2022 Hyundai Ioniq Hybrid: Regular Car Reviews

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024
  • Get Entered to WIN this 50th Anniversary Mustang GT!
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    DEADLINE to ENTER is May 25th @ 11:59pm (PST).
    Regular Car Reviews explores the 2022 Hyundai Ioniq Hybrid, a car that welcomes you
    like a Japanese vending machine, and offers a different hybrid experience than meets the eye. But whois this car for? Is it better than other hybrids like the Prius? Let’s figure this thing out.
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @zdengvox
    @zdengvox Před 2 lety +1382

    Hyundai is really making cars. They are some of the cars ever made, and this is definitely one of them.
    It has looks, technologies and performance. It is a car choice in 2022.

    • @gluttonousmaximus9048
      @gluttonousmaximus9048 Před 2 lety +65

      Damn! Hot take you've got, almost sounds like it's a car or somethin'

    • @zdengvox
      @zdengvox Před 2 lety +68

      @@gluttonousmaximus9048 New Ioniq is a step in a direction, which makes it the car that I have ever seen. I know many may disagree, but that's just how I feel about this car.

    • @whburton1
      @whburton1 Před 2 lety +6

      They may still be making shitty cars, but you are having issues making words ROFLMAO

    • @rapu4
      @rapu4 Před 2 lety +23

      @@whburton1 aye mate these cars are actually pretty good, i'd take an ioniq over a prius any day

    • @lego4virgo
      @lego4virgo Před 2 lety +23

      Yes, this is very...car.

  • @skyemaster8802
    @skyemaster8802 Před 2 lety +1655

    This is certainly one of the cars of all time.

  • @BokBarber
    @BokBarber Před 2 lety +480

    Mr. Regular is the type of guy who can record his lines while clearly in the bathroom and I'll still watch the review.

    • @michaeldougan2129
      @michaeldougan2129 Před 2 lety +28

      Let's be honest here, that's not outside the realm of possibilities for him.

    • @quillmaurer6563
      @quillmaurer6563 Před 2 lety +20

      His videos don't have actual farts in them anymore, like they sometimes used to. Or that one (can't remember what) where he was scrambling to finish recording the voice-over because he needed to shit.

    • @canadiangunner0190
      @canadiangunner0190 Před 2 lety +14

      @@quillmaurer6563 Subaru BRAT

    • @efrandsen72
      @efrandsen72 Před 2 lety +2

      Xbox achievement unlocked

    • @BokBarber
      @BokBarber Před 2 lety +2

      The acoustics tell the story.

  • @jordanwalter6570
    @jordanwalter6570 Před 2 lety +372

    As someone who owns one of these, I can confirm that the Regen paddles are the most fun part of it. It is possible to get better than the EPA mpg rating. I got 67 mpg one day, granted I was driving through a construction zone with slow traffic

    • @RegularCars
      @RegularCars  Před 2 lety +61

      For real? your got 67mpg?

    • @jordanwalter6570
      @jordanwalter6570 Před 2 lety +62

      @@RegularCars yeah! I usually average between 52 and 57 (40-45 in the winter) but in slower traffic it can stay in EV mode longer. I wish I had the plug in so I could drive more than 3 miles on electric

    • @louiearmstrong
      @louiearmstrong Před 2 lety +20

      @@RegularCars I had a Ioniq Lyft driver claim he gets 60mpg doing Lyft/Uber around Philly suburbs

    • @fmccloud
      @fmccloud Před 2 lety +25

      @@RegularCars If you apply the same focus you give with shifting a manual as you do managing a hybrid car, you can squeeze a lot of MPG out of these cars. Managing the regen and throttle constantly in my Prius nets me 50 MPG on a 18 year old car and I have the same amount of fun as I did in my Volvo S70 T5 M5.
      Plus regen is second nature for truckers. B mode is like pulling the Jake brake on a truck, slowing without the brakes is fun.

    • @ericrodriguez4101
      @ericrodriguez4101 Před 2 lety +13

      @@RegularCars Also an Ioniq owner who has hit 67 mpg, can confirm with pic as proof

  • @criswithanh
    @criswithanh Před 2 lety +456

    Of all the cars Mr. Regular has reviewed, this one is definitely the most recent

    • @ericbitzer5247
      @ericbitzer5247 Před 2 lety +9

      Yes. Yes it is. Until the next one.

    • @markmiller3279
      @markmiller3279 Před 2 lety +4

      But also one of the oldest new cars. They've made these for many years now.

    • @gr6e
      @gr6e Před 2 lety

      That's not true at all

    • @davemichael3042
      @davemichael3042 Před 4 měsíci

      P😊😊​@@ericbitzer5247

  • @dangualtieri
    @dangualtieri Před 2 lety +265

    I need a second car that is the anthesis of my Wrangler. Comfortable, great on gas, practical, inexpensive to own, quiet, and a great highway cruiser. Time and time again, I've ended up looking at this.

    • @RegularCars
      @RegularCars  Před 2 lety +93

      And the lack of a fragile hyundai CVT is a plus too

    • @nobyl8163
      @nobyl8163 Před 2 lety +7

      Gonna put in a plug for my Toyota Yaris iA too! Pretty sure rcr reviewed it but it was a while ago. >40mpg hwy without a hybrid system

    • @malrofo
      @malrofo Před 2 lety +14

      TOYOTA COROLLA

    • @xPhantom1786
      @xPhantom1786 Před 2 lety

      My set up - gen 2 2004 prius and my 21 ridgeline in the garage

    • @Turshin
      @Turshin Před 2 lety +1

      2nd gen Lexus GS 300. They run forever and are very comfortable and half the price of this brand new "An Car" or probably cheaper.

  • @geigerzoola6642
    @geigerzoola6642 Před 2 lety +320

    The Hyundai Ioniq is definitely the most car ever made

    • @expressway95
      @expressway95 Před 2 lety

      Willing to bet that no PHV or cab driver has ever used the regen braking thingy

    • @comboballer
      @comboballer Před 2 lety

      '*one of them

    • @markmiller3279
      @markmiller3279 Před 2 lety

      @@expressway95 Serious Uber and Lyft drivers love to maximize their mpg. I'd not be at all surprised if they used them.

  • @parmijo
    @parmijo Před 2 lety +34

    I rented an Ioniq Hybrid in Vegas last Nov. It got a real world 56mpg average. I went over 600 miles before filling it back up. Awesome range. More traditional than Prius hybrid.

  • @kevinpatrickmacnutt
    @kevinpatrickmacnutt Před 2 lety +178

    I actually think they are decent looking as far as a simple commuter goes. 0-60 in 8.9 seconds is decent for a practical car.

    • @timbit72
      @timbit72 Před 2 lety +18

      An comment befitting this car.

