Where Are They Now?: Hyundai Tiburon/Coupe/Tuscani
In the realm of sporty cars for teenagers and young adult drivers, there isn’t a single car I think of more than the Hyundai Tiburon (known as the Coupe in Europe and the Middle East, and the Tuscani in South Korea and Indonesia). I always wanted one of these with the GT V6 package. A leather trimmed, 172 horsepower sporty coupe that was backed by Hyundai reliability? Where do I sign? Well see, there’s the problem, they don’t make the Tiburon anymore, in fact, they haven’t made the Tiburon in ten years.
It all started with the death of the Hyundai Scoupe in 1995, and the announcement of it’s successor, the Tiburon, pictured above. This coke-bottle designed coupe was Hyundai’s answer to the Saturn SC’s, Pontiac Sunfire, Dodge/Plymouth Neon, Ford/Mercury Cougar, and Ford Escort ZX2, to name a few Tiburon had two engine choices, either the 1.8L, 130 horsepower four-cylinder from the Elantra of the time, or a 2.0L four-cylinder producing 140 horsepower. The big engine was capable of pulling the Tiburon up to sixty miles per hour in a reasonable 8.2 seconds. Sales were also slower than it’s rivals, averaging just 9,000 sales per year for the first generation.
The second-generation Tiburon debuted for 2003. The car grew longer, and wider, but also put on about 200 pounds in the process. The 2.0L carried over as the base engine and the Delta 2.7L V6 was made available in the Tiburon GT V6. The GT V6 was a hot car, packing 172 horsepower, it dropped the Tiburon’s 0-60 run to a respectable seven seconds.
I personally love the lines of the second-generation Tiburon, so much in fact, that it’s Grand Theft Auto counterpart, the Bollokan Prairie, was one of the first cars I acquired in game. I almost bought one of these for myself when I was looking for a replacement for my Maxima, but the I found was past it’s prime. I still maintain that this is one of the best looking of the sporty coupes of the early 2000s, I’d even take this over a Mustang from the same era, solely due to it’s exclusivity, and the rear hatchback makes it a bit more practical.
The face-lift for the second-generation Tiburon brought a lot of updates. The updated front fascia and headlights brought the Tiburon into the mid-2000s, but the engines were all carried over without any major changes. Stability control, sunroof, side airbags, aluminum accents, and a new blue backlight for the instrument cluster were all added for 2007. The UK got a special TSIII edition that included quad exhaust and a quilted leather interior. Fully loaded, the last version of the Tiburon could be had for under $23,000 which made it an incredibly practical price, but the V6 Premium Ford Mustang of the same era started at about $20,000 and on the other end of the coupe market, the Honda Accord made the same power as the Tiburon’s V6 from a more efficient four-cylinder, and started around $23,000. Not to mention that a Volkswagen Golf GTI a was more fun, had more power, had the hatchback, and was just as quick to sixty.
And ultimately, that’s what killed the Tiburon, was better and cheaper sport coupes, while this was a great competitor for the Ford/Mercury Cougar and the Dodge Neon, it couldn’t hold it’s own in the market, and that is a shame, because what we got in it’s place, the Genesis Coupe and Veloster, just don’t have the same sort of presence that the Tiburon did, it definitely doesn’t hold the name presence. Maybe I’m lost in the glory of a car that in reality was never really good enough to shake that practical Hyundai charm to be a really good sporty coupe, but I will say it was one of the most stylish coupes, and I never miss the chance to shoot an envious look at the driver of these on the road.
Ultimately, no one cared though. Heck, earlier this week I had almost completely forgotten this car existed until I saw one on the road the other day, and rekindled my love for these. Like just look at it again and tell me that it doesn’t look like it’s going to be fun, and good to drive. Maybe the front wheel drive turned people off because it looked too much like a muscle car, but wasn’t hatchback-ish enough to be a decent GTI competitor. Who knows, all I know is that if there was any car I could bring back from the dead, with zero miles on the clock, all for myself, it’d be one of these.
What do you think? Am I crazy? Should this thing stay dead, or should the designers at Hyundai bring back this amazing sports coupe? Comment below!
Comments
Well, I guess it’s just a House on the Prairie.
Haha, get the game reference?
OOF
I still own the tiburon 2000 black one with only 222 000 on the clock and driving it to work 😁