
Value has always been a Korean-car hallmark. In the beginning, that meant using killer stereos, giguntous warranties, and used-car pricing to lure customers into miserable cars designed and built by people who were new to driving, let alone automaking. The value pricing and impressive warranty terms (five-year/60,000-mile bumper-to-bumper and 10-year/100,000-mile powertrain coverage) persists today, though they have arguably become unnecessary. In terms of packaging, feature-content, driving dynamics, and build quality, Hyundais now rival the benchmark blue-chip brands, and in 2006 Hyundai nosed ahead of mighty Toyota in the coveted J.D. Power Initial Quality Survey rankings.
The 2009 Hyundai Sonata is a perfect case in point. All new for 2006, Hyundai has again spent big to keep its bread-and-butter sedan competitive with the new Toyota Camry and Honda Accord sedans that have appeared since then. The 2.4L four-cylinder engine gets continuously variable valve timing on both camshafts, a new variable-volume intake manifold, and other refinements that boost horsepower from 162 to 175 and torque from 164 to 168 lb-ft. EPA fuel economy also increases from 21 mpg city/30 mpg highway to 22/32 with the five-speed automatic, besting Camry and Accord. And it's not just the numbers that impress. This is a smooth-running, sweet-sounding four that doesn't shake at idle and never vibrates the steering wheel as many fours do. Acceleration to 60 mph in 8.7 sec feels competitive and unstrained from the driver's seat.

Big money was spent upgrading the interior with a new center console, some new color choices, and chrome accents that make the Sonata feel like it's competing in a higher price class. Officially classified by the EPA as a large car, there's ample room to seat five in comfort and the giant 16.3-cu-ft trunk ranks as best in class (at least until the new Mazda6 sedan arrives, boasting 16.6 cubes). Sonata standard equipment includes stability control, tire-pressure monitoring, heated mirrors, and an XM-ready stereo with USB/iPod connection and auxiliary jack. Our SE added a standard sunroof, 17-inch wheels with a sport-tuned suspension, and automatic headlamps. Fancier Limited models get an optional navigation system this year.
Probably what impresses us most about the 2009 Hyundai Sonata is its sophisticated ride and handling. The control-arm front/multilink rear suspension delivers a ride that's smooth and supple while providing confident, neutral, and predictable handling. Ultimate grip limits are modest (0.78 g), but the light-effort steering keeps the driver informed of where those limits are. State-of-the-art anti-lock braking with brake-assist helps stop the Sonata from 60 mph in just 124 ft.