    • @_RiseAgainst
      @_RiseAgainst Před 2 lety +15

      8 sec 0-60 will always be my minimum. And I'm surprised they still make cars slower than that. Except suburu, they make some "10 sec cars"

    • @user59371
      @user59371 Před 2 lety +14

      9 sec 0-60 is getting into “dangerously slow” territory

    • @lilwillie428
      @lilwillie428 Před 2 lety +3

      @@_RiseAgainst hey my Impreza is faster than 10, I can almost get it to 9 if I drop the clutch hard enough and rev it high enough. Your right tho, having to drop into 3ed to pass people gets old quick

    • @J.Gainez
      @J.Gainez Před 2 lety +1

      @@user59371 just imagine the merging speeds lmao like 4 seconds 40-55 and most places are 65

  • @andyking894
    @andyking894 Před 2 lety +43

    Hyundai Ioniq - official car of "this cubicle is my dream job."

  • @thegamingpigeon3216
    @thegamingpigeon3216 Před 11 měsíci +3

    My dad has a 2022 Ioniq Hybrid. If you drive a ton, it's fantastic. Beyond that, there's better cars, but not for the fuel efficiency you'll get. It averages 58-59mpg. It drops in the winter to the 40's, can get lower if it's really cold, but it's rare to get it below 40mpg in most places, but we live in Wisconsin. But in the summer? My dad had a picture of it once, going down the interstate on an 83 degree day, no wind doing 75 mph, he was averaging 78mpg. It is also INCREDIBLY quiet. You won't know your car is turned on when it's actually on.

  • @InvictvsNox
    @InvictvsNox Před 2 lety +139

    This is definitely one of my favorite episodes as of late, great writing

    • @RegularCars
      @RegularCars  Před 2 lety +28

      Thanks!

    • @stevegredell1123
      @stevegredell1123 Před 2 lety +1

      @@RegularCars This was definitely AN EPISODE
      JK I loved it

    • @TheFlyingPineapple
      @TheFlyingPineapple Před 2 lety

      Ruined by absolutely shit-tier audio

    • @evanever
      @evanever Před 2 lety +3

      @@TheFlyingPineapple if you aren't watching this with no headphones on public transport, are you even a real fan?

  • @barryervin8536
    @barryervin8536 Před 2 lety +145

    Hybrid cars make lots of sense. Unlike an EV, you never have to search for a charging station and plug it in and wait for it to charge. But unlike a straight gasoline powered car, it has the ability to store energy to be tapped when you need it while getting great gas mileage the rest of the time. At my advanced age I can't see myself ever owning an EV but I have come around to the idea of a hybrid now that there's a bigger choice and most of the early bugs have been worked out. As for the "dull and boring" styling, an interesting thing about cars is that you can't see them while you're driving them and I spend almost no time gazing adoringly at my car when it's parked.

    • @alanmoore78
      @alanmoore78 Před 2 lety +16

      I think the plug in hybrid is the best possible stepping stone to a full EV. It does what the hybrid does, plus you can plug it in for a couple dozen miles of electric only operation on the next trip. Gets you used to plugging the car in at night or when you'll be parked awhile. Got a ten mile commute and somewhere to plug in at work...you might not have to buy gas for many weeks...which introduces a NEW problem when that oxygenated gas loses it's energy and starts gumming things up.

    • @needfuldoer4531
      @needfuldoer4531 Před 2 lety +13

      That's why cars like the Volt will burn gas after X miles or Y time of EV-only operation, even if they're charged. It's not an issue, just the third or fourth round of "oh well yeah but" FUD that skeptics will come up with when you explain hybrids to them.
      Been driving a second gen Volt for years. I get 50 miles of range in the summer, 40 MPG on gas, and 300 foot-pounds of torque to play with. Charging it at 20 cents a kilowatt costs the same as if gas was $2/gal. I have a whole rant on deck about how it should have been a powertrain option for the Equinox instead of a niche small hatchback, but I have no complaints. It's the daily-est daily that GM ever dailied.

    • @alanmoore78
      @alanmoore78 Před 2 lety +2

      @@needfuldoer4531 The Volt and other PHEV's are definitely the way to go. Equinox EV is the one I'm most excited for based on projected looks and low base price, and for the few times a year I NEED to go more than 150 miles a day, well, I have other vehicles that can do that, or I can schedule a charging stop. It's really NOT much of a lifestyle change to go full EV it's just that first few weeks of remembering to plug it in, planning ahead for trips that exceed 80% of the range, and knowing or learning where charging stations are where you plan to be. It's a bit of culture shock and people fear that.

    • @markmiller3279
      @markmiller3279 Před 2 lety +1

      @@alanmoore78 Depends on your driving habits. If you have a commute, a PHEV makes a lot of sense, especially if you can charge at work, too. We live in a city and our car's limited mileage mostly comes from drives out of town, well beyond the battery's range. For us a cheaper regular hybrid like this makes sense. I've also looked at the PHEV Ioniq, but the bigger battery causes the cargo area floor to be about four inches higher, so the cargo area is very shallow. It wouldn't be adequate for road trips, as you can't load even smaller suitcases on their sides. It would be a challenge to carry even our modest luggage.

    • @reinbeers5322
      @reinbeers5322 Před 2 lety +2

      You don't spend time just staring at your car?

  • @jackobora3193
    @jackobora3193 Před 2 lety +35

    The Ioniq was kind of attractive when it first came out, but clearly looks like a last-gen car now. I think it's getting a refresh this coming year, and it's very needed. That said, it's a car your mom will borrow for the day and then tell all her friends at the book club about how nice it was while simultaneously forgetting what it's called or who makes it.

    • @notisac3149
      @notisac3149 Před rokem

      Actually, they stopped making this kind of Ioniq. They have an entirely new line of Ioniqs that are electric only, very different from the original.

  • @PieterDamsteegt
    @PieterDamsteegt Před 2 lety +14

    I rented this on a trip in California, helped me not notice the insane fuel prices... and was consistently getting an average of 59 mpg

  • @Shiruvan
    @Shiruvan Před 2 lety +130

    the slight echoing here makes me feeling like Mr. Regular is stuck in that 'THERE IS ALWAYS A FUEL SHORTAGE' mode in the classic Mini review

  • @ness3415
    @ness3415 Před 2 lety +19

    Never thought I'd relate to a video so much. 2016-1/2 Cruze LT with a 6speed manual. It just simply exists, no issues, no fun, no frills, 40mpgs, it just exists in this invisible space that nobody looks twice at, and that is fine by me. It is my pragmatic vehicle of choice since 2015, gets me where i need to be safely and saving money so I can enjoy myself elsewhere.

  • @KillbillyA
    @KillbillyA Před 2 lety +35

    You nailed it in the end. Imagine being a dad of few small kids, with stressful time consuming job, thats FUCKING DEAD just from his everyday duties as father and employee. There are milions of us. Yes you will always whine after few beers after your old classic interesting cars and motorcycles you used to have in your twenties, but you WILL NOT want them again, cause you have ZERO time and energy and money to waste. You just need reliable comfortable affordable transport that doesnt require any effort to maintain.
    If this shit happens to you one day, welcome, youre the real adult now.

