Hyundai’s N division keeps turning out some of the most interesting performance cars on sale today, right down to its performance crossover, the Kona N. Today’s featured Members’ Ride comes from the aptly named Nsane In The MembraNe, who’s enjoyed its his Hyundai Kona N in its intended habitat: the race track, duh.
(Welcome to Members’ Rides. This is the weekly feature where we look at people who became members of the site by signing up here and parting with a little of their hard-earned dough to keep The Autopian going. Our plan is to do these every week! Today it’s Nsane In The MembraNe’s turn!)
“But wait, isn’t that a sensible family CUV?” you ask. Well, yes, but it’s the Kona N! “N,” you fools! It’s right there in the name! The N division got its single-letter name from two things: the Namyang location of Hyundai’s research and development center, and the Nürburgring, one of my favorite race tracks on earth. You’re playing yourself if you think the Kona N is only for kid-hauling and grocery runs.
Anyway, we’ve come to expect hot track-focused versions of higher-end SUVs like the Porsche Macan GTS, so why shouldn’t Hyundai follow suit? It’s a classic case where too many people ask why, and too few people ask why not. Both Nsane and I are convinced that the Kona N is the kind of car that’s Holy Grail fodder for the future.
Sadly, we’re still waiting to see if the new 2024 Kona will get another N-variant, so maybe talking with a current Kona N owner will help force Hyundai’s hand. Take it away, Nsane In The MembraNe!
Tell us a little bit about yourself and how you got into cars.
I was born and raised in the D.C. area and still live here. I’m happily married, a lover of all four-legged friends, and my other hobbies include sports, music, and cooking. I got into cars when I was a kiddo. It started with my aunt, who’s had an NA Miata since it was brand new. When I was little, she’d let me row the gears for her and I actually wound up learning to drive stick on it back in 2020. So, things really came full circle.
One of my uncles drag races as well. Last I heard, he still has his monstrous Dodge Dart build that he’s had since I was little. I think it was a ’68 Dart, but I could be wrong. He took me to the drag strip when I was around 11 or 12, which obviously blew my mind. I also had another uncle who was a German car enthusiast. He got me several Porsche books when I was around that same age.
Although I wouldn’t call him an enthusiast per se, my dad has always owned and enjoyed quirky cars, too. He had a manual Saab 93 for years and has since moved on to an assortment of Jeep Grand Cherokees (shout out to DT) and big Audi sedans, with a few Volvos in between.
Today, I like to spend time on the weekends detailing my Kona N and going for spirited drives on choice backroads in the area. My dad and I will attend a local cars and coffee together every now and then as well. I don’t have a ton of free time these days, but I often like to spend chunks of it here with you knuckleheads or watching car YouTube. Naturally, my favorites are Regular Car Reviews and SavageGeese, but I also enjoy Throttle House and a weekly dose of Doug DeMuro, who grew up a few miles from me, although I’ve never met him in person.
So, why did you choose the Kona N?
As the commentariat knows, I more or less wound up in the Kona N as a compromise. In 2020, I bought a brand new Mk7.5 VW GTI, which was more or less a car I’d wanted since I was a teenager. However, I quickly became disenchanted with it. It had serious issues with misfires and other German car gremlins. It also got me more interested in driving actual sports cars, which unfortunately wound up making me less fond of it.
Shortly after buying it, I drove a 5th-gen Camaro, learned to drive stick on my aunt’s NA Miata, and started taking the GTI for serious backroad rips in an undisclosed location that were, of course, always within the confines of the law. The combination of the mechanical issues, experiencing more engaging cars, and the fact that VW essentially only lets you drive at 7.5/10 stock left me wanting more.
I originally set my sights on a GR Corolla, but the enormous and expensive headache it would be to get one became apparent quickly. As a result, I checked out an Elantra N on a Sunday afternoon to take a look at the competition. I wound up being absolutely smitten. Between the steering feel, the raucous exhaust and engine note (for a 4-popper), the way the DCT banged off shifts, the quickness, and the mechanical grip (praise be to the N differential), I was sold.
I then had a conversation with my wife, who said that her condition for me getting out of a car and into a new one after only two years—which is objectively dumb, financially speaking—was that it had to be a useful package. She said the Elantra N was juvenile looking (correct, at least until the 2024s get here) and asked if they had any other N cars. The Veloster was naturally out of the question because of its weird layout, and then it dawned on me…guess what, my love? There’s an N CUV!
