe
Santa Fe LX V6 includes
$2,200 worth of options. My tester was the GLS with front-wheel-drive and a
heavy-duty towing package ($295). As tested, the vehicle cost $19,759. Creature
comforts like CD stereo, air conditioning, remote/keyless entry, power windows
and mirrors, fog lamps, and blackout privacy glass are all included with the GLS
package. The only important option missing from my tester was the combination
anti-lock brake/traction control system ($595). A vehicle this well equipped
for under $20,000 raises the stakes in a very bold way.
The Santa Fe may be a serious
bargain, but a serious off-roader it is not. Even though I only drove the
front-wheel-drive model, I can tell you that a 7.4-inch ground clearance is
pretty down to earth in the worst sort of way, and no addition of 4WD can alter that fact. (By
comparison, Volvo's citified V70
CrossCountry wagon boasts 7.5 inches of clearance, for crying out loud.) Plus,
the Santa Fe's chassis is tuned for city-slicker tastes. Its sporty
four-wheel-independent suspension is tuned for a smooth if not exactly soft
ride. Unfortunately, in serious off-road conditions, all that cushy springing tends to jam wheel travel right up to
the bump stops.
That might as well be expected from a vehicle based on
Hyundai's top-o'-the-line Sonata sedan. Obviously, Santa Fe has been conceived
as an urban cowboy from the outset. So what? Virtually every other SUV on the market has devolved into a cozy street/utility vehicle as
well. Meanwhile, serious, rugged, off-roading has become
about as commonplace as dueling with flintlock pistols.
With 78 cubic feet of total cargo
space, and 29 cubes with the rear seat in use, the five-passenger Santa Fe
actually comes close to rivaling the haulage capacity of seven-seaters like
Acura's MDX and the Mercury Mountaineer/Ford
Explorer, which cost nearly twice as
much. Unlike the aforementioned models, with their
hard-edged, knife-creased exterior styling, Santa Fe is rounded, voluptuous,
even vaguely bulbous. It is, in fact, a truck rendition of Hyundai's overtly odd-looking Tiburon sport coupe. I can assure you,
however,
that fleshy, Rubenesque styling is infinitely more
appropriate to a truck than to a sports car.
I have every expectation that the 181 horsepower rating of
the Santa Fe's V-6 will inspire wails of woe from most auto writers and macho
enthusiasts. I beg to buck this trend. Yes, there are more potent V-6 engines in
similarly sized and even some smaller SUVs. No, the Santa Fe is not seriously
underpowered. I found its performance about town very lively, and the twin-cam
engine is fast-revving with a generously long powerband. Shiftronic clutchless
manual shifting, moreover, adds an additional measure of sport to a routine commute.
On the freeway, I constantly caught myself
slipping up to "bear-bait" speeds without even noticing; the engine pulls
effortlessly, and the ride is reassuringly stable. What I didn't do, however, is
race the thing. Anyone who requires a 200-plus horsepower SUV to do that is, in my humble
estimation, embarrassingly--even pathologically--naive.
But I can say I'm disappointed with
Santa Fe's fuel economy, rated at just 19 miles per gallon/city, 26/highway. If
indeed one settles for less horsepower than the
competition, then better fuel mileage ought
to compensate. In the Santa Fe it doesn't.
At a time when $2-per-gallon gas is a distinct possibility, this SUV, which
otherwise competes so boldly in price and warranty, is simply lost in the crowd when it comes to fuel efficiency.
I admire Hyundai just the same for buckling its spurs,
cocking its hat, and looking the American SUV buyer square in the eye. If it
takes a Wild West image and
rock-bottom pricing to sell SUVs, Hyundai
is biting the bullet and doing just that. With SUV shoppers
stampeding ever onward in a headlong rush, one of their preferred trails, I predict, will soon lead to Santa
Fe.
2001 Hyundai Santa Fe
GLS
Base price: $19,759
Engine: 2.7-liter V-6, 181 hp
Transmission:
Four-speed automatic, front-wheel drive
Length
x width x height:
177.3 x 72.7 x 66 in
Wheelbase:
103.1 in
Curb weight: 3494
lb
EPA City/Hwy: 19/26 mpg
Safety equipment: Front airbags,
optional ABS/traction control
Major standard equipment: Four-wheel independent
suspension & disc brakes, HVAC, AM/FM/CD audio system, remote entry, power
windows/locks/mirrors, fog lamps
Warranty: Five
years/60,000 miles
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