    • @deusexaethera
      @deusexaethera Před 2 lety +5

      I go through this and I only have one kid. To handle 2 kids I would need either a stay at home mom, or an au pair, or a side honey. Though really those could all be the same woman.

    • @KillbillyA
      @KillbillyA Před 2 lety +2

      @@deusexaethera nah, thats rookie stuff, 2 working parents with 2-3 kids is still standard, i live in a part of the world where it is impossible to feed the family just from 1 salary, what you are talking about is the american dream valid 1950-1990 I guess? Thats gone forever. The other thing is, in todays world even if you had a stay at home mom, she would probably do nothing anyway, cause most women nowadays dont want to. They are either forced to work by financial situation or marry rich guy and expect servants to do all the work. There are exceptions off course.

    • @ohfouroneone
      @ohfouroneone Před 2 lety +2

      I'm a young person with 0 children and still would prefer an electric/automatic car. What is fun for me while driving is the sights, talking to people in the car, listening to good music etc. What is NOT fun is changing gears, stressing about how fast I'm going or who to overtake, etc. I guess gearheads will think that makes me not like driving or not a good driver, but really I don't care. Some people like golf because they want to hit the ball hard, some just like to walk around outside for a bit, both are worthy in my book.

    • @KillbillyA
      @KillbillyA Před 2 lety +3

      @@ohfouroneone well you obviously are not a gearhead, its totally fine, its not for everybody,you probably have totally different hobbies. What I was talking about is people like me, gearheads that gave up, cause it just doesnt go with busy adult lifestyle. The day has 24 hours and there just isnt room for tinkering with the machine and fun driving around, the priorities change. Most of us hope we will be those old dudes that got back to it when kids leave the house.

  • @xsharpy
    @xsharpy Před 2 lety +26

    In the days of $5 dollar gas prices and cars going 10k over MSRP, I can totally understand that sentiment regarding just buying a car that is relatively cheap, reliable and gets 40+ mpg. I have a Jeep now, but I'm eyeing a PHEV Mitsubishi Outlander whenever they finally refresh it.

    • @Brian-om2hh
      @Brian-om2hh Před 2 lety +4

      $5 dollars for a gallon of gas? Jeez, try double that. That's what we pay in the UK.....

    • @rufs6468
      @rufs6468 Před 2 lety

      one of the mechanics I work with (motorcycle, not car) has a PHEV Outlander and loves it. Good mpg and heaps of space.

  • @seththomas9105
    @seththomas9105 Před 2 lety +9

    Kool. This is like Dynamic braking on a diesel-electric or electric locomotive. When the traction motors become "dynamo's" or generators and put currant back into the resistance grid or overhead wire. This has been around in railroad locomotives since the late 40's and is used every day on trains. Great idea.

  • @wildmikefilms
    @wildmikefilms Před 2 lety +18

    The fact that the HV battery can charge the 12v battery if it goes dead is great. But Mr. Regular is wrong about needing a ton of juice to start the car. It needs very little. Only enough to close the main relays from the HV battery to the electric motor. These cars dont have starters. The HV motor turns over the engine. At least if these are anything like the prius.

    • @Bartonovich52
      @Bartonovich52 Před 2 lety

      I was wondering about this.

    • @AsekiBekovy
      @AsekiBekovy Před 2 lety +2

      THIS. And it of course also answers the alternator/tensioner style question. You can't see ist because it doesn't exist. DC converter from HV to 12 V, no need for an alternator.

    • @xPorkchops007x
      @xPorkchops007x Před 2 lety +1

      I believe my 2020 Ioniq Plug in Hybrid only charges the 12V battery if I'm in drive mode. If I sit parked and drain the battery (which I did recently), the 12V won't be charged by the EV battery. I had to take off a piece of the door handle, use the manual key, unlock the back door from the inside, and climb into the trunk to reach the 12V battery to jump start it.

  • @jonathanmarquise422
    @jonathanmarquise422 Před 2 lety +10

    I actually had one of these moments this weekend. after 2 years of ownership, I sold my Lexus LS430. it was one of my dream cars growing up, and I was fortunate enough to own it, drive it for two years trouble free, put 15k miles on it, and sell it for a grand less than I bought it for. I realized that owning a 16 year old flagship luxury car was not the best of ideas. toyotas, while reliable, are subject to aging. every time something wore out on that car I would look up what it cost to replace, and it was a fortune. my next car is going to be something like a corolla or a civic. if I ever want something like the LS again, it'll be a weekend toy.

  • @tjnucnuc
    @tjnucnuc Před 2 lety +16

    Hey I think it’s pretty cool that the Ioniq comes with a 7 speed dual clutch transmission. It’s more fun than say your average Corolla or Elantra. Also it goes full EV mode all the way up to Highway/interstate speed.

  • @isaacsmind5575
    @isaacsmind5575 Před 2 lety +55

    I’m going to make the argument that the Prius moved past it’s superiority complex years ago. I see people from all ideologies and geographies driving them because they’re cheap, reliable hatchbacks. The Ioniq seems like a more “normal” version of the Prius.

    • @Pacific_Spirit459
      @Pacific_Spirit459 Před 2 lety +4

      Eh, not in my area it hasn't. I still see Priuses rolling around here with an "Im better than you" mentality.
      And interestingly enough, theyre also the car i see involved in the most accidents around here.

    • @stevethepocket
      @stevethepocket Před 2 lety +3

      @@Pacific_Spirit459 I'm curious how exactly you can read the minds of your fellow drivers.

    • @Pacific_Spirit459
      @Pacific_Spirit459 Před 2 lety

      @@stevethepocket Pretty easy when you see them regularly cut off semis, change lanes without signaling, tailgate, etc.

    • @markmiller3279
      @markmiller3279 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Pacific_Spirit459 That's just bad driving, not smugness. Toyota's likely appeal to less experienced drivers because of their reputation for being sturdy, safe, reliable transportation. People who enjoy driving and are skillful buy other things.

    • @Pacific_Spirit459
      @Pacific_Spirit459 Před 2 lety

      @@markmiller3279 I still don't trust a Prius as far as I can throw one. And I'll continue to call double parked priuses idiots.

  • @johnnyk6906
    @johnnyk6906 Před 2 lety +22

    MPG in hybrid varies greatly depending on temperature. my average for commute exceeds EPA during warmer months but drops drastically during colder months. my range has been high 30s' in the winter months driving NE hwys and mid 50s' commuting in DMV during warmer months. 15mpg is a huge variation but overall mid 40s' in colder months and low 50s during warmer months.

    • @deusexaethera
      @deusexaethera Před 2 lety +1

      Reinflate your tires when the weather gets cold. It helps a little.

