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Hyundai i30 Fastback 2018 review
Dec 6th 2017, 00:01

Hyundai i30 Fastback

The i30 has previously been offered in hatchback and estate form, now there's a fastback
The Hyundai i30 Fastback combines good looks with sensible practicalities, but its dynamic charm is what appeals the most As the name implies, this premise here is quite simple. Hyundai already offers its i30 as either a hatchback or an estate, and now there's a third body style: a fastback.Compared to the five-door hatch – itself revised for 2017 – the roofline is lowered by roughly an inch and tapers gently at the rear. Along with the elongated nose, complete with lower-set grille, it means the Fastback is 115mm longer than the hatch. The rear haunches are also more pronounced, with wrap-around rear lights, and there are two new wheel designs, of 17 and 18 inches.Is all that enough to make duck-tailed i30 Fastback a thing of beauty? Perhaps, albeit in a slightly pokey fashion that leaves one in no doubt about the car's hatchback origins.Nevertheless, the big claim from Hyundai is that the Fastback 'democratises advanced design', tacitly referencing the swooping likes of Audi's A5 Sportback and Kia Stinger, which cost rather a lot more. Hyundai also reckons itself to be the first brand to hit up the volume segment with a five-door coupe, conveniently forgetting about the existence of the Mazda 3 Fastback, which we rather like.You'd be forgiven for thinking the changes go no deeper than the metalwork, but you'd be wrong. The chassis sits 5mm lower than before and the suspension has been stiffened a touch in line with the Fastback's marginally more sporting bent. In the UK, the engine line-up will be petrol-only at first (and possibly, ever), with a 1.0-litre turbo unit touting 118bhp and a similarly blown 1.4-litre engine offering a more wholesome 137bhp. A six-speed manual can be had with either powerplant, though the more powerful of the two is also offered with Hyundai's seven-speed dual-clutcher.Equipment is decently generous, with the base-spec SE Nav 1.0 T-GDi featuring an 8-inch touchscreen with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. There's also wireless phone charging and a rear-view camera, though to indulge in the luxury of artificial leather seats you'll need to upgrade to Premium spec, which adds LED headlights, too. Top-of-the-line Premium SE cars get a panoramic sunroof.It's worth mentioning that safety equipment is equally generous, with lane departure warning, forward collision warning, lane-keep assist and autonomous emergency braking standard across the range. Premium-spec cars also get blind-spot warning. 

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