Hyundai Genesis The Next Generation
Hyundai will not offer all-wheel drive for its Genesis luxury sedan into the second generation car arrives for model year 2014. In the past, the CEO of Hyundai John Krafcik has indicated that the Genesis sedan and coupe as well as Equus, which offer an installation which is expected to drive all who come running as a complement to today’s cars. But besides this delay for the Genesis sedan, if the Equus and the Genesis coupe will still offer all-wheel drive variants, they also may have to wait for what we assume will be a platform gets refreshed.
The Genesis sedan has made significant inroads in the market entry-and mid-range luxury in the U.S., in line with strong sales and a high percentage of buyers of conquest. All-wheel drive should make a big difference in persuading buyers snow belt to put the car in his barn, and could help crack the big Hyundai 30,000 sales per year. For context, BMW 5 series was good for sales of around 40,000 in 2010, while the Toyota Avalon exceeded 28 thousand years past.
Although not included AWD, Hyundai recently announced a series of improvements in Genesis. You can read about further changes here, for those with little time, features a direct injection 333-horsepower V-6 engine for the base car, and, top of range R-Spec with a new model 429 – hp 5.0-liter V-8. Model cars and 4.6-liter V-8 to get a new gearbox, Hyundai designed eight-speed automatic, too.
Since we have to wait for AWD, we will take care to see if the settings of 2011 suspension models have solved one of our major complaints about the sedan Genesis, his walk weak.