  • @acatacho
    @acatacho Před 2 lety +9

    The ioniq is a car for me, a person who enjoys commuting as much as I like standing in queue behind a person who thinks that not showering is their contribution to preserve water.

  • @mcall9800
    @mcall9800 Před 2 lety +10

    I'm glad that fiddling with regen paddles is being recognized as the joy it is.

    • @bwofficial1776
      @bwofficial1776 Před 2 lety

      Toyota's hybrids have a shifter position that goes to full regen. It's not much but it's great for scrubbing off 5MPH going into a curve.

  • @pbfloyd13
    @pbfloyd13 Před rokem +3

    You know Hyundai is winning the _boring wars_ when 70% one of my Lyfts for the last 12 months have been an Ionic hybrids instead of a Prius...

  • @Karthex
    @Karthex Před 2 lety +9

    I own one of these and the comment about just needing a car that works is incredibly true, it’s there when my old and fun cars are broken or I need to go on a road trip.

  • @keithchristner4522
    @keithchristner4522 Před 2 lety +46

    Great writing on this episode. I can totally relate to the point "I just want something that's good." Which is why as I get older, the dang Toyota RAV4 s are on the top of my list for my next car.

    • @RegularCars
      @RegularCars  Před 2 lety +15

      Rav4's are legit!

    • @bwofficial1776
      @bwofficial1776 Před 2 lety +3

      Get one of the hybrid Rav4s. The non-hybrid engine drones and buzzes.

    • @drivingnowherecomic
      @drivingnowherecomic Před 2 lety +2

      This is how I ended up with my boring spec '19 RAV4. After years of fun cars with the 'fun' issues that come alongside em... I wanted something easy/comfortable to commute in. Something that I could fit people and stuff in easily, got decent gas mileage on regular, and was ultra reliable. And say what you will about crossovers, but I haven't thought about how steep a driveway is, cringed driving on a crappy road, or worried about being seen by a brodozer like I was in my Miata... The peace of mind is amazing.
      At the same time I dropped a grand on a decent VR sim rig to scratch the enthusiast itch, and if needed I'll just go borrow my brothers mustang. Zero regrets.
      Also the market is so crazy right now I could get nearly what I paid for this thing three years ago... with kia stingers bizarrely undervalued I am tempted to have a funmobile again...

  • @FedUpKentuckian
    @FedUpKentuckian Před 2 lety +2

    Let me tell you something. I have a 2019 Ioniq Hybrid. It has over 169,000 miles on it. It is the most reliable car that I have ever owned. And by reliable, I mean no engine, transmission, steering, suspension, cooling, electrical issues. The only reason this car goes to a shop is to get its oil changed, tires rotated/replaced, and occasionally get its emissions module adjusted. Oh and it most definitely gets EPA rated MPGs. I regularly get between 55-60 MPG. Only when it is cold weather and/or raining out do I get less than 55 MPG. Sounds like the owner of this Ioniq either doesn't know how to drive it right to get the rated MPGs or is deliberately driving the vehicle harder than he needs to be.

  • @8draco8
    @8draco8 Před 2 lety +35

    Sometimes I just want fairly quiet, comfortable, efficient car with decent infotaiment system to listen to audiobooks and podcasts on my way to and from work.

  • @IsaiahEyre
    @IsaiahEyre Před 2 lety +6

    I was half expecting Harold Jablonsky to jump in and say "BUSINESS" after the mention of 4 wheel disc brakes.

  • @greenteagabe
    @greenteagabe Před 2 lety +4

    As someone who's young, works for minimum wage, and daily drives a Lifted XJ Cherokee with the current gas prices, a hybrid like a 1st gen Honda insight or Hyundai like this is looking more and more appealing.

    • @ScubaSteveM45
      @ScubaSteveM45 Před 2 lety +2

      Go to college, major in something that has a job waiting for you at the end. Make several multiples of minimum wage and you too can not worry about the price of fuel in your luxury sedan that requires premium and gets ~25 mpg 😎

  • @nfugitt89
    @nfugitt89 Před 2 lety +9

    I think there's probably an article or a longform video to be made about how it seemed like we were headed for every car becoming a hybrid until gas got cheap, leading to companies scrambling to make EVs when Tesla got big

  • @maximumfilms7458
    @maximumfilms7458 Před 2 lety +33

    As someone who works for a rental car company, those paddles are the saving grace of my boring ass days

    • @tjnucnuc
      @tjnucnuc Před 2 lety +3

      That’s hilarious 😂that’s how I felt working at Toyota. A V6 Camry was the most fun we had.

  • @gawgspates6940
    @gawgspates6940 Před 2 lety +25

    I own a 2020 Ionic EV. So it’s a bit different than this car. I use it for ride share. I rock level 3 regen all the time. It took some getting used to but I’m smooth with it now. Hyundai claims 170 mile range but even in winter I get 185 plus and in warmer months I see well over 220. I leased it, $3k down, $215/month no bs. This car makes me money. Love it.

    • @danielmorris6584
      @danielmorris6584 Před 2 lety +1

      Leases car for ride sharing? Unlimited mileage package?

    • @markmiller3279
      @markmiller3279 Před 2 lety

      @@danielmorris6584 There are companies that specifically lease cars to rideshare drivers.

    • @gawgspates6940
      @gawgspates6940 Před 2 lety

      @@danielmorris6584 I took the 15,000 mile/year lease. I’m retired so I’m a part timer for RS. It’s more than enough for my mileage.

    • @gawgspates6940
      @gawgspates6940 Před 2 lety

      @@markmiller3279 I got mine from a regular Hyundai dealership in Goshen NY.

  • @victorkreig6089
    @victorkreig6089 Před 2 lety +5

    Sometimes cars are just that, cars. That's why I love 90's Honda and Mitsubishi so much, so many different options and an entire fleet of "yeah this drives and won't bother you have a good day" types

  • @guskelman3058
    @guskelman3058 Před 2 lety +2

    I am a tech at a large hyundai dealer in kingston, Ontario. The 1.6L NA inline 4 is the best engine hyundai ever made.
    Also, we see so many cases of people keeping their car in regen level 3 and their brakes are rusted and making grinding noises, because they're barely used.

  • @gar24407
    @gar24407 Před rokem +2

    The 17" wheels kill the MPG. I got the low trim (blue) with 15s and it does get well above 54mpg. Best I got was 62mpg on a tank.

  • @sampelletier5083
    @sampelletier5083 Před 2 lety +17

    I gotta say those regen paddles sound like tons of fun

  • @MusicByproduct
    @MusicByproduct Před 2 lety +92

    Hyundai's regen paddles are great for city driving. When I rent one of these cars I mostly just use the paddles and rarely touch the brake pedal. :)
    Would be interesting to hear your take on the Ioniq 5.

