Home » The Stunning Hyundai N Vision 74 Goes Fast As Hell By Augmenting Battery Power With Hydrogen

The Stunning Hyundai N Vision 74 Goes Fast As Hell By Augmenting Battery Power With Hydrogen

N Vision 74 Topshot 2
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There’s been a whole lot of hype around Hyundai’s N Day this year. Not only were rumors of a production electric N car flying like spitballs in a middle school cafeteria, Hyundai released a lead teaser image of something very wedgy and very winged under a cover. While Hyundai has confirmed that an Ioniq 5 N will be arriving next year, fans will likely be disappointed to know that lips are sealed regarding details. However, Hyundai does have a pair of new prototypes to show off, and the wedge-shaped thing under the cover goes ridiculously, unbelievably hard.

David’s already covered the prototype with more near-term importance, so I’m here to talk about the really exciting one – the Hyundai N Vision 74. See, back in the ‘70s, Giorgetto Giugiaro whipped up a nifty coupe version of the Hyundai Pony that never made production. Americans might not be familiar with the Hyundai Pony unless they watched the Red Green Show, but here in Canada we did more than just duct tape old Hyundais together – we actually drove them. While the Pony coupe would be vaguely familiar to any Canadian who lived through the ‘80s or ‘90s, the N Vision 74 takes Giugiaro’s vision and sends it to compete in this year’s overfender nationals.

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Hyundai N Vision 74
Photo credit: Hyundai

This thing looks gnarly, from hectic box flares to turbofans to a very angry set of pixel daytime running lights. It’s a hard-edged lit-up anti-hero car for whatever cyberpunk dystopia eventually caves in our front doors with size 14 boots. Its proportions are absolutely enormous – 16 inches longer than a Bugatti Chiron, three-quarters of an inch wider than a Ferrari Testarossa, half an inch lower than a Lexus LC 500. The wheelbase is a whopping 2,905 mm long, longer than that on a Mercedes-Benz G-Wagen. The dimensions on this thing are absolutely unreal. More importantly, the N Vision 74 isn’t just a pretty face – it may just save trackday driving through the use of one seriously innovative powertrain. The N Vision 74 is a hybrid, but it doesn’t burn much other than rubber.

For starters, there’s a 60.4 kWh battery pack driving the rear wheels through two electric motors. Not only does this promise a delicious rear-wheel-drive handling balance, it also allows for some clever torque vectoring. On the practicality front, range is said to be more than 600 km (373 miles) on the WLTP cycle, right up there with some of the better long-range EVs on sale. Pleasant, kind, sensible stuff so far.

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Photo credit: Hyundai

Now we get to the hybrid part of the equation. Nestled deep in the N Vision 74 is a hydrogen fuel cell with a nice, lightweight hydrogen tank capable of storing 4.2 kg of the stuff. The fuel cell stack can generate a decent 85 kW of juice, great as a range extender for topping off the battery while on the go. However, that hydrogen fuel cell’s role isn’t just as a range extender. It’s also there to ram electricity to the motors as a sort of overboost function, bludgeoning the rear tires to a pulp in tandem with the battery pack whenever conditions allow. Not only is the end result a face-melting 670 horsepower and 664 lb-ft of torque, this injection of rage means the N Vision 74 can actually hold up to track driving, something most street-legal EVs don’t do a brilliant job at.

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While some gasoline-powered vehicles hate track work, electric cars really hate track work. All those wide-open “throttle” events put a serious dent into range while properly taxing battery cooling systems. Why? Because batteries have thermal operating limits, and current generates resistive heat as it passes through a conductor. (You may have heard of I^2*R losses – heat goes up with the square or current). The harder you pound on the pedal in an electric car, the more heat is generated by the battery, and the less happy the battery gets.

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Photo credit: Hyundai

The hydrogen fuel cell in the N Vision 74 is a method of getting around this. In addition to range extension and providing a boost of peak power, the fuel cell carries some burden of sending electric current to the motors in order to give the battery pack a chance to breathe. After all, reducing pack discharge rate is a great way of extending range and promoting battery cooling. Of course, the caveat is that hydrogen filling stations aren’t exactly plentiful, but that could change in the coming decades.

Hyundai N Vision 74
Photo credit: Hyundai

Truthfully, there’s a lot to love about the N Vision 74. I like the fact that it’s rear-wheel-drive and looks absolutely mental, I like that it uses hydrogen as a boost rather than as a sole propulsion method, and I like how it gives hope about the future of long track stints. I absolutely love track driving, and the electric age worries me a touch in terms of open lapping. We may soon be in a weird spot where we can’t really roll up to the track in our new daily drivers, go lapping for the afternoon, have the 20 to 30 minute sessions we’re used to, and simply drive home. Hydrogen might be one form of light at the end of the tunnel.

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Chris Jackson
Chris Jackson
1 year ago

get lost!

Myk El
Myk El
1 year ago

I hope they make something like it. Even then, though, probably the closest I’ll ever get to having one would be driving it in a video game.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 year ago

“The fuel cell stack can generate a decent 85 kW of juice, great as a range extender for topping off the battery while on the go.”

That, for the record is 113 HP. That’s not much better than the 104HP engine out of the Ioniq.

Jason Hinton
Jason Hinton
1 year ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

Which is plenty for a car to cruise at highway speeds.

PaysOutAllNight
PaysOutAllNight
1 year ago

Can we please stop calling everything nice “stunning”? I am not stunned. I am impressed, though.

Not a fan of the H2 fuel cell part, because H2 fuel cells aren’t going to be part of any affordable car, ever. It’s too difficult to deal with the pressures, the temperature swings, and H2’s ability to leak out of even the best-designed fuel systems. (10% lost to leakage per month is an EPA goal, typical real-life loss is more!) And the beryllium-copper tools used to work on H2 systems aren’t cheap. No matter how you scale it, H2 will always be very expensive as a fuel. It’s a government subsidy grift.

Jakob K's Garage
Jakob K's Garage
1 year ago

I really like that they put these crazy and completely over the top front and rear spoilers on it, and the elongated hood hiding the top of the front lights are also a japanese boÌ„soÌ„zoku style inspired design. So it would be (more) fun with a really tall and steep tail pipe, just spraying water, since it’s (partly) hydrogen driven!

And personally I have been secretly praying for flat design wheel covers (or rims) to come back in style since 1992.

Ian Case
Ian Case
1 year ago

Oh man… I want this so badly.

James Davidson
James Davidson
1 year ago

This looks amazing! All the best parts of the existing Ionic 5 with BMW M1, first gen VW Scirroco, DeTomaso Pantera and R5 Turbo added to the mix! The 3/4 angle view from the front is just sinister enough. Just a fantastic design!

Speed Racer
Speed Racer
1 year ago
Reply to  James Davidson

Looks like a little first gen Audi Quattro thrown in there too.

Manuel Verissimo
Manuel Verissimo
1 year ago

I freaking love this. That front shot reminds me of the Lancia 037, which is very far from a bad thing!

SYKO Simmons
SYKO Simmons
1 year ago

This screams so much 80s badassery Don Johnson just pulled in my driveway in a white Testerossa blaring Van Helen. Please make this! Even if full electric I might consider it just to have it in my garage taking up space!

samfinnz
samfinnz
1 year ago
Reply to  SYKO Simmons

Van Helen, Boxcar Willie’s crustpunk niece

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