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My thoughts on the Veloster N PP coming from a MK7 Golf R

kln55

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Nthusiast
Apr 18, 2019
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I wanted to share my thoughts on the Veloster N with Performance Pack in reference to another car that people may cross shop, assuming the price gap isn't a concern.

For context, I had a MK6 GTI, an MK6 Golf R (eventually tuned to stage 2+) then an MK7 Golf R with some mods I'll touch on below. All these were manuals.

Driving Experience:
Overall, there is a big character difference between the cars. Effectively, the Golf R drives like a GT car. It's very powerful, (feels underrated, even before I tuned it to around 300whp) launches hard with the AWD, and feels at home on the freeway at speed. It's decent in corners, but much prefers sweepers rather than hairpins.

The N, is more nimble, more eager to take turns hard, more focused as a driver's car. Still quite competent freeway speed and comfortable in Normal mode.

Drive Modes:
Speaking of drive modes, the Golf R does have 3 modes; Comfort, Normal and Race. Comfort is far softer than the N's normal mode. The suspension is quite pliable and steering becomes very light. Outside of very rough roads, I didn't find it very pleasant. The car loses confidence at speed and feels floaty. The steering in the R is super quick at 2.1 turns lock to lock and in Comfort mode, it makes the car twitchy.

Race mode in the R is about as stiff as Normal mode in the N. I basically left it in that mode at all times. Unlike the N, throttle response doesn't change which I think is a big part of why the R always feels like a GT car. Even in Race mode, throttle inputs too sluggish, with a noticeable dead space at initial tip in. This makes the car very smooth and easy to drive, but makes heal towing a major pain. You have to tip into the accelerator farther and for a longer than average which makes heal towing feel sluggish and nearly useless. The RPMs drop and rise fast enough, but the pedal delay makes the car feel lazy.

The N's drive modes change the car's character much more dramatically. The car adjusts suspension firmness, steering weight, pedal sensitivity, engine responsiveness, LSD responsiveness, and of course that wonderful exhaust noise. In Normal mode, the car is smooth and subdued. It feels like a GT cruiser in this mode and is quite close to the R's Normal mode. You can tell Germans did the tuning in this thing. N mode (or N custom) totally changes the cars behavior making it eager and sharp.

It's worth mentioning that this LSD is quite an engineering feat. Mixed with the FWD format, the front turns in at nearly unreal angles and the back will smoothly and predictably slide out if you let it and have the ESC in sport of off. The R, at least the 2016 model, doesn't have an LSD. It uses a Haldex clutch to send power to the rear when needed and brake torque vectoring when cornering. It's not the same. Not even close. The back won't come out on you, but the car has a far higher tendency to understeer. Come in too hot and you will need to brake to slow yourself enough to take the corner rather than plow. In the N, come in too hot and just let off the gas. The car will turn hard into the corner. Gas it at the apex and you will rocket out back onto a straight. Way fun.

Interior:
It's no secret VW's have stellar interior quality. Soft touch plastics all over. A flowing sense of design where every detail feels thought out. Lot's of variance in materials used giving a overall sense of quality only surpassed by luxury brands. BUT this is where the N surprised me the most. Yes, the door panels and dash are hard, cheap looking plastic, but the things the driver engages with are actually far superior in the N. The steering wheel, pedals, shifter, and seats are all better.

I think this is important so I'll break these down individually:

Steering Wheel-
R- Nice looking, but thin diameter with really cheap leather. Doesn't fit the quality of the rest of the car.
N- Thicker, padded, higher quality leather. A joy to hold

Pedals-
R- Spacing isn't as good. Heal tow shifting is clumsy. Dead zone on initial accelerator tip in. Brake pedal has hard initial bite, but loses stopping power on harder presses. Clutch feels like nothing. It's super light to the point where you wonder if it's actually connected to anything, or just electronic. Grab point is quite high. Nearly half way up the pedal travel, again making driving smoothly easy, but not very sporty.
N- Better spacing, no accelerator dead zone. Brakes have good bite, but also stay firm and linear when pressed hard. Clutch is still light, but feels mechanical. Bites close to the floor, still easy to modulate.