    • @Seatux
      @Seatux Před 2 lety +6

      Man I thought it was just a Honda thing too. Its two extra levels of regen however and its + paddle to add regen instead. Sounds weird at first, but after a while it comes naturally.
      Never mind the B on the transmission after D is more regen in itself. (Honda City Hybrid)

    • @Yukikazehalo
      @Yukikazehalo Před 2 lety +2

      Sounds like it's designed to support "one pedal" driving in various road conditions.

    • @RegularCars
      @RegularCars  Před 2 lety +23

      someone bring me an Ionic 5!

    • @markmiller3279
      @markmiller3279 Před 2 lety +1

      @@RegularCars Soon, I hope. It looks like an impressive car.

    • @barryervin8536
      @barryervin8536 Před 2 lety

      Well, if you like the idea of driving around in city traffic without brake lights.... or is there some sort of deceleration sensor that activates the brake lights when engine braking? I really don't know.

  • @wyattr7982
    @wyattr7982 Před 2 lety +7

    That OG prius review is my goto first RCR video to send people. I grew up in Lehighton and spent lots of time volunteering at Hawk Mountain (did my hs and eagle scout service projects there too) so its nice to see some familiar scenery. If you ever saw a blue prius going way too fast on 895 that was probably me

  • @shinybaldy
    @shinybaldy Před 2 lety +13

    A 300 mile range EV's battery cells distributed amongst 10 hybrids like this one - reduces net emissions and gas consumption more than 1 EV and 9 gas powered cars.
    some ppl do practical things and help the environment too in the process.

    • @rufs6468
      @rufs6468 Před 2 lety

      I think the main point of a full EV at this point is saving money on gas, because you don't buy it, and electricity is way cheaper. Personally I'd rather get the EV version of the Ioniq (if I could afford it) for this reason.

  • @Deschain-um7jz
    @Deschain-um7jz Před 2 lety +31

    Of all the cars I’ve ever seen, this is among them.

  • @joshbrailsford
    @joshbrailsford Před 2 lety +26

    Same reason I ditched a 1997 Ford Fiesta for a 2013 Citroën C1 (Toyota Aygo) - it stirs no emotion in me when I drive it, but it won't break every few months. At the beginning, I was worried I was becoming less of a "car guy", but then I realised I was actually becoming more of a life guy - there's more to life than wrenching on a beater in all weathers for the sake of potentially saving a few quid.

    • @bandvitromania9642
      @bandvitromania9642 Před 2 lety +1

      A reliable French car? That's pretty rare i think
      Edit: French-Japanese toaster

    • @Gnerko123
      @Gnerko123 Před 2 lety +6

      @@bandvitromania9642 that’s because it’s mostly identical to the toyota aygo

    • @bandvitromania9642
      @bandvitromania9642 Před 2 lety

      @@Gnerko123 true

    • @nickw9626
      @nickw9626 Před 2 lety +3

      My ioniq replaced my Aygo which I owned for 5 years and 50k miles. The ioniq to me is the grownup extension to the principles of the Aygo. Cheap running costs and no fuss motoring.

    • @joshbrailsford
      @joshbrailsford Před 2 lety +4

      @@bandvitromania9642 only the badge is French. It's a Czech-built Toyota.

  • @ordinal2361
    @ordinal2361 Před 2 lety +33

    I wear brown shoes, and I approve of this car.

  • @moparpower0788
    @moparpower0788 Před 2 lety +2

    I have the plug in hybrid version and i charge up for free at work with a 80 mile round trip commute. On a full charge it shows 29 miles of pure ev range. With using the regen braking i have pushed it to 43 miles before the gas engine kicked in .i have pretty much mastered the 1 pedal driving with max regen .Last tank of gas i got almost 1100 miles with an average of 99.98 mpg. Id drive this over a prius prime any day of the week.

  • @idiottv6499
    @idiottv6499 Před 2 lety +8

    I was in the market for the previous gen Ioniq after my Toyota Auris hybrid got stolen, but eventually went with the Auris again, first because the Hyundai drove like a regular automatic(it is one, just with the extra electric motor sandwiched between the engine and transmission), while Toyotas don't have a clutch or normal transmission to speak of and the electric motor powers the wheels directly, second the Auris is more B E I G E.
    Other considerations:
    -Cheaper than a Prius(+), more expensive than an Auris(-)
    -GDI engine(-) - there's just one injector - in the combustion chamber, while Toyotas have two - the other one in its regular spot. I'm still sceptical whether the former can be reliable without additional, periodical clearing of the gunk that accumulates on intake valves.
    -Way more gimmicks than Toyota(+).
    -Arguably prettier(+). The Auris has a face only a mother could love.

  • @cherrypepsi2815
    @cherrypepsi2815 Před 2 lety +20

    Hyundai has been making some cars lately. It's impressive how their lineup is just cars.

    • @quillmaurer6563
      @quillmaurer6563 Před 2 lety +4

      Actually in a way that actually is remarkable - they still make cars (sedans) when some other companies (US big three) have completely discontinued anything other than SUVs, crossovers, and trucks.

    • @cherrypepsi2815
      @cherrypepsi2815 Před 2 lety

      @@quillmaurer6563 As I said, Hyundai has been making some cars lately. Their cars really are just cars. It's insane how they can make a car, especially in this economy (at this time of day, too!)

    • @deanchur
      @deanchur Před 2 lety

      And some of the still have physical controls for HVAC!
      Anything that requires a touchscreen for HVAC is on the do-not-buy list for me.

  • @rkan665
    @rkan665 Před 2 lety +7

    It's nice hearing Mr Regular doing his voice over from a Wendy's bathroom stall.

  • @tyrannicalrex3624
    @tyrannicalrex3624 Před 2 lety +1

    I never understood why people hated on Hyundai so much. The engines in their Elantra has been solid for years. I'm currently driving a 2007 Elantra and its still solid with almost 120,000 miles on it. Needs some work done to it especially new spark plugs and wires but nothing serious.

  • @LegoDork
    @LegoDork Před 2 lety +4

    I used to half-assed hyper-mile My "99 Impreza (OBS). I got 30 MPG pretty regularly. 32 When I could push it. Traffic makes it difficult.
    Light on the pedals, lowest RPM you can get away with, neutral whenever possible. I can see my self doing a similar thing with regenerative braking.

    • @AsekiBekovy
      @AsekiBekovy Před 2 lety +1

      The hypermiling trick with regeneratice braking is to brake lightly enough that you will always use regen only and to only brake when really necessary. It's better to coast whenever you can. Oh and in a plug in hybrid you will stick to 30 mph. That way you maximize the total electrically only range you can cover.

    • @Snerdles
      @Snerdles Před 2 lety +1

      That's how I use my PHEV ioniq. If you just count gas milage and not the electricity to charge my best fillup is over 200mpg, with regulars over 100mpg. My best highway trip was about 170 miles at 63mpg. It may not have power but I have fun playing the efficiency game instead.

