The 2013 Hyundai Elantra coupe may not need much explanation; it’s basically an Elantra sedan with two fewer doors. On the other hand, it’s hard for us to say why Hyundai has decided to enter the shrinking segment of front-wheel-drive coupes—especially with the Veloster andmore-powerful Genesis coupe already on dealer lots. Perhaps Hyundai’s sleek new two-door will steal a few sales from the Honda Civiccoupe and even the Elantra’s corporate sibling, the Kia Forte Koup.
The dual- and quad-doored versions of the Elantra are nearly identical underneath. They have the same 106.3-inch wheelbase, the same overall width of 69.9 inches, and the same height of 56.5 inches. The only major exterior dimensional difference is that the coupe is 0.4 inch longer than the sedan. (Scintillating stuff, we know.) So they’re really, really similar and those sedan-like dimensions should make the Elantra coupe very spacious. The two-door beats the Civic coupe and Forte Koup in both interior volume and cargo space.
Powertrain options are directly carried over from the Elantra sedan. That means buyers get a 148-hp, 1.8-liter inline-four with a less-than-awesome 131 lb-ft of torque. These numbers put the Elantra coupe ahead of the Civic coupe, behind the wimpiest Forte Koup—that car gets a 2.0-liter standard; a 2.4 is optional—and mid-pack for the segment in general. A six-speed manual transmission is available—and necessary if you want to maximize fuel economy—while a six-speed automatic is an option. Self-shifting coupes are estimated at 28 mpg city/39 highway, while Hyundai says the stick version should get 29/40. These fuel-economy ratings are just about identical to those of the sedan.
The Elantra coupe will be as well-equipped as its four-door bro. A touch-screen nav system with a rearview camera is optional, as are leather-trimmed seats, keyless entry and start, a power sunroof, and dual-zone climate control. SE models get a sportier suspension tune.
Thanks to: Car and Driver
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