Top Gear Lays Plaudits on Hyundai Ioniq 5 N

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

Alert members of the B&B know we don’t tend to put much stock into “Of the Year” awards, for reasons with which you lot are intimately familiar. Witness the spectacle of Motor Trend awarding the Blazer EV its SUV of the Year trophy as Exhibit A of our feelings.


Nevertheless, an EV with its wick cranked to 641 horsepower tends to get out attention – as it did the crew of Top Gear across the pond.


Setting up as the most powerful – and perhaps most expensive – Hyundai made to date, the Ioniq 5 N is the first electric vehicle to fly the brand’s N flag and takes to the streets with what’s being reported as a reasonably credible simulation of a twin-clutch automatic transmission. It’s of no small hit of irony that the N crew deliberately infused some of the DCT’s hiccups and burps in attempts to retain an engaging rather than sanitized driving feel. The same goes for its simulated torque curve that’s meant to be a reasonable facsimile of turbocharged gasser engines. There’s even a tachometer which will allow drivers to run headlong into a rev limiter if they forget to shift up.


All of this surely is part and parcel of why Top Gear selected the thing for its plaudits. We all know the fastest way through a quarter mile in an EV would be with an uninterrupted wave of power – immediate admittance to what feels like an infinite well of torque, in other words – but we also know that gearheads aren’t the most rational people on this planet. Most of us crave engagement from our vehicles, explaining why the manual transmission lives on in some of the best cars even if its automatic-equipped counterpart is faster on paper.


Perhaps this is why we chose to spill some digital ink on an award we’d normally glaze over like day-old Krispy Kreme donuts. The new Ioniq 5 N is a tacit admission that people who buy vehicles with outsized performance creds do indeed like some measure of aural (and tactile) feedback whist caning the thing around their favorite circuit. Perhaps entertaining frivolity will become a category in these types of evaluations. 


After all, it already is in ours.


[Image: Hyundai]


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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

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  • Tassos You can answer your own question for yourself, Tim, if you ask instead"Have Japanese (or Korean) Automakers Eaten Everyone's Lunch"?I am sure you can answer it without my help.
  • Tassos WHile this IS a legitimate used car, unlike the vast majority of Tim's obsolete 30 and 40 year old pieces of junk, the price is ABSOLUTELY RIDICULOUS. It is not even a Hellcat. WHat are you paying for? The low miles? I wish it had DOUBLE the miles, which would guarantee it was regularly driven AND well maintained these 10 years, and they were easy highway miles, not damaging stop-go city miles!!!
  • Tassos Silly and RIdiculous.The REAL Tassos.
  • Lostboy If you can stay home when it's bad out in winter, then maybe your 3 season tire WILL be an "ALL-SEASON" tire as your just not going to get winters and make do? I guess tire rotations and alignments just because a whole lot more important!
  • Mike My wife has a ‘20 Mazda3 w/the Premium Package; before that she had a ‘15 Mazda3 i GT; before THAT she had an ‘06 Mazda Tribute S V6, ie: Ford Escape with a Mazda-tuned suspension. (I’ve also had two Miata NAs, a ‘94 & a ‘97M, but that’s another story.) We’ve gotten excellent service out of them all. Her 2020, like the others before it, is our road trip car - gets 38mpg highway, it’s been from NC to Florida, Texas, Newfoundland, & many places in between. Comfortable, sporty, well-appointed, spacious, & reliable. Sure, we’d look at a Mazda hybrid, but not anytime soon.😎
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