    • @peter7582
      @peter7582 Před 2 lety

      Coasting in neutral doesn't save gas in a fuel injected engine. The ecu will cut fuel when engine braking.

  • @scott8919
    @scott8919 Před 2 lety +14

    I like how Mr. R couldn't even be bothered to improve his audio quality for the review.

    • @frj3289
      @frj3289 Před 2 lety +9

      I'd like to think he recorded this in the bathroom while P O O P I N G.

  • @Stereomoo
    @Stereomoo Před 2 lety +6

    Lot of that applies to my parents' prius. It's a car for people whose lifestyle requires an car, but they don't want to think about it. And yeah that won't do 67mpg either unless you keep it under 45mph

    • @soy_leche
      @soy_leche Před 2 lety +7

      This describes me. I don’t want to think ever about maintenance, reliability, or gas prices. And the prius fits the bill.

    • @highcountrypioneer3025
      @highcountrypioneer3025 Před 2 lety +1

      My ioniq blue gets 65mpg at 55-65mph.

  • @MrPikkoz
    @MrPikkoz Před 2 lety +10

    Maybe i'm getting old but when my wife had It for a couple of months I actually enjoyed it more driving it around in the city than my bmw 435d (that has more than double of the hp and torque) very relaxing experience and enjoyed even more using the paddles to regen,the 0-60 wasn't impressive but on highway 50-70 times were in the order of 5-6seconds so perfectly acceptable , the boot was also quite big and bigger than what you have there because in UK it has a different boot floor, the color was also a much nicer metallized blue.
    What i didn't liked is the touchscreen controls that are fingerprint magnets and the interior plastics.
    The colour and the texture reminded me a rhinocero's butt.
    Yeah a big wide rhinocero's butt with that black console bit in the middle there like an ass*ole.

  • @Brianlikescars
    @Brianlikescars Před 2 lety +3

    I got to try an Ioniq 5. I daily a manual C7ZO6…
    I now want an Ioniq 5 as well. Because sometimes you don’t need braaaapbraaap, sometimes you need to be able to just chill. The stereo is pretty solid, nothing is awful, just… works.

    • @AsekiBekovy
      @AsekiBekovy Před 2 lety +1

      Is the normal Ioniq electro available in the US? You should try for a used one. Battery degradation is minimal on these and they are extremely efficient. They deliver consumption at highway speed that other EVs have as average. Quite outstanding EVs and known to last long

  • @NeurodivergentSuperiority
    @NeurodivergentSuperiority Před 2 lety +18

    As van, i can confirm that this is not a car...
    ...but instead is *an car*

  • @THOMASGPII
    @THOMASGPII Před 2 lety +1

    I drive a 2021 Ioniq. I got the Blue/Base trim. The Blue trim gets a few mpg more. There are no paddles on the Blue trim. It has better warranty and mpg then a Toyota Prius. Also, it is one of the few Hybrid Cars without a CVT. The Ioniq has a Duel Clutch transmission. I did some research, the Ioniq Hybrid has the best MPG of any non plug on vehicle in the USA. I rarely get the epa mpg but still get 40-55 mpg.

  • @jonkotovenaar
    @jonkotovenaar Před 3 měsíci

    I got a 2019 model about a year ago, put around 25.000 km (15.000 miles) on it since, and love her so much. Can easily drive 900-1000km (5-600 miles) on a full tank of 40L (10.5 gal). Only issue I sometimes have is that the Smart Cruise Control system randomly stops working from time to time (probably because of front radar sensor). Truly an amazing car, has a lot of features you wouldn't expect. While it isn't a sports car at all its a nice and comfortable cruiser as well as a reliable and responsive speedster when adjusting your driving style. Truly one of the best hybrid models ever made imo.

  • @dopey473
    @dopey473 Před 2 lety +11

    OH MY GOD A REGULAR CAR

  • @RyanBowie1
    @RyanBowie1 Před 2 lety +3

    This is the car I have ever seen

  • @DerCrawlerVomUrAnus
    @DerCrawlerVomUrAnus Před 2 lety +1

    I can relate to so much of this. Once you get older and have a long way to work on top of other sorrows you just want to sit in your car, go to work and come home without having to worry about every little noise coming from the car or things feeling somewhat different. Sometimes things just need to work and if they have to be boring to do so, so be it.

  • @teddieteddie7535
    @teddieteddie7535 Před 2 lety +4

    Thanks for the informative review. I deal with these at work sometimes, but have never been in them long enough to get an idea of how they drive. Oil changes are pretty easy to do and the wheels/tires aren't that heavy to carry around when replacing components. Good to know that the fuel economy is not as high as Hyundai claims.

    • @airforcerg
      @airforcerg Před 2 lety +2

      It's all about where, and how, you drive.
      I've had mid-40s mileage, and I've had almost 70s mileage. It's not like a break-in period or anything, just getting used to how to drive the car most efficiently.

  • @PurelyJimbo
    @PurelyJimbo Před 2 lety +13

    Aww! A flat-bottom steering wheel! That's so cute!

  • @chargerguy1973
    @chargerguy1973 Před 2 lety +17

    "Hyundai knew they couldn't compete with Toyota in the Smug Department." Another 10/10 line out of many.

    • @bwofficial1776
      @bwofficial1776 Před 2 lety

      Like the time Honda made a hybrid that looked just like a Prius.

  • @Anya-Prime
    @Anya-Prime Před 2 lety +2

    I keep circling back to hybrids because of this exact pragmatism. I want a fun car and I can have one, but I also need a practical car for loading up the hatch, the rare commute, or sitting in traffic to Philly.
    The temptation is to go electric and get to sit in quiet futuristic comfort without touching a gas station, but that also means a 600$/month car payment for the privilege. Plus, it’s hard to justify nearly 50k on a car that struggles with road trips off the beaten path, compromises cargo space for aerodynamics, and is a first generation effort that will look pitifully outdated in 10 years.
    And then there’s the thousands of Priuses on Craigslist for pocket change that are as reliable as all hell, efficient enough to outcompete a new EV for decades on cost and emissions, and even comes in a blobby van version. I want the future, the acceleration, the modern infotainment, the at home charging, but is it worth spending 3-5 times more on that instead of putting the money into the Miata or into the house?
    Damn it, I wish I could get a boring used EV with 250 miles of range for 15k and forget about the daily driver for the next decade, but the pandemic shortages fucked up the resale of the Bolt so I can’t get one of those for that price. And if I’m signing up for a monthly payment for an EV, it’d better be a modern wonder that will serve me for years without issues.
    Having driven a bland car as my only car, an unreliable fun car as my only car, and for a time owning a beater and the unreliable fun car together, I definitely see the appeal of a cheap modern reliable piece of vehicular transportation. I would get a rental sometimes and wonder why I’m dealing with boxer headgaskets, discontinued headlamps, and aux cable -> lighting dongles when a basic civic has carplay, radar cruise, and everything works fine and even the ride is decent and quiet. There’s just always the temptation to make the daily/reliable car something interesting or go used to get a better value or more features, but especially in the age of basic cars having effectively standard luxury features of yesteryear.
    It’s become harder still because I don’t have a daily commute anymore, so a daily car will sit even more so than before, but yet I still need the practicality every couple of weeks to the point that rentals wouldn’t do. I can justify a cheap weekend car but it’s gotten hard to justify spending a double digit percentage of my income on transportation when I’ve gotten used to budgeting 300$ a month for everything car related lately.
    Sorry for the story, feel free to ignore. You just really hit that dilemma on the head for me and it pisses me off that I realistically need to get myself a 10k Prius V or something like this an car.
    Carry on

    • @RegularCars
      @RegularCars  Před 2 lety +1

      What are you driving right now?