Shifter-
R- Like the clutch, feels like nothing. Loose and rubbery. It's not hard to find a gear and takes nearly no effort to just tip from gear to gear. Between the R's clutch and shifter, it really feels like the manual was a total afterthought. It's not engaging and the car feels much better suited in DSG form where super fast shifts and a computer can perfectly sync with the tuning on the rest of the drive train. Actually, most of my complaints on engagement are ironically solved with the DSG. Don't need to think about dead zones and pedal travel if you don't need to heal tow or work the clutch, for example.
N- The shifter is solid. No play. Easy to place from gear to gear, but inspires confidence and rewards it's use.

Seats-
R-Leather, but the cheap stuff. It doesn't hold up well over time and are a tad wider making the bolsters less useful. You slide around more on the leather and aren't held in much by the bolsters. This was the area I was most disappointed with. The MK6 had fantastic seats. Better leather, well bolstered and great lumbar support. I could never get comfortable lumbar support in the MK7. Unlike the MK6, moving the back support seems to just push the whole back of the seat out. It can't really be focused on a specific zone of your back. I resorted to just using a back pillow on longer drives.
N- Very comfy seats. I prefer the cloth. It feels durable although a bit scratchy when new on bare arms. Slightly tighter bolsters, but with the cloth you don't move around at all. GREAT lumbar support. You can really dial it to where you want it and it can be very firm to quite soft.

In the end, I modified quite a bit on the MK7 R and never felt satisfied. Pedalbox to remove pedal deadzone and increase response. JB1 tune with intake and catback to make the engine and sound sharper and more engaging. Dogbone bushing insert to remove engine movement and laggy feel when accelerating or braking, steering wheel wrap to improve thickness and quality. Shifter bushings to remove the lose feel.

The take away for me, is that the R feels relaxed. It's a great car if you just want to cruise it and take a back road here and there. If you want something more sharp and nimble. It's either never ending mods, or a different car. The N's split personality and higher quality with things the driver touches makes it much more fun. I got the R for $32k due to some discounts during DieselGate. At that price and for the right person, I think it's a great value. Today, the R goes for $40k. At an $11,000 price gap, the R no longer is a value. It's NOT $11k better of a car. Even though it is faster.

The Veloster N is, in my opinion, the best performance and comfort value available today anywhere near this price point. I think the price gap on these cars proves that.

Thoughts?

Edited as I was wrong about the Golf R manual. It still exists.
 
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Hi all,

Also new here with a month-old Veloster N PP replacing a manual m235i.

@kln55 -- I share your impressions about the N almost exactly!! With two distinctions where I feel differently:

1) the throttle pedal -- I find that there is in fact quite a dead space and that even in the most aggressive mode, the throttle response is too slow for my taste... had to get a RaceChip XLR to remedy that for now.
2) pedal spacing -- I have yet to figure out how to heel-toe in this car efficiently and so far find it rather difficult. The gas pedal seems too low and too far away relative to the brake. At least for my size 10 US shoe and the way I am used to heel-toeing in my other and previous cars, it doesn't quite work (yet?).

Other than this, what a brilliant car!!
 
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@issaguzzi, Interesting. I wonder how you'd feel about the Golf R's pedal input and spacing then? How would you compare the clutch and shifter feel in the BMW? They usually have really high clutch engagement points, which I'm not a fan of.
 
Can't compare to Golf R well, as I only drove one a couple of times and briefly. On an MKVII GTI the pedal setup seemed just right for me, although again, I have not driven one all-out.

With the m235i, the clutch feel was indeed one of my biggest pet peeves but, unlike some others, easily solved. Ultimate Clutch pedal sits about 15mm lower than the stock one, and also comes with a clutch stop to get rid of the dead space. Add to that a modification to the slave cylinder that removes the restrictor, and you have a very different clutch engagement from OEM that worked for me way better. That said, the character doesn't change entirely as a lot of it is due to the pressure plate, etc. -- you'd have to go full aftermarket clutch to change the feel completely.