I then earned the coveted wife blessing and managed to track one down a few weeks later at an MSRP-only dealership that also gave me $500 off sticker. I drove it, it wound up being about 95% as good as the Elantra N, and that’s all she wrote. I’ve now had it for 18 months and 11,000 miles and I’m as happy with it today as I was the day I drove it off the lot.
What are your favorite things about the Kona N so far?
I think what I like most about it is that it can essentially be a regular car when you want it to be. In Normal and Eco drive modes, it more or less acts like a plain old Kona. It has plenty of room. The seats are comfortable. The Harman Kardon sound system is pretty good. You can eat up road trip miles like you could in any commuter so long as you can put up with the ride, which is pretty rough. There’s no way around it, unfortunately. In its softest mode, it’s still a bit jolting, its middle mode is for track use or smooth backroad blasts only, and its harshest mode will send you directly to the chiropractor. With a baby on the way, I’m considering putting some aftermarket springs on it that soften things up a bit.
That being said, when you want to drive hard, it’s only a click away. I always use my custom mode and set the parameters to match whatever road I’m on. Generally speaking, I have the engine, exhaust, and steering in Sport +, the transmission either in Sport or Sport +, and the suspension in Normal or, occasionally, Sport. It’s an absolute terror on a backroad. You can also fully defeat traction control, although I’ve only ever had it intervene once when I left it on in Sport mode. Make no mistake, this car will let you boogie.
When you filled in the Members’ Rides survey, you mentioned plans to take the Kona N on track for the first time. How did that go?
I took it to a track attack day at Dominion Raceway in September, and it absolutely ripped. We lapped for about an hour and it had no issues. The engine didn’t overheat, the brakes didn’t fade, power delivery was even the entire time, and it was a menace in the twisties. One of the instructors kept moving it into faster groupings and it was keeping up with much more powerful cars, albeit in a pretty controlled setting. After we were done several folks came over to ask me about it, because no one thought the goofy looking crossover had any business being there until they couldn’t keep up with it.
Therein lies my favorite thing about the car: no one knows what it is. People more or less ignore it. It’s fairly anonymous and in its softer settings, it blends right in. It draws almost no attention whatsoever. But at the click of one of the N buttons, it turns into an unhinged maniac. I love the damn thing to death and I plan on driving it for at least another few years. I’m also going back to Dominion in the spring for some of their high performance driver education (HPDE) days where I plan on taking my track driving a few steps further. I’m sure it’ll do great and will continue to function as a great daily in the interim. The N cars are something special and I encourage everyone to give them a try because the intersection of fun, capability, and value is as good as it gets.
We love a good factory sleeper! Let’s daydream for a bit, though. What would be in your dream garage?
A Bronco Raptor for stupid capability, a Lexus LC500 for fun, and a BMW M550i as a daily that splits the difference.
Thanks, Nsane! If you’re a member and want to be highlighted, please check your email for a link to a survey you can fill out. If you don’t want to be featured, that’s also fine. Go here and join today!
I’ve always enjoyed your comments here and it’s great to see an attainable member’s ride. As a DC area Veloster N owner, I approve! The Hyundai Ns are special cars full of character. Coincidentally I also tried and failed to get a Toyota dealer to let me put a deposit down on a loaded GR Corolla core at something approaching MSRP. Now a little hobby of mine is reading the negatives in GR Corolla reviews to quell my FOMO and reinforce my Veloster N confirmation bias. 😉
Oh my latest GRC copium is that they’re lousy track cars. They have significant cooling issues with the differentials that apparently mean they’re only good for a few laps. My Kona N managed an entire track day without issues, therefore N>GR, duh.
Honestly if I were to go back to the unhinged compact well I’d probably wind up in a CTR/Integra Type S, but only if I could get either at MSRP and unfortunately that doesn’t seem like it’s ever going to be a thing.
Nsane is one of my favorite commentators and I’ve enjoyed they way he has shared how a humble Kona N can still get the heart pumping while providing needed practicality.
Also, thrilled that Stef is with us and writing these articles. Let the automotive weirdo flag fly!
Love that the vehicle is basically a ‘sleeper’! Nobody expects much from it, shift it into N mode and boom! Drop the hammer
Glad to see that the Kona lives up to the N badge.