    • @Anya-Prime
      @Anya-Prime Před 2 lety +1

      @@RegularCars a beat up ‘06 impreza wagon. 2.5AT. I’m between Miatas and you drove my IS350 which is what I’m calling the boring one

  • @joshuajordan5700
    @joshuajordan5700 Před 2 lety +11

    Wow I felt this one. Selling my focus RS soon for, most likely, a new insight. My commute is sucking any joy out of the RS experience, and I can’t justify racking up miles commuting an RS. Fuel economy first, fun second

  • @o0260o
    @o0260o Před 2 lety +22

    Every time I look into cars purely based on my needs, I end with this. It's a car that is painfully practical.

    • @bwofficial1776
      @bwofficial1776 Před 2 lety +2

      Nothing wrong with that. I have a lot of seat time in a Prius and it's very good at what it's designed for. Great MPG, surprisingly good handling and braking, tons of room inside, reliable as the sunrise, and well built. It's slow, it's dorky, and the materials/features are lacking, but everything else makes up for it.

    • @ScubaSteveM45
      @ScubaSteveM45 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bwofficial1776 so why do you Prius drivers seem to go no faster than 38 mph down the on ramp going onto the freeway? Is that all the car feels like doing in that situation or do you just not care about getting up to speed?!

  • @ganelon76
    @ganelon76 Před 2 lety +6

    We have this car. Got it for the same reasons. Long commute. We do average well above 50 regularly. Maybe it’s the driving conditions.

  • @beemerdudecs
    @beemerdudecs Před 2 lety

    We’ve got a 2019 Ionic hybrid. It’s got almost 60,000 miles on it with no hiccups. All I’ve had to do is put gas in it ( the oil changes are covered for 3 years) and it’s getting 45-55 mpg. When we were shopping for it we compared it to the Prius which was about $10,000 more and the warranty was for 2 years. The Hyundai had a 10 year warranty and the battery was covered for life. The Hyundai was a no brainer.

  • @tmike4160
    @tmike4160 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you Mr Regular Cars for making me feel better about my life. I own an ioniq and have been struggling with my maniless for sometime. But you smart poem like assessments in the middle of you videos always have a wealth of deep knowledge

  • @DiscoBallGaming
    @DiscoBallGaming Před 2 lety +15

    This is the most car I have ever seen, absolutely one of the cars of all time

    • @RegularCars
      @RegularCars  Před 2 lety +9

      This is like a gray crayon

    • @alechall7082
      @alechall7082 Před 2 lety +4

      ​@@RegularCars In a bag of gray crayons.

    • @dimitriosfotopoulos3689
      @dimitriosfotopoulos3689 Před 2 lety

      @@alechall7082 In an unmarked cardboard box. And discoballgaming, please go and buy an adjective, ffs.

    • @dfjelddalen
      @dfjelddalen Před 2 lety +1

      @@RegularCars Candy Apple Grey. But then that is a great album.

  • @Kamukix
    @Kamukix Před 2 lety +4

    Wow lol, we leased my wife one of these last year. Great little car, not super fun but holy shit is it efficient. I want to drive one with some real tires on it because the chassis feels pretty good itself, but those tires are not going to let you do much.
    In the one year we've had it so far, it's been excellent. 👌

  • @sirreal2290
    @sirreal2290 Před 2 lety +1

    Jesus that Prius bit was so on point... sometimes the references you make scare me with how accurate they are to my life.

  • @isaks3243
    @isaks3243 Před 2 lety +1

    every car I own has to be fun. that doesn't mean that a car that isn't fun isn't a good car. this was actually an amazingly good review of this car!

  • @alexhb12333
    @alexhb12333 Před 2 lety +9

    The crazy thing is this car can do 0-60.

  • @weegeemike
    @weegeemike Před 2 lety +10

    Hyundai is always really optimistic about their MPG ratings...ive never gotten close to touching the 27 city MPG advertised on my Sonata, but i have exceeded the 36 hwy MPG on occasion so theres that.

    • @jseeker1867
      @jseeker1867 Před 2 lety

      Huh, now that I think about it, how do they test city MPG anyways? Because I have a feeling that more congested cities like New York or LA are gonna give you a way different reading than some other average city.

    • @weegeemike
      @weegeemike Před 2 lety

      @Driver 637 true, im only saying that they dont really live up to the ratings, at least in my experience. And im a casual driver, brake slow and accelerate smoothly

    • @markmiller3279
      @markmiller3279 Před 2 lety

      @Driver 637 Actually, most cars are not tested by the EPA (it would cost too much.) There is a formula used for calculating gas mileage, and the automakers are responsible for doing the math. That's how Hyundai got in trouble eith the EPA about a decade ago - they weren't doing the calculations right. Hyundai brought it to the attention of the EPA and had to pay off buyers who had been misled by the overly high numbers.

  • @FlymanMS
    @FlymanMS Před 2 lety +1

    Get yourself a SO who'd hug you like Roman hugs his dream car.

  • @theartist1352
    @theartist1352 Před 2 lety +1

    Audio Recorded in an open room with no deadening … it’s like a Voice of God with the subtle room reverb

  • @nickw9626
    @nickw9626 Před 2 lety +6

    I own a 2018 ioniq hybrid. The regen paddles are only on the 2019 model onwards (at least in the UK). On my car, the paddles shift up and down the gears.
    The lead acid battery was deleted in 2017 I think, after hyundai found a way to use a small lion battery attached to the main battery to start the car. In this way, the ioniq is the same as some Porsches. This also saves about 20kg and frees up the cubby, as you mentioned.
    I get about 62 miles to an imperial gallon, which is about 52 US.
    Yes it's a little boring but it ticked all my boxes. Quiet, comfortable, dual zone climate, economical and more than fast enough for me. Mine has the subwoofer, too, which adds some punch to the audio.
    Oh, and the dual clutch gearbox is miles better than the Toyota Prius' e-cvt.

  • @quintongooden593
    @quintongooden593 Před 2 lety +4

    The topic of this video is exactly why I traded my 2016 Fiat 500 Abarth for a 2014 Honda Civic Si, needed a car that works every time.