The shifter was typical of recent BMW -- easy, quite precise but never exact or near clinical on a level that, say, latest MX-5 transmission is, or one in Type R. Ever-so-slightly "rubbery" I'd say. For me it was at times very enjoyable and at others feeling less mechanical than I like. Overall I prefer the shifter feel in the N quite a bit more :) In fact I prefer the whole car quite a bit more :) although I will always miss the BMW 6-cylinder engine -- that thing is a marvel.
 
Good to see some feedback from previous VW and BMW owners. After living with the VN for ~2800 miles, here are some additional thoughts on it:

Shifter is a bit notchy for my taste, even with low viscosity RL MT-LV fluid plus CERMA MT treatment (recently added). I’d prefer much shorter throws. Luckily no gear engagement issues that seem to plague the i30N (e.g, 5th to 6th). I still don’t like the shift knob shape since the reverse ring always makes me notice it.

Clutch pedal travel is too long and pedal feel is somewhat vague at speed. The exhaust note changes at a stop when the friction zone is reached, which is nice but can get annoying if you are in Normal or Eco mode and want to be quiet. Sometimes get clunking at low speeds, like in parking lots or when slowing way down for neighborhood entrances, regardless of whether rev-matching is on or not. No rhyme or reason but cringeworthy when it happens with pedestrians nearby.

I pay a lot of attention to engine sounds to listen for unusual vibrations when accelerating hard, so I’ve actually been running more often recently in Normal with rev-matching on and ESC Sport on. The pops/bangs are fun but after awhile can actually become a bit annoying on upshifts (I know, blasphemy, right?) when only lightly accelerating to ~3200.

Seating comfort and position are so good I haven’t given it much thought, which is a very good thing. Haven’t felt a need to mess with lumbar support at all.

Turbo and pedal lag are real after hard upshifts, so I’m starting to experiment with not fully releasing the accelerator. Sweet spot not yet found but rev-matching in theory should keep revs from rising.

When doing hard steering maneuvers/corrections (e.g, quick lane changes), the unibody still flexes noticeably and can give a bit of that floaty/disconnected feeling, but I have a remedy planned (parts should have arrived today but it will be awhile until they go on).

As usual, it’s still not quick/fast enough, but with a JB4 just about maxing the turbo out, it’s getting there!
 
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I wanted to share my thoughts on the Veloster N with Performance Pack in reference to another car that people may cross shop, assuming the price gap isn't a concern.

For context, I had a MK6 GTI, an MK6 Golf R (eventually tuned to stage 2+) then an MK7 Golf R with some mods I'll touch on below. All these were manuals.

Driving Experience:
Overall, there is a big character difference between the cars. Effectively, the Golf R drives like a GT car. It's very powerful, (feels underrated, even before I tuned it to around 300whp) launches hard with the AWD, and feels at home on the freeway at speed. It's decent in corners, but much prefers sweepers rather than hairpins.

The N, is more nimble, more eager to take turns hard, more focused as a driver's car. Still quite competent freeway speed and comfortable in Normal mode.

Drive Modes:
Speaking of drive modes, the Golf R does have 3 modes; Comfort, Normal and Race. Comfort is far softer than the N's normal mode. The suspension is quite pliable and steering becomes very light. Outside of very rough roads, I didn't find it very pleasant. The car loses confidence at speed and feels floaty. The steering in the R is super quick at 2.1 turns lock to lock and in Comfort mode, it makes the car twitchy.

Race mode in the R is about as stiff as Normal mode in the N. I basically left it in that mode at all times. Unlike the N, throttle response doesn't change which I think is a big part of why the R always feels like a GT car. Even in Race mode, throttle inputs too sluggish, with a noticeable dead space at initial tip in. This makes the car very smooth and easy to drive, but makes heal towing a major pain. You have to tip into the accelerator farther and for a longer than average which makes heal towing feel sluggish and nearly useless. The RPMs drop and rise fast enough, but the pedal delay makes the car feel lazy.

The N's drive modes change the car's character much more dramatically. The car adjusts suspension firmness, steering weight, pedal sensitivity, engine responsiveness, LSD responsiveness, and of course that wonderful exhaust noise. In Normal mode, the car is smooth and subdued. It feels like a GT cruiser in this mode and is quite close to the R's Normal mode. You can tell Germans did the tuning in this thing. N mode (or N custom) totally changes the cars behavior making it eager and sharp.

