Sep 04, 2016 02:12 AM
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Hello guys I m siddhant and today we gonna discuss than buying a hyundai verna is right option or not.!
The 25-year old Hyundai Elantra badge is the company’s oldest remaining in service. This small sedan, now in its sixth generation, is also the company’s global top-seller.
So despite the fact its i30 hatchback sibling quadruples its sales in Australia, which always favours cars of the hatch variety, it’s a big deal for the Korean car-maker.
The new 2016 Hyundai Elantra you see here launches locally this week. It brings to the table a more subdued and upmarket design both outside and in, an all-new chassis and new technology to appeal to its target buyers, and to woo people away from sedan versions of the top-selling Toyota Corolla and Mazda 3, and battling Ford Focus, Volkswagen Jetta and Holden Cruze.
These target buyers are, in Hyundai’s words, “hatch and SUV rejectors”, people drawn to the privacy and silhouette of the traditional three-box sedan, and keen to buck the trend to little crossovers. They’re also, again in Hyundai’s words, typically older and more conservative.
It’s a shrinking but still notable market, one in which Hyundai has grown its share to more than 12 per cent. The Elantra makes up about 8.5 per cent of its Australian sales, so it remains a vital cog in the machine.
On first impressions after a quick drive this week, this new one is a significantly better car than its stylistically edgier, but otherwise lukewarm, predecessor. In fact, in many ways it’s pushing for overall class leadership.