First drive: 2014 Hyundai Centennial in the UAE
As much success as Hyundai is experiencing nowadays, truth be told, they have a big gaping hole in their sales figures for models beyond a certain price-point. One of the those models is the Hyundai Centennial. As even Hyundai owners might not know, the Centennial is the flagship of the Korean brand, designed to tackle premium brands head-on. The car has been around for a couple of years now, but we finally took one for a spin at the launch of the mildly-facelifted 2014 model.
The Centennial is undoubtedly a handsome car. However, there aren’t enough distinctive design cues to make it stand out. Sure, there’s that nice muscular kink on the rear haunches, but that’s about it. We assume the conservative design is appealing to management-types in the Far East who prefer to get shuttled here and there without fanfare. Even the Lexus LS used to be just as anonymous, at least until its facelift this year.
Inside, the Centennial gives you your money’s worth with a cabin that plays in the big league. Slightly redesigned for 2014, mostly to accommodate new gadgets, the Centennial offers cabin materials almost as cushy as the stuff in a Lexus, although most consumers won’t be able to notice the difference. The design itself lacks any distinctive features apart from the new BMW-inspired joystick shifter and rotary-dial multimedia controls. We liked the layout of the rear seats much more than in the Lexus though, with its nicely-integrated dual LCD screens, reclining seats and cooler box in our loaded 4-seater test car.
The tech is also easy enough to figure out, for the most part, and you even get upscale little options such as doors that suck in and close by themselves if you just shut them lightly. You can also spec up the car with features like an LCD gauge cluster, adaptive cruise, around-view parking cameras and LED headlights. There’s more options, like the haptic-feedback steering-wheel buttons and the multi-colour heads-up display, that we’ve never seen before in any other car.
Hyundai was so confident about their product that they made us drive all the way from Dubai to Abu Dhabi, and then made us do laps on the Yas Marina F1 racetrack!
The highway drive was comfortable, with a very compliant ride even with the optional 19-inch alloys. The car was quiet for the most part, but some wind noise was noticeable at speeds above 120 kph.
The new 5.0-litre direct-injection V8 engine offers decent power, but you will never feel a kick in the back when accelerating. The 8-speed automatic felt a bit confused at times, preferring to stick to higher gears, as it takes ages to downshift when you put the pedal to the metal. It’s possible the brand new cars take time to learn the driver’s behaviour.
At the track, after a brief lunch, we got to try out the car on three different circuit layouts, using different sections of Yas Marina. The two longer tracks were mildly amusing, as we weren’t really moving much beyond 120 kph, kept in check by a pace car. The sharper corners were handled just fine, as the stability control made sure understeer was kept at a minimum simply by cutting off the power smoothly.
We had the most fun at the third track, a smaller course that was full of sharp corners and there wasn’t enough space to get the speeds too high anyway, so the pace car didn’t hold us back. The Centennial is by no means a driver’s car, but with the stability control and sport mode left on, it offers unflappably safe handling, with moderate body roll and trustworthy brakes. Whatever lean there is on a turn is quickly quelled as the road straightens out. The body movements are well-controlled, not feeling artificially-manipulated like we noticed in the Lexus LS. The Centennial will never keep up with a BMW 7-Series on the corners, but it doesn’t need to. Nobody takes their full-size sedan to the track.
The Centennial is an excellent effort by a company that is keen to showcase what they’re capable of now. The only thing holding back this car in this region is the lack of a premium badge, as proven by the likes of the Volkswagen Phaeton and the Honda Legend. If that doesn’t bother you then, for the money, the sheer amount of metal and microchips you get for the price is impossible to beat.
For prices and specs, check out the Hyundai Centennial buyer guide.
Comments
mohammad
Hmm….this or the new S class?? Hmmmmmmmmmmm……
Shibu Daniel
Well, it’s cheaper than a decently specced E-Class.
Abdirahman
Great to see that in UAE you get Gasoline Direct Injection GDI , here in Qatar we do not get that , they brought 4.6 Liter engine. May be the fuel is better in UAE than Qatar.
anyway is see hyundai Genesis in the last picture is it with Gaselone direct injection technlogy ?
Mashfique Hussain Chowdhury
Yep, it’s GDI. But maybe the new engines haven’t reached Qatar yet? The 4.6 was offered here until February at least.
Joe
Mash is correct, the GDI versions just started to arrive this year, so you should be getting these in a month or two probably.
Anon
you are wrong in Qatar they do offer the 5.0 GDI
Abdirahman
Lol that comment was atleast one month ago ,and thumps down as well for it, also i asked them personaly and went to Qatar Fair show but they said they do not have it right now. never checked with them since then so i hope you look at the time of the comment
marc
these frigging asian copycats.
outside outgoing s-class, inside lexus
frigging_asian
and your point of being non-asian??? Atleast they can build their own car, tv, cellphone, etc. What about your country?
Ironman
^lol
Kamran
Hyundai has finally copied the unique to BMW joystick gear lever.It sucks on this Centennial!!…. 🙂
Sri Krishna
volkswagen + toyota + honda + merc = hyundai
Sri Krishna
Hyundai are imitators look how they have imitated merc in the front honda at the back
Joe
You saw the new Accord from the back? Its nearly a direct copy from the Genesis Sedan.
Get used to it, any new design will have similarities with another already released car.
v6turbo
And still when i see old Lexus, suddenly i think its Merc. And new Avalon with Ford Focus bottom grill, and Ford Focus with Aston Martin Bottom grill, lol…
Sri Krishna
Joe just have a look at the 2002 Accord from the back genesis has copied that from accord yes i do agree that the body has been copied from the genesis but genesis itself copied the tail lamps from the 2002 accord
SHAFIQ
you’ve have read the dsiclaimer on movies same applies here 😀
any resemblence to anything dead or alive is pure coincidence 😉
vivek
^^^now that, I like!
tchebereeyanth
Come to Riyadh. there are more coreeans here than corollas anywhere else!!!
habib
Hyundai is best know a days most cars seen in riyadh is Sonata drive arabia make road test for sonata 2009-2010 model plz
Bilal
Which is better, Genesis 2015 or Centennial 2014?