It's worth mentioning that this LSD is quite an engineering feat. Mixed with the FWD format, the front turns in at nearly unreal angles and the back will smoothly and predictably slide out if you let it and have the ESC in sport of off. The R, at least the 2016 model, doesn't have an LSD. It uses a Haldex clutch to send power to the rear when needed and brake torque vectoring when cornering. It's not the same. Not even close. The back won't come out on you, but the car has a far higher tendency to understeer. Come in too hot and you will need to brake to slow yourself enough to take the corner rather than plow. In the N, come in too hot and just let off the gas. The car will turn hard into the corner. Gas it at the apex and you will rocket out back onto a straight. Way fun.

Interior:
It's no secret VW's have stellar interior quality. Soft touch plastics all over. A flowing sense of design where every detail feels thought out. Lot's of variance in materials used giving a overall sense of quality only surpassed by luxury brands. BUT this is where the N surprised me the most. Yes, the door panels and dash are hard, cheap looking plastic, but the things the driver engages with are actually far superior in the N. The steering wheel, pedals, shifter, and seats are all better.

I think this is important so I'll break these down individually:

Steering Wheel-
R- Nice looking, but thin diameter with really cheap leather. Doesn't fit the quality of the rest of the car.
N- Thicker, padded, higher quality leather. A joy to hold

Pedals-
R- Spacing isn't as good. Heal tow shifting is clumsy. Dead zone on initial accelerator tip in. Brake pedal has hard initial bite, but loses stopping power on harder presses. Clutch feels like nothing. It's super light to the point where you wonder if it's actually connected to anything, or just electronic. Grab point is quite high. Nearly half way up the pedal travel, again making driving smoothly easy, but not very sporty.
N- Better spacing, no accelerator dead zone. Brakes have good bite, but also stay firm and linear when pressed hard. Clutch is still light, but feels mechanical. Bites close to the floor, still easy to modulate.

Shifter-
R- Like the clutch, feels like nothing. Loose and rubbery. It's not hard to find a gear and takes nearly no effort to just tip from gear to gear. Between the R's clutch and shifter, it really feels like the manual was a total afterthought. It's not engaging and the car feels much better suited in DSG form where super fast shifts and a computer can perfectly sync with the tuning on the rest of the drive train. Actually, most of my complaints on engagement are ironically solved with the DSG. Don't need to think about dead zones and pedal travel if you don't need to heal tow or work the clutch, for example.
N- The shifter is solid. No play. Easy to place from gear to gear, but inspires confidence and rewards it's use.

Seats-
R-Leather, but the cheap stuff. It doesn't hold up well over time and are a tad wider making the bolsters less useful. You slide around more on the leather and aren't held in much by the bolsters. This was the area I was most disappointed with. The MK6 had fantastic seats. Better leather, well bolstered and great lumbar support. I could never get comfortable lumbar support in the MK7. Unlike the MK6, moving the back support seems to just push the whole back of the seat out. It can't really be focused on a specific zone of your back. I resorted to just using a back pillow on longer drives.
N- Very comfy seats. I prefer the cloth. It feels durable although a bit scratchy when new on bare arms. Slightly tighter bolsters, but with the cloth you don't move around at all. GREAT lumbar support. You can really dial it to where you want it and it can be very firm to quite soft.

In the end, I modified quite a bit on the MK7 R and never felt satisfied. Pedalbox to remove pedal deadzone and increase response. JB1 tune with intake and catback to make the engine and sound sharper and more engaging. Dogbone bushing insert to remove engine movement and laggy feel when accelerating or braking, steering wheel wrap to improve thickness and quality. Shifter bushings to remove the lose feel.

The take away for me, is that the R feels relaxed. It's a great car if you just want to cruise it and take a back road here and there. If you want something more sharp and nimble. It's either never ending mods, or a different car. The N's split personality and higher quality with things the driver touches makes it much more fun. I got the R for $32k due to some discounts during DieselGate. At that price and for the right person, I think it's a great value. Today, the R goes for $40k and no longer has a manual, which is sadly for the best. At an $11,000 price gap, the R no longer is a value. It's NOT $11k better of a car. Even though it is faster.

