2003 Sonata 4 Cyl
I test drove the base Sonata today and I was quite impressed. It had plenty
of pickup, even with the AC on, and blew away the Saturn L200 I test drove. I am looking at the 4 cyl for the better mileage. I will be putting 20K miles/year on the car and I want something which will last at least 100K, is reliable and gets good mileage. My 98 Chevy Malibu eats brakes (among other things) and I'm hoping I don't get a repeat performance. So, what is the most miles anyone has on one of these? Anything to look out for with these cars? I don't see many Sonata drivers in this group, especially drivers of the 4 cylinder. Any feedback would be appreciated. TIA |
Re: 2003 Sonata 4 Cyl
I have a 2002 4cyl and average 26 in and around the house and have
gotten an average of 32 for 4 trips to N.C. from Pgh. On Mon, 18 Aug 2003 23:54:20 GMT, Harry Smith <harry@execpc.com> wrote: >Craig wrote: >> >> I test drove the base Sonata today and I was quite impressed. It had plenty >> of pickup, even with the AC on, and blew away the Saturn L200 I test drove. >> >> I am looking at the 4 cyl for the better mileage. I will be putting 20K >> miles/year on the car and I want something which will last at least 100K, is >> reliable and gets good mileage. My 98 Chevy Malibu eats brakes (among other >> things) and I'm hoping I don't get a repeat performance. >> >> So, what is the most miles anyone has on one of these? Anything to look out >> for with these cars? I don't see many Sonata drivers in this group, >> especially drivers of the 4 cylinder. Any feedback would be appreciated. TIA >============= >We don't have a 2003, so the engine configurations are different, but we >do have a 1989 with 300,000 miles on it that my daughter still drives. >We have a '99 with about 65,000 and a 2001 with about 40,000 (both >V-6's). The '99 had a rear wheel bearing replaced and that's the total >of our out-of-pocket repairs on both those new ones. We think they're >the greatest cars for the money. The mileage on the '99 and '01 is >about 24 in town and up to 30 on the highway (more often 27 or so). >We've been from Texas to the Yukon in them with no problems at all. > >Harry |
Re: 2003 Sonata 4 Cyl
"Craig" <stillmc@yahoo.com.nospam> wrote in message
news:m2KdnTiCLJ_yB6CiXTWJjg@comcast.com... > I test drove the base Sonata today and I was quite impressed. It had plenty > of pickup, even with the AC on, and blew away the Saturn L200 I test drove. > > I am looking at the 4 cyl for the better mileage. I will be putting 20K > miles/year on the car and I want something which will last at least 100K, is > reliable and gets good mileage. My 98 Chevy Malibu eats brakes (among other > things) and I'm hoping I don't get a repeat performance. > > So, what is the most miles anyone has on one of these? Anything to look out > for with these cars? I don't see many Sonata drivers in this group, > especially drivers of the 4 cylinder. Any feedback would be appreciated. TIA I might be the winner in this category. We bought our 2002 4-cylinder Sonata in late June of 02 and turned over 54,000 miles this morning. I make trips between the Washington DC area and New England on a practically weekly basis between April and October, and the car's been absolutely bulletproof. The only thing it's been to the dealer for aside from oil changes have been for front end alignments (two) and the replacement of an inside door handle because the chrome flaked off and gave paper cuts. Mileage on the trips is somewhere around 33 MPG total (I write down every fill-up in a book and punch it into Excel), with me being a bit of a light foot with sparing use of the A/C and heavy use of the cruise control. Brakes haven't been an issue yet, but then again with all the highway travel the car does we really haven't put 54,000 miles worth of brake wear on it. And as I think about it more, I can't think of any one 'weak' spot of the car that should get attention in future model years. The only things I wish the car had are map lights in the rear view mirror (the higher models do) and a lock on the glove box door. Things I like that weren't expected in a $15000 car - dual power outlets on the dash and one in the trunk, CD stereo with tweeters, fog lights, and the sportronic transmission. I'm never buying a regular old automatic again. I can recommend the 4-cyl Sonata without hesitation. The car has treated us amazingly well, and I don't see us having any trouble getting to 200,000 miles or more. |
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