2014 Hyundai Equus
Hyundai’s
impressive 2014 Equus model costs thousands less than rival luxury
sedans.
Prices: $61,000-$68,000
Hyundai lacks the prestigious name of rivals such as BMW and Mercedes,
but there’s not much in a name these days besides snob appeal
when it comes to foreign luxury sedans.
The smart money thus might be tempted to bypass competitors of
Hyundai’s flagship Equus sedan and save approximately $20,000
by buying the Equus and putting the money in blue-chip investments.
The 2013 Equus was fine in most respects, but has been upgraded for
2014, although the rear-drive car still doesn’t offer
all-wheel drive. It has a new front bumper, fascia and grille, new side
mirrors and taillight graphics, standard LED fog lamps and polished
19-inch premium alloy wheels. Inside is a redesigned instrument panel
and center stack, revised steering wheel control layout and genuine
wood trim.
There’s also revised suspension tuning for the electronically
controlled air suspension for more ride comfort and handling, with a
snow mode added to the drive mode system.
Ride quality comes close to matching that of some rivals.
The electro-hydraulic power steering, controlled by a handsome, easily
gripped wheel, is quick. It’s also a little heavy and should
provide more road feel. The electronically controlled air suspension is
on the firm side, but provides a supple ride as it tackles bad roads.
The all-disc anti-lock brakes do a good job, working with a
progressive-action pedal and a brake-assist feature.
The Equus is no sports sedan, but can be driven quickly and
safely. Handling for those driving beyound their abilities is
helped by electronic stability control and a stability management
system with pre-collision warning.
There’s the standard $61,000 (without a $920 freight charge)
Equus Signature model and a slightly more upscale $68,000 Ultimate
version. The Signature is so loaded with equipment that the Ultimate
really isn’t necessary—unless you want such items
as cooled rear seats, illuminated rear vanity mirrors, power trunk lid
and a rear-seat entertainment system with dual 9.2-inch monitors.
The Signature’s long list of features includes the air
suspension for a supple ride and sure handling, premium leather seats,
power tilt-and-slide glass sunroof, heated/cooled front seats, backlit
gauges, AM/FM/HD radio/Sirius/XM/CD/DVD/MP3 audio system, hands-free
phone system and 60/40 power reclining and heated rear seats.
Let’s stop right there before we get cross-eyed, although
note that the four-passenger seating option is gone. That sort of
seating arrangement is generally only popular for luxury cars in China,
anyway.
Safety items include no less than 9 air bags, including a
driver’s knee air bag, front/rear seat-mounted side-impact
ones and side-curtain ones. There’s also Blind Spot Detection
with Rear Cross-traffic Alert, Smart Cruise Control and a front and
rear parking assistance system with reaview camera and Rear
Crosss-traffic
Alert.
The Equus is whisked along by a sophisticated 5-liter
direct-injectionV-8 that delivers 429 horsepower on premium fuel and
421 horsepower on regular grade gasoline. The strong engine provides
plenty of power for fast merging and passing and loafs at 1,600 r.p.m.
at 65 miles per hour.
Still, the long (203.1-inch), fast Equus weighs approximately 4,500
pounds and thus sparkling fuel economy shouldn’t be expected.
The estimated numbers are 15 miles per gallon in the city and 23 on
highways.
Power is fed through an eight-speed automatic transmission that
upshifts smoothly but hesitates on downshifts. It has an easily used
manual-shift feature.
My Equus Signature test car’s spacious interior looked
upscale with its wood and leather, but not lavishly so. The cabin has a
good number of storage areas and was quiet, with the exception of noise
from my test car’s low-profile tires: 45-series front and
even wider 40-series rear. I didn’t notice in the snow-loaded
zero-degree weather, but the car might have been equipped with noisier
winter tires.
The power tilt/telescopic wheel should suit drivers of all sizes, and
the driver’s door-mounted power seat controls are duplicates
of those in a Mercedes. The electroluminescent cluster has a 7-inch LCD
screen. Manual controls are small but well-marked. I especially liked
the front-door pull-out storage pockets—they look like
they’re from a private jet. The circular roof-mounted vanity
lights for the sun visor mirrors are a touch of class, as is the classy
looking dashboard analog clock. All seats provide good support,
although the center of the backseat is stiff.
It’s a good thing the folding outside side mirrors are large
because vision to the rear is generally poor without them.
I could have used the power trunk lid when shopping because my arms
were full of groceries, but at least the large trunk easily swallowed
them. Power folding rear seatbacks enlarge the cargo area
The Equus is backed by a 10/year/100,000-mile powertrain warranty, but
most luxury sedan buyers don/t keep a car that long.
If you want to impress neighbors with Equus rivals such as an Audi,
BMW, Jaguar, Lexus or Mercedes, go ahead and buy one. They’re
fine cars, but you may ask yourself if saving, say $20,000, by buying
an Equus would have been a smarter move.