The Veloster N is, in my opinion, the best performance and comfort value available today anywhere near this price point. I think the price gap on these cars proves that.

Thoughts?
You have my vote for "post of the week". :)
Not because you said all the right things about the N-car which makes us happy but because you were detailed in your analysis and you have vast experience with the VW vehicles you compared.
You have just cemented how I feel about these N-cars once again. :cool::)
 
Luckily no gear engagement issues that seem to plague the i30N (e.g, 5th to 6th). I still don’t like the shift knob shape since the reverse ring always makes me notice it.

Going into 6th on mine occasionally seems to require a bit of extra care, a bit more conscious bandwidth spent on that shift; nothing alarming yet though. I didn't like the shift knob at first either but am starting to get used to it to a point that I don't quite care. For comparison, GTI's golf ball affair is worse, IMO, and, for another reference, the one in current Minis I find just unbearable :)

Turbo and pedal lag are real after hard upshifts, so I’m starting to experiment with not fully releasing the accelerator.

I installed a GFB Mach 2 diverter valve (model T9110), and it makes for less boost lost between shifts, so it tightened hard shifts for me considerably. Slightly crisper throttle response, too. Together with the Racechip pedal modifier I feel it improves this significantly.
 
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The exhaust note changes at a stop when the friction zone is reached, which is nice but can get annoying if you are in Normal or Eco mode and want to be quiet.

Are you referring to the anti-stall feature the car has when you release the clutch with no throttle?

The hatchback has this, so I expect the VN also has it...

The exhaust note changes because the engine lifts the revs a little to prevent the car stalling. I am not 100% sure, but I don't think this can be turned off.
 
Yes, anti-stall indeed. When in front at a stoplight, I prefer to let the cluch out until the friction zone triggers, then just barely back off until the light turns green. To someone behind or on either side, the increased exhaust volume could tip them off that I’m staging for a launch. :confused:
 
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I installed a GFB Mach 2 diverter valve (model T9110), and it makes for less boost lost between shifts, so it tightened hard shifts for me considerably. Slightly crisper throttle response, too. Together with the Racechip pedal modifier I feel it improves this significantly.
Yes, I’m sure a better valve will help; still waiting on a flange to be made by the vendor for the valve I support and have waiting.
 
Yes, anti-stall indeed. At a stoplight I like to let the clutch out until the friction zone triggers, then just back off until the light turns green. To someone behind or on either side, it tips them off that I’m staging for a launch. :confused:

That is very likely to lead to premature clutch wear if you are regularly just off the bite point.
 
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I’m cognizant of the increased wear risk. For the very small amount of times I get pole position at a light, it doesn’t concern me. It’s not like I’m sitting there for the entire duration of the light in this fashion. I do it shortly before the adjacent lights change.

I’ll be changing the clutch and flywheel out anyway before too long.
 
You have my vote for "post of the week". :)
Not because you said all the right things about the N-car which makes us happy but because you were detailed in your analysis and you have vast experience with the VW vehicles you compared.
You have just cemented how I feel about these N-cars once again. :cool::)
Oh, yes. I feel this Padawan will swiftly rise up through the ranks to challenge your review mastery. The Force is definitely strong with this one.
 
I figured I'd follow up with a few things I am going to change. I did make my original observations seem quite glowing...and I stand by them, but nothing is perfect.

I do think this car will benefit from stiffer engine torque bushings. Stock, it's not nearly as bad as any of the Golfs were, but there is some noticeable movement that creates a laggy feeling. This is most pronounced with the engine in Sport + since it is quite responsive. You can feel the motor shift forward and back during accel and even decel. I think the Powerflex performance bushings will work nicely for this issue.

I also mentioned the accelerator pedal dead zone in the Golf R. After seeing some of the comments here, I paid more attention to it and still think it's not bad. In the Golf, it's a literal dead zone, you can rest your foot on the pedal and get no reaction. It's not like that here, but the initial tip in is mild so I can see how some may feel it's still not sharp enough. I think it's worth trying a pedal box of some sort to sharpen this up, but I'm hoping it doesn't change the cars behavior in Normal mode too much. I'd like to keep the relaxed response there, but boost the response in Sport and N modes. I don't want to be pressing buttons to tune the pedal all the time, however. I just want to set it and forget it.