  • @GetToThePointAlready
    @GetToThePointAlready Před rokem +1

    0:58 - The toyota prius owner impression is the funniest thing I've seen on this show LMAO. Got me in tears.

  • @ordinaryJeff
    @ordinaryJeff Před 2 lety +1

    My driving is split between an 89 v6 firebird, and a 2000 neon. This would be a very car upgrade.

  • @SSGHondaJon
    @SSGHondaJon Před 2 lety +7

    The Children of the Atom reference is why I’m here. It’s like having a conversation with a version of me with more drive and motivation.

    • @RegularCars
      @RegularCars  Před 2 lety +3

      That was such a quarter-eater

    • @SSGHondaJon
      @SSGHondaJon Před 2 lety

      @@RegularCars I’ve got it on the Saturn and I swear its almost a perfect conversion. The only thing missing is me throwing quarters at it by the hand full.

  • @forfluf
    @forfluf Před 2 lety +3

    I never heard "piece of mind" and "Hyundai" in the same breath before.

    • @jonytube
      @jonytube Před 2 lety

      Hyundai consistently ranks among the top 4 most reliable brands here in Europe as rated by insurance companies, the other 3 being Honda, Lexus and Toyota. I think that says a whole lot about how good hoondaze have become.

    • @forfluf
      @forfluf Před 2 lety

      @@jonytube If you want to own a reliable car for 10 years, it's not gonna be a Hyundai.

    • @jonytube
      @jonytube Před 2 lety

      @@forfluf source: trust me bro

  • @9nxt
    @9nxt Před rokem +2

    I love my dinky little hybrid, I don't know why the dude doesn't get good gas mileage. I hover around 52 in my urban town and I can get as high as 62 while I door dash in Sarasota

  • @agrippa1234
    @agrippa1234 Před 2 lety +1

    And finally, as you probably know, mileage will vary with temp. Our RAV 4 HSE Hybrid will log as low as 35 mpg in the winter and a little over 40 mpg by July (PNW)....

  • @legoferrari14
    @legoferrari14 Před 2 lety +8

    Ah, so this car is of the same status as Dankpods' Fiat Niki.

  • @HybridViking
    @HybridViking Před 2 lety +14

    FUCKING LOVE MY IONIQ EV BROOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!! I think its fun in sport :>
    Had the hybrid and now the EV and I really enjoyed how both drive though they are the most powerful cars I've ever had, sport in the EV feels lightning fast from 0-40 then it tapers off a bit and never once had any issues with either of them. SOLID CAR 10/10 if you are a dad, them cooled seats are amazing.

    • @_RiseAgainst
      @_RiseAgainst Před 2 lety +5

      Wouldn't the cooled seats make more sense if you are trying to become a dad?

    • @HybridViking
      @HybridViking Před 2 lety +1

      @@_RiseAgainst fine, it's a dad / future dad's car if you want to be anal about it.. Actually that won't result in kids.

  • @cybercanal5319
    @cybercanal5319 Před 2 lety +2

    Finish up that pilots license already so we can finally get Regular Plane Reviews.

  • @peten6445
    @peten6445 Před 2 lety

    My wife owns one and she gets around 52 miles. It is not the best car on the road but that is not what we purchased it for. The vehicle is for one main reason, to save gas. It does have great heated seats and the ac is not bad. It is not a Tesla model 3, but it does its job pretty good.

  • @ReverendTed
    @ReverendTed Před 2 lety +5

    This car is attractive to real gearheads.
    In fact, it attracts every gearhead in the universe with a force proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the distance between them.

  • @nicozimmermann8672
    @nicozimmermann8672 Před 2 lety +3

    Here in Austria we have so many of them. it´s the car for someone who wants a car. made for the average joe who never got the line "the way is the destination". Doesn´t matter how go get to work, cinema, family party, school, dogpark or your exes house if you drive a ioniq

  • @WilliamRayne
    @WilliamRayne Před rokem

    "They just want to pay for their handle of Fireball, and 'put the rest on pump six.' " has got to be one the greatest lines I've heard in a LONG time.
    I came here years ago because I like cars. I'm here today because...well, I still like cars, but the writing on this show is exquisite!

  • @WaywardPondering
    @WaywardPondering Před 2 lety +1

    I’ve become a khaki pants driver focusing on safety and reliability. Now, I support other car fans’ enthusiasm and projects.

  • @SKBreakDaRules
    @SKBreakDaRules Před 2 lety +5

    9:30 the 12V battery doesn't have to send the current to start the combustion engine, just to switch on the relay of the 240V system

    • @RegularCars
      @RegularCars  Před 2 lety

      That’s all it does?

    • @SKBreakDaRules
      @SKBreakDaRules Před 2 lety

      The accessories and the electronics do run off 12V, but I believe the engine is started by the hybrid electric motor

    • @jamesv4262
      @jamesv4262 Před 2 lety +1

      @@SKBreakDaRules yeah thats why starting a hybrid is always a very strange feeling. All you hear is a relay click, and a "READY" light show up in the dashboard lol. No other noise, and when the car tells the ICE to turn on it sounds nothing like a traditional starter.

  • @bjf10
    @bjf10 Před 2 lety +3

    I'm a lot like this dude with my 2013 cmax. I wanted good fuel economy and decent carrying capacity (I was coming from a toyota matrix). Aside from the extremely garbage Ford Sync 2 stereo (which shits itself twice a year or so and requires REMOVING A FUSE to reset).
    The idea of owning some super expensive "performance" car is totally unappealing.

    • @kyleinwisc
      @kyleinwisc Před 2 lety +1

      Ill try the fuse thing. Mine won't connect bt

    • @bjf10
      @bjf10 Před 2 lety +2

      @@kyleinwisc Fuse 79, passenger footwell.
      The radios locking up and being unable to be shut off (and draining the battery) is a well known problem with these units. It's super dumb.

  • @blabla-sv4pm
    @blabla-sv4pm Před 2 lety

    I own since new a 2020 similar grey Ioniq. 100% electric version. Not an exciting car, but I enjoy its smooth and quiet driving experience. It's also the most efficient EV on the market, and saves me a lot of money, especially when recharging with my solar panels on sunny days. It's a modest car, okay, only a car. At the end of the day (and at the beginning), it's good to find peace and non-stressful driving, to be un-noticed in any situation. This car is gold to me when I want to be forgotten and live my life. I have no regrets. It's also surprisingly quick on a green light! Last but not least : it's not an SUV, thank you.

  • @goatsplitter
    @goatsplitter Před 2 lety +2

    See who can make the most beige appliance. Perfectly stated. I feel like most cars are becoming "An Cars" and are purely appliances lately. I too have traded out of a WRX for "An Car" (crosstrek) so I totally get this content! Well put in this, Mr. Regular.