Seejay
Registered Member
Well, it’s been a fun three years, and I learned a lot, maybe more than I wanted to know.
I just took delivery on an absolutely cherry 2012 LS 460 and I am very pleased with it. I would like to think that I have gained an appreciation of it since I drove a 2015 Genesis sedan for the last three years.
This is going to be TL;DR, so you may want to stop here.
THE CARS: Many people would jump to conclusions about this, but it’s not that easy. The Lexus is more refined, but it does not have the poise on rough road surfaces that the Genesis exhibits. The driver of an S class once tried to shake me on a bad street under construction to no avail. Longitudinal damping is the equal of a Bimmer, best guess. Lotus earned their money. Lexus has a better brake pedal, by far. The Genesis steering is much better. The seats in the Lexus are better. On most road surfaces, the Genesis beats the Lexus, especially on small surface imperfections like expansion joints. The high beam switch on the Genesis is a delight to use, while the Lexus is merely (!) excellent. Et cetera. My Genesis was super dependable and always started right up—no funny business with the battery or electrical.
THE DEALERS: Well, the US Hyundai dealers are not Canadian, but some are exceptional. I said Hyundai and not Genesis. Until they are separate facilities, separate buildings, the culture will overlap, and that’s not good for Genesis. A potential luxury car buyer will be unimpressed. Toyota and Nissan understood automobile marketing in the US, but Hyundai will have to learn the hard way. My personal experiences bear this out. Under no circumstances would a Lexus dealer have let me pay to drill out the stud on a wheel hub to remove a defective locking lug nut. Neither would they have cut a rotor down to fix a problem with the brakes and call it done on a car with 200 miles on the odometer. Neither would they deliver a new car with a poor wheel alignment.
THE COMPANY: At Hyundai, customer care is corporate care. If you have to go to them because of a dealer, you have already lost. Repeatedly brow beating them over obvious issues takes all the joy of ownership away. I have watched them get much better at this. When my sunroof broke, I was driven to a Hertz rental office and given a car to drive until mine was fixed. So they are coming around. Occasionally, they have relapses. When I called my dealer and asked about an early turn in (paying the lease to maturity on a monthly basis, but turning the car in early), he advised against it, not saying (but hinting) that they would bungle it and mess up my credit. He advised to pay out the full amount, which I will do.
I want to thank everyone at Genesisowners for being there and here—we are a community. Solidarity. I will visit from time to time and say hello. Aloha.
I just took delivery on an absolutely cherry 2012 LS 460 and I am very pleased with it. I would like to think that I have gained an appreciation of it since I drove a 2015 Genesis sedan for the last three years.
This is going to be TL;DR, so you may want to stop here.
THE CARS: Many people would jump to conclusions about this, but it’s not that easy. The Lexus is more refined, but it does not have the poise on rough road surfaces that the Genesis exhibits. The driver of an S class once tried to shake me on a bad street under construction to no avail. Longitudinal damping is the equal of a Bimmer, best guess. Lotus earned their money. Lexus has a better brake pedal, by far. The Genesis steering is much better. The seats in the Lexus are better. On most road surfaces, the Genesis beats the Lexus, especially on small surface imperfections like expansion joints. The high beam switch on the Genesis is a delight to use, while the Lexus is merely (!) excellent. Et cetera. My Genesis was super dependable and always started right up—no funny business with the battery or electrical.
THE DEALERS: Well, the US Hyundai dealers are not Canadian, but some are exceptional. I said Hyundai and not Genesis. Until they are separate facilities, separate buildings, the culture will overlap, and that’s not good for Genesis. A potential luxury car buyer will be unimpressed. Toyota and Nissan understood automobile marketing in the US, but Hyundai will have to learn the hard way. My personal experiences bear this out. Under no circumstances would a Lexus dealer have let me pay to drill out the stud on a wheel hub to remove a defective locking lug nut. Neither would they have cut a rotor down to fix a problem with the brakes and call it done on a car with 200 miles on the odometer. Neither would they deliver a new car with a poor wheel alignment.
THE COMPANY: At Hyundai, customer care is corporate care. If you have to go to them because of a dealer, you have already lost. Repeatedly brow beating them over obvious issues takes all the joy of ownership away. I have watched them get much better at this. When my sunroof broke, I was driven to a Hertz rental office and given a car to drive until mine was fixed. So they are coming around. Occasionally, they have relapses. When I called my dealer and asked about an early turn in (paying the lease to maturity on a monthly basis, but turning the car in early), he advised against it, not saying (but hinting) that they would bungle it and mess up my credit. He advised to pay out the full amount, which I will do.
I want to thank everyone at Genesisowners for being there and here—we are a community. Solidarity. I will visit from time to time and say hello. Aloha.