Lastly, I'm waiting to see what the N accessories are that Hyundai may come out with. The cheapness of some of the interior plastics can be fixed with some nice trim pieces, but this is pretty low priority and really depends on price. I'd like to keep these changes to Hyundai's offerings to maintain an OEM type of look. I tend to mod my cars to what I call OEM+. Minor changes that enhance the original spirit and intent without changing it's character. I bought it for a reason, after all.
 
Yes, these types of threads and posts are far more useful and informative in my opinion, than the endless Type R v 308GTI v I30N (insert any combination of ‘hot hatch’ from 160bhp to 400bhp as you please’ YouTube/magazine reviews which we have all watched a million times.

The comparison of cars is so much more than a drag strip or track time and there are some really interesting quirks/annoyances and Easter eggs that owners of their respective cars can share, and this thread is a stonking example of this.

FWIW - once you use a Pedal box for a car........you will NEVER go back:p
 
Good to see some feedback from previous VW and BMW owners. After living with the VN for ~2800 miles, here are some additional thoughts on it:

Shifter is a bit notchy for my taste, even with low viscosity RL MT-LV fluid plus CERMA MT treatment (recently added). I’d prefer much shorter throws. Luckily no gear engagement issues that seem to plague the i30N (e.g, 5th to 6th). I still don’t like the shift knob shape since the reverse ring always makes me notice it.

Clutch pedal travel is too long and pedal feel is somewhat vague at speed. The exhaust note changes at a stop when the friction zone is reached, which is nice but can get annoying if you are in Normal or Eco mode and want to be quiet. Sometimes get clunking at low speeds, like in parking lots or when slowing way down for neighborhood entrances, regardless of whether rev-matching is on or not. No rhyme or reason but cringeworthy when it happens with pedestrians nearby.

I pay a lot of attention to engine sounds to listen for unusual vibrations when accelerating hard, so I’ve actually been running more often recently in Normal with rev-matching on and ESC Sport on. The pops/bangs are fun but after awhile can actually become a bit annoying on upshifts (I know, blasphemy, right?) when only lightly accelerating to ~3200.

Seating comfort and position are so good I haven’t given it much thought, which is a very good thing. Haven’t felt a need to mess with lumbar support at all.

Turbo and pedal lag are real after hard upshifts, so I’m starting to experiment with not fully releasing the accelerator. Sweet spot not yet found but rev-matching in theory should keep revs from rising.

When doing hard steering maneuvers/corrections (e.g, quick lane changes), the unibody still flexes noticeably and can give a bit of that floaty/disconnected feeling, but I have a remedy planned (parts should have arrived today but it will be awhile until they go on).

As usual, it’s still not quick/fast enough, but with a JB4 just about maxing the turbo out, it’s getting there!
You would be surprised to see the extra numbers of welding spots as well as floor reinforcement that goes into the N.. Chassis flex??
In autocross, you can see the N hop on 3 wheels....
 
No, I wouldn’t. I already knew about the additional reinforcement and IMO, it’s not enough. My comparative references are a 2006 M6 and a 2002 C5 Z06 with coilovers, though. Not exactly new tech yet quick lane changes in those were much more precise.
 
Going into 6th on mine occasionally seems to require a bit of extra care, a bit more conscious bandwidth spent on that shift; nothing alarming yet though. I didn't like the shift knob at first either but am starting to get used to it to a point that I don't quite care. For comparison, GTI's golf ball affair is worse, IMO, and, for another reference, the one in current Minis I find just unbearable :)



I installed a GFB Mach 2 diverter valve (model T9110), and it makes for less boost lost between shifts, so it tightened hard shifts for me considerably. Slightly crisper throttle response, too. Together with the Racechip pedal modifier I feel it improves this significantly.

Was the pre load already adjusted on this? (I know you can adjust manually) and how much are you recirculating? Fully?

Thanks