The driving distance from Veracruz, Mexico, to Santa Fe, N.M. is
about 1,700 miles. But Hyundai's recently retired Veracruz wagon and the
2013 Santa Fe are much closer, at least in spirit.
Until its demise following the 2012
model year, the Veracruz represented Hyundai's mainstay transport for
people requiring accommodations for up to seven-passengers and their
belongings. Its drawbacks, including a hefty 4,300-pound base weight,
eventually placed it out of the running.
The Veracruz's capacity, if not its
name, has been replaced by the Santa Fe, or at least one version of the
Santa Fe. For the 2013 model year Hyundai has seen fit to create both a
five-place model, called the Santa Fe Sport, plus an extended-length
model with four inches added between the front and rear wheels that can
seat six or seven, depending on the configuration. The Santa Fe now
closely matches the boxier Veracruz's total cargo capacity, but is
lighter by about 320 pounds.
The Santa Fe's trimmer, sleeker design also places it
higher on the attractiveness scale. Abandoned is the soap-dish shape
that was in evidence with first- and second-generation wagons. Along the
sides and rear deck, the sheetmetal is now as taut and crisp as a
starched shirt, while the grille copies a familiar style that's common
to most of Hyundai's fleet.
The Santa Fe's interior reveals that
Hyundai is really getting the hang of what constitutes great interior
design. From the sculpted dashboard and door panels to the inwardly
angled primary gauges, the look is strictly premium, even without the
available leather seat coverings or eight-inch touch-screen display.
A second-row bench seat that's
included with the base GLS is split 40:20:40 and can be had with
optional slide and recline to maximize either passenger comfort or
stowage room. Second-row twin-folding high-back bucket seats are
standard in the six-passenger Santa Fe Limited.
Both trim levels come with a 3.3-liter
V6 that puts out 290 horsepower and 252 pound-feet of torque. The
engine is exclusive to the three-row Santa Fe (the five-passenger Sport
comes with four-cylinder power). The V6 is hooked to a six-speed
automatic transmission with manual shift controls.
Fuel consumption is rated at 18 mpg in the city and 25 highway, or 18/24 if all-wheel-drive is selected.
AWD increases the Santa Fe's $29,200
base price by $1,750, but is well worth it for the added control and
peace of mind in slippery, muddy conditions. The system has been
engineered to shift torque to a single wheel, if necessary, depending on
weather and driving conditions.
Additionally the AWD's active
cornering control applies light braking to the outside wheels while
turning to help stabilize the vehicle's intended trajectory.
Towing capacity for all is rated at 5,000 pounds.
Another Santa Fe feature is the Driver
Selectable Steering Mode, which has Comfort, Normal and Sport settings.
Selecting Comfort reduces steering effort by 10 percent and aids
parking maneuverability. Inversely, the Sport position firms up the
steering by the same amount and increases "on-center feel" for better
highway control.
The base GLS is fitted with a solid
array of content but stops short of going overboard. For that you'll
need to move up to the Limited that comes with dual-zone climate
control, eight-way power driver's seat, heated second-row seat, power
tailgate, rearview camera, push-button start and a 19-inch alloy wheels
(18-inchers are standard).
Heading an extensive list of options
is a panoramic sunroof, eight-inch touch-screen navigation system,
550-watt 12-speaker premium audio package, heated steering wheel and
rear-side-window sunshades.
With its enlarged dimensions, the
attractively packaged Santa Fe provides more of everything to more
people. Factor in a thrifty V6 and numerous technological improvements
and it's a virtual certainty that most Hyundai shoppers will barely miss
the Veracruz.
What you should know: 2013 Hyundai Santa Fe
Type: Four-door, front- /all-wheel-drive wagon
Engine (hp): 3.3-liter DOHC V6 (290)
Transmission: Six-speed automatic
Market position: Tall
wagons with all-wheel-drive capabilities are key in most automaker's
lineups. Six- and seven-passenger models such as the Santa Fe occupy an
increasingly important niche within that bracket.
Points:
Extended-length Santa Fe complements regular-length five-passenger
version; Standard V6 is unique to that model; AWD option a cut above
most competitors in sophistication; Fuel economy about average for its
class with more gears for automatic transmission likely on the way; Good
looks and practical packaging make Santa Fe a solid choice.
Safety:
Front airbags; side-impact airbags; side-curtain airbags; front-knee
airbag; anti-lock brakes; traction control; stability control.
MPG (city/hwy): 18/25 (FWD)
Base price (incl. destination): $29,200
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