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Review: Hyundai Santa Fe a welcome diversion

PARK CITY, Utah — It seems unfair, but it’s true: weekends fly, and weekdays walk. For the most part, life is a day-to-day drill of monotony punctuated by a few moments of pleasure.
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The 2019 Hyundai Santa Fe (Hynudai)

PARK CITY, Utah — It seems unfair, but it’s true: weekends fly, and weekdays walk. For the most part, life is a day-to-day drill of monotony punctuated by a few moments of pleasure. This explains why comfort and convenience, not high horsepower thrills, is what most motorists prefer — especially those with families.

With that in mind, if you’re contemplating a new family sled, consider the new 2019 Hyundai Santa Fe, a redesigned two-row crossover.

Offered in ascending Essential, Preferred, Luxury and Ultimate trim levels, each Santa Fe offers an increasing number of standard convenience features and few options.

The new model’s styling trades the previous version’s soft shapes for a more broad-shouldered, masculine appearance, more reminiscent of an SUV. Its face is particularly distinctive, with an aggressively textured trapezoid-shaped grille flanked by stacked headlamp clusters and capped by slim, horizontal daytime running lights and a chrome bar that runs the width of the front that’s stylish and assertive.

The Santa Fe’s overall footprint remains much like last year’s model. All passengers enjoy chair high seats and good headroom, although the Santa Fe’s roofline slopes down noticeably to meet the top of the windshield, lending the front row a more claustrophobic feel for taller passengers. Cargo room is generous, and there’s a large under-floor storage space with a removable Styrofoam divider. Opening the automatic rear tailgate is as easy as standing near it with the key fob. No swinging your foot under the bumper, as in competing models. Thoughtfully, you can adjust the speed with which the tailgate opens, and how high it goes.

Ambience depends on trim level. Less expensive models feature attractively patterned cloth seats, while more expensive models feature leather trim and a more expressive headliner. The instrument panel features soft touch surfaces and stitched accents, although the door panels use hard, cheap plastics that look appropriate on cheaper models and out of place on pricier ones.

The Santa Fe comes standard with front-wheel drive and a 185-horsepower 2.4-litre double overhead-cam four-cylinder engine mated to an eight-speed automatic transmission with manual shift mode. A 235-horsepower turbocharged 2.0-litre DOHC four-cylinder is optional on higher-trim models. All-wheel drive is optional.

Most drivers will likely choose the 2.4-litre engine, which has adequate power if you live in a place where the only hills are landfills. Once facing an incline, this engine gets easily winded, forcing drivers to floor the throttle, which generates noise but not thrust. This makes the optional 2.0-litre four the ideal choice, providing enough power in any situation, especially when the vehicle is loaded with passengers and gear. Pop the drive mode selector into Sport mode and the Santa Fe becomes more responsive with either engine, although it has no affect on suspension. Better yet, popping the transmission into manual mode shows how expertly Hyundai engineered its gearbox. When climbing hills, the transmission holds its gear without automatically upshifting for fuel economy, unlike many competitors’ models. That said, when teamed with the 2.4-litre engine, transmission behaviour isn’t as refined.

Nevertheless, the cabin is astonishingly quiet with either engine, although the base engine does emit a continual hum, due to the need for the engine to keep the revs up.

Handling is compliant and agile, although it’s not sporty. Only the worst off-road bumps break through this car’s comfort barrier. Nevertheless, you’ll find a Santa Fe with the smaller engine and wheels favours comfort, and does not feel as refined, as sharp or as firm-riding as the Ultimate, due mainly to better tires and transmission behaviour. When cornering, body lean is evident, but minimal, and the Santa Fe’s lane-keeping assist works to keep you in your lane. Unlike similar systems, it has a natural feel that doesn’t feel intrusive or forced. Once accustomed to it, most drivers will appreciate its assistance.

Even though few owners will ever do it, the Santa Fe is fairly good once the sidewalk ends, thanks to its torque-vectoring all-wheel-drive system, which brakes the inside wheels in a corner to enhance handling. It makes sliding around in the wild fun.

And of course there is the usual pile of driver-assistance features, including rear cross-traffic collision-avoidance assist, blind spot detection, forward collision-avoidance assist, high beam assist, lane keeping assist, driver attention warning, rear view monitor, and safe exit assist, which keeps the rear doors locked if the vehicle’s radar detects cars approaching from the rear. An optional feature, Rear Occupant Alert, reminds drivers to check the rear seats when leaving the vehicle.

The infotainment system is commendably easy to use; Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are standard. The 12-speaker Infinity surround sound system provides good audio quality. However, there is no in-vehicle Wi-Fi hotspot.

Given what most of us face on a daily basis, the Santa Fe proves to be is a spacious crossover with an amazing amount of cargo space. It’s an able assistant who is seen, not heard; a comforting, capable, compelling presence in a monotonous world.

Just be sure to spring for the more powerful engine. After all, don’t you deserve more excitement in your life?