I’ve got a ’20 Veloster N, and the way you describe your car fits perfectly. So good at the dual role daily/track toy.
Only done AutoX so far with mine, but it’s easily the most tail happy car I’ve driven out there. But was also able to do full family car duty when my daughter was born and it was our only car for a little bit. Fit 3 adults, a baby, and a jogging stroller in that thing. Far more practical than people expect.
At the last autox I went to I got beat by a Mazda CX30 on the first few laps. Went to talk to the guy and the thing was sick. Lowered 3 inches, on sticky tires, tuned.
Anyways, point is that it seems like if your SO doesn’t want you to get the sporty car, you get the CUV version that’s exactly the same thing but pretending to be an SUV.
Lowered CUVs look so cool, too. That CX-30’s gotta be a pretty neat ride.
I had to see the badges to know what it was- it just looked like a Mazda 3 with a bit of plastic and larger tires.
Nice to see this vehicle getting used to its utmost, with all its “personalities” getting to do their stuff.
That was a good read. Thanks Nsane and Stef!
Nice ride!
Great story Nsane! I enjoyed your well-phrased rationale but esp. your example. As in, you’re urban.
I sometimes feel like I’m one of the few people here who doesn’t have a huge garage with person-high red toolboxes, a drag strip they created themselves in their back yard, etc.
It inspires me to see someone living the enthusiast life so well in a situation that requires a fair amount of forward thinking and adaptability to make it all work, which you clearly do.
I feel the same way sometimes so right there with you. It’s easy to say everything should be V8, manual, 2 door, etc. when you’re single, have a garage, and live in the country. Things are a lot different when you live in the city and have a bunch of responsibilities.
That’s why it’s great that stuff like the Kona N, GTI, etc. exist. There are a few reasonably affordable cars left that let you have your cake and eat it too. And I’m also not ashamed to say the DCT in my car is amazing and was a big selling point. I spend a good hour and a half of most days when I’m in the office and it’s nice to not have to worry about a clutch then and still be able to take full control when I want to.
*hour and a half of most days when I’m in the office in traffic
To my thinking, it’s the modern version of the gentleman racer ethos, which is irresistible to me perhaps because it paradoxically perhaps best reflects our reality – that our lives are largely about pursuing multiple goals, of which cars are just one.
A very good one, absolutely, but we each have other pursuits and goals that matter, so at best, the true enthusiast choice is often one that charts a moderate course between the extremes – it’s trackable, it’s everyday useful, and is easy to live with so you get to use it all the time in a lot of different ways. Seems to me a fulfilling way to engage with our machines.
Congratulations! Love the N cars- I like the look of the Kona over the elantra (2024 looks better). At the top of my list for potential new cars next year. Plus, 10 year warranty is nice.
Congratulations, Nsane! Well written there. Sounds like you actually do have your cake—and it eats, too! And, I appreciate your advocacy of the Ns: without it, I never would have talked to that lady at our C&C with an ElantraN. I met an enthusiast I wouldn’t have otherwise, and she got to show off her cool headlight surrounds and the other bit & bobs. Kinda made my day.
Glad to have made you a friend! The Ns are super cool and comparatively very affordable, especially in an era where Civic Type Rs, Golf Rs, and GR Corollas are selling in the high 40s/low to mid 50s. People (rightly) complain that manufacturers don’t really listen to enthusiasts much these days. Hyundai of all people did, and the cars check a lot of boxes.
They’re track-able out of the box, have tremendous steering feel/feedback, actually sound like something, can be driven at 10/10ths without needing to be modified, a manual is the default transmission in the EN/sadly deceased Veloster N, and the 2 liter turbo’s a peach. It’s not particularly refined and it’s rather inefficient for what it is, but it’s got charisma for days and a beefy power band.
I’m always here to sing the praises of the N’s because I still feel like they’re a little under appreciated in the grand scheme of things, but that’s changing. The last C&C I went to had 4 or 5. There are DOZENS of us! DOZENS!
Thanks Stef! This was super fun. I encourage my fellow members to submit their rides too 🙂
Cool story, bro! And I mean that sincerely!
Lalalalalalala, nothing to see here. Just some member littering another thread with a link to the Torch Medical Fund. Donate today Ya Filthy Animals!