Hyundai plans high-performance line for 2017

Korean brand hopes to burnish its reputation with new division led by the former chief engineer of BMW’s M operation

Hyundai N cars will represent the cutting edge of the firm’s performance effort in the coming years, in much the same way the M Division works at BMW.

Hyundai plans to begin selling a high-performance line in 2017 to burnish its reputation amid flagging sales. helmed by the M Series chief engineer hired from BMW. Led by Albert Biermann, who joined the company from BMW in April, the focus on vehicle performance comes two years after chairman Chung Mong-Koo promoted Peter Schreyer to oversee design at both Hyundai and affiliate Kia Motors Corp.

The carmaker is showcasing three models from its N-brand high-performance line this week at the Frankfurt International Motor Show. The push is a continuation of the carmaker’s years of efforts to upgrade its image.

“The next step is to increase the performance and to give our cars, when you drive the car, a little bit more of a driving character,” Biermann (58), told reporters last week. “We are really going for the established high-performance brands and want to compete with them.” Hyundai plans to improve and refine everything from the clutch paddle to the suspension when building N-brand vehicles to “change the character of the car,” Biermann said.

The car firm is considering development of a new engine for the N series and may offer models in different segments, including SUVs, he said. Hyundai may also make hybrid N models, he said. In Frankfurt this week, Hyundai is showing a preview of the latest World Rally Championship challenger, based on the new generation i20. The second and third models will be the RM15 concept and the N 2025 Vision Gran Turismo concept, developed for Sony’s PlayStation racing game.

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Although the N series will target a niche market of car enthusiasts, the technology will be incorporated into other Hyundai vehicles, enhancing the performance of the entire lineup, Biermann said. “Once they find out how robust and reliable our high- performance cars are on the race track, they will buy our car,” said Biermann, who spent more than three decades at BMW before joining Hyundai. “We will make some wild boys and girls at Hyundai N.”

- (Bloomberg)