
The list of cars with small turbo petrol engines is as follows:
- Nexon/Curvv
- C3/Basalt/Aircross
- XUV3XO
- i20 NLine/Venue/Sonet/Syros
- Fronx/Taisor
- Kiger/Magnite
- Kushaq/Taigun/Kylaq/Virtus/Slavia
With a 1.2L turbo petrol engine, Hyundai will still be able to make it available to the smaller cars such as the i20, Venue or Sonet (sister company). Moreover, the larger displacement largely takes care of the psychological angle where smaller engines are presumed to be underpowered.
Although, lately, the success of Virtus, Slavia and somewhat of a success of the Kushaq and Taigun, confirms that our market has matured enough to recognise the value of turbo engines over non turbos. Still, a small bump in displacement is not a bad idea.
The current Creta’s 1.5L non-turbo engine is good but it does not offer the kind of drivability that a 1.2L turbo or even a 1.0L turbo engine can offer. Besides, offering it with the Creta will allow Hyundai to achieve higher economies of scale, helping them contain the manufacturing cost.
Whatever extra cost will come from adding a turbo charger and direct injection will be greatly off-set by the smaller engine block size and a few percentage points worth of taxes, which are levied upon cars with greater than 1199cc engines in cars longer than 4 metres.
Should the government go soft on hybrids, the engine will help Hyundai immediately pivot to a hybrid powertrain option for the Creta (or other cars) with a shorter turnaround time.
Also Read: MG ZS EV Gets a MASSIVE Rs. 6.14 Lakh (23.05%) Price Drop In June
Fuel Cost Calculator for Cars – Know your monthly fuel expense based on usage and mileage
Car On-Road Price Calculator – Convert ex-showroom to on-road price for any city
Sell Used Car Online – Enter your car and contact details to get an instant price estimate and book a free inspection with our partner network