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Is There Room in the Luxury Market for Hyundai?

4249 messages, Last post on Dec 03, 2009 at 6:58 PM
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| that Hyundai/Kia are going to keep the generous Warranty. | |
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Replying to: steve_ (Jun 23, 2009 7:08 am) Additionally, the Powers report stated that "The Genesis significantly outperformed other Premium Sedans. Insure.com has ranked the 2009 Santa Fe as costing less to insure than any other vehicle. |
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exactly. Hyundai is no slouch as a car/SUV-maker, by any stretch. They have hit the big time and can no longer be drug through the mud by anyone. Let's put it this way, the one dragging them through the mud now is only straining their own muscles and giving theirselves a hernia. May they rest in peace. |
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Replying to: steve_ (Jun 23, 2009 8:37 am) I think their 5 year Durability Study is more meaningful, for instance. Also, I recall the Hummer H2 came out and it did poorly, and one of the reasons stated was that gas mileage was worse than owners expected. Here's the thing - how is poor gas mileage a quality problem? I mean, it's a Hummer, for crying out loud, how does JD Power interpret that as a lack of quality? They suck down gas very reliably, in fact they are probably the most RELIABLE consumers of gas on the planet! LOL Same for the Mini Cooper - owners complained about a cup holder. The design may not be the best, but is that really a quality problem? I dunno, that's a stretch. If we're talking about an average of 0.8 to 1.6 "problems" per car, and poor gas mileage on a Hummer or a lame cup holder on a Mini counts as 1 "problem", then maybe it is meaningless after all. I think it's a good sign that Hyundai has moved up, and there are fewer complaints, but this is merely an early indicator, not a solid measure.
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Replying to: ateixeira (Jun 23, 2009 12:42 pm) Yeah, that was the initial quality one I think, and JD Power redid their survey stuff after that. I think they gave less weight to the "The Driving Experience" section or expanded some of the other categories to compensate for the little gotchas like that. True Delta never got my attention and CR has their own problems. Edmunds switched from JD Power Star Ratings a while back and now uses Identifix, which is what MSN Auto uses (or used).
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Replying to: steve_ (Jun 23, 2009 4:51 pm) How timely, though, that there was an Editorial in Automotive News yesterday by Jesse Snyder headlined "J.D. Power Initial Quality Survey defeats itself", arguing, among other things, that automakers are "doing such a good job that the Power IQS is almost meaningless as a buyer's guide". One example they cite is that Honda's 5th place finish sounds much better than Saturn's 24th placement, but the actual difference is 0.2 problems per vehicle between the two brands, hardly worth mention. I think what it will do is penalize a single widespread flaw, a car could go from first to worst if one single component is designed poorly, and it may not even be very significant. |
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Replying to: ateixeira (Jun 24, 2009 8:23 am) Also, if a single important component is designed poorly, that could be very significant and maybe the car deserves to go to the bottom of the list in that case--especially since the overall quality of cars today is quite high relative to the past.
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Replying to: backy (Jun 24, 2009 8:29 am) But that also might simply make automakers risk-averse. Why go out on a limb with a new technology if you'll going to get skewered if many units turn out to be faulty? It'll certainly make the testing process more important. the JD Power survey is a victim of its own success The Editor said the same thing. Any how, I think we're drifting a bit off topic, so taking this back to Hyundai... The results may actually be more impressive that I was thinking, simply because the Genesis has a lot of new features that don't exist on their lower-end models. So to launch a new car, new powertrain, and add a lot of extra featuers (i.e. potential faults) and actually improve on IQ scores is an accomplishment for sure. The funny thing is I don't think JDP measures Quality, per se, but problems or defects. To clarify - the Genesis uses a high grade of quality leather, but the plain old cheap cloth on an Accent would earn it the same score (as long as it's not tearing apart at the seams).
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Replying to: ateixeira (Jun 24, 2009 8:23 am) Ok, time for a plug for the Genesis long term blog post earlier this week - it's all about quality (if you consider class to be an element of quality): 2009 Hyundai Genesis V6: Classy Looking Interior |
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Replying to: steve_ (Jun 24, 2009 9:25 am) I like the chrome trim on the steering wheel - very subtle, tasteful. I'd prefer less of the silvery stuff on the center console, though. Flat, matte black or wood would be better there. The trim around the outer vents and the stripe at the top of the leather strip also look nice. I sat my wife in one of these at a car show and she said "This is a HYUNDAI?!" |
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