Browse over 9,000 car reviews

Hyundai iLoad diesel 2014 Review

EXPERT RATING
7
Peter Anderson road tests and reviews the Hyundai iLoad with specs, fuel consumption and verdict.

So far this year, light commercial vans have accounted for over 13,000 units. Of those, almost a half are Toyota HiAces. The next van off the loading dock is the Hyundai iLoad, with just under 4000 sales, or around twenty-one percent of the market. There's a lot of daylight between the iLoad and the rest.

Year to date this sector is growing at a healthy four percent over 2013. Clearly a lot of people have a choice to make about which big white van they're going to be spending a huge amount of time in for around three or four years - is the Hyundai iLoad a worthy companion?

VALUE

The iLoad is available with one 2.0-litre petrol and two 2.5-litre diesel engines, with a choice of six-speed manual or five-speed automatic transmissions.

The iLoad range starts with the steel-wheeled manual 2.4-litre petrol at $30,990, with the diesel manual coming at $36,490.

Ours was the mid-range automatic diesel which weighs in at $38,990. For that you get a van the size of the Queen Mary, a basic cloth cabin with vinyl, hose out floors and a surprisingly powerful air-conditioner.

There are quite a few options. Metallic paint (silver or black) at $695; and barn doors at the rear for $550 to replace the tailgate. A rear parking camera is a pricey $1337, the rubber floor in ours added $554, the cargo barrier $707, the plastic curtain a further $245.

You can have a wooden floor for $554, canvas seat covers for $187, a portable cooler for $336 and tailored floor mats for $103 (rubber) or $125 (carpet). The nudge bar was $810, tow bar is $903. The list seems to go on forever, fair enough in the commercial field where operators have many differing needs.

DESIGN

It's a big box. Looks don't really matter in this space so it's practicality that really matters.

The tailgate opens high (or you can spec the double barn doors if you work in height-restricted areas) to a 4.3 cubic metre load bay. At its narrowest, the floor is 1260mm wide between the wheel arches, or 1620mm at its widest. The flat vinyl-covered floor is 2375mm long and 1350mm high. 

Obviously, you can jam a lot of stuff in here. Including wardrobe-shaped stuff when your brother gets wind that you've got a big van.

Both sides have sliding doors and they have a good, easy action and big grab handles for when your hands are full and you don't want to faff around. In fact, there's nothing fiddly on the iLoad - everything seems a bit Fisher-Price until you remember that these are workhorses and it all makes sense.

The cabin is open to the load bay but you are separated by a cage and you can also put up a plastic curtain. There's a single driver's seat along with a two person sliding bench. The central stack pokes out towards the middle seat, so you'll want to be short if you expect to fit between driver and outboard passenger.

On the outside, ours had a nudge bar and some not-so-racy 16-inch alloys.

SAFETY

Dual airbags, ABS, traction control, brake force distribution and pre-tensioned and load limited front seatbelts make for a four-star ANCAP rating. The diesel also features stability control.

FEATURES

Slim pickings here, but the tradies' friend has a two-speaker stereo with Bluetooth and USB input, perfect for blaring out the sort of thing Triple M usually plays or better to hear a ranting talkback host over your McMuffin. It's an old-style stereo unit with an LCD display but does the job.

ENGINE / TRANSMISSION

The Hyundai iLoad's diesel is a big 2.5-litre, four-cylinder turbo, producing 125kW and 441Nm - as long as you spec that five speed automatic. Without the auto, your load-lugging will be slower. The manual iLoad might have one extra gear, but drops 25kW and almost a 100Nm.

Hyundai claims 8.8L/100km in this form, which isn't terrible when you discover its empty weight is 2062kg.

DRIVING

The front doors open very wide and stepping in requires holding the grab handle and pulling oneself in. Once aboard you've got a pretty impressive view as the bonnet drops away over the front wheels.

Some vans are horrendous. You sit over the wheels, your legs dangling in the footwell. The iLoad feels a bit more secure than the average van with a flat floor for the passengers to clamber across if they need to.

If you drive an iLoad empty, you'll be bouncing around as though aboard the Rubber Dinghy Rapids. Without any weight in the back you can even spin the rear wheels, although if a van this big got away from you'd probably wipe out a postcode.

Progress is far more civilised once loaded up - the iLoad can carry 1113kg in this configuration. The cavernous rear stops being a megaphone for driveline noise and it gets to the point where it genuinely feels like a big car, or at least a reasonably well-sorted MPV.

There are ten rings for securing your load and the (optional) rubber floor is a big help in stopping things sliding around. When loading up bulky items - like sibling-owned wardrobes - it's handy to have access from both sides, with good sized steps to get your feet on.

The cage also protects you from flying loose items when you have to stop (the brakes are actually very good) although the plastic curtain will be even better if, like us, you had rolls of turf in the back that unrolled and sprayed the cabin with soil. A quick vacuum and a broom and all was right with the big Hyundai again.

The power steering is pretty light and the transmission not bad for a commercial vehicle. If you have to drive for a living, you won't hate it. It is a bit loud, though.

Pricing guides

$17,995
Based on 53 cars listed for sale in the last 6 months
Lowest Price
$9,999
Highest Price
$24,990

Range and Specs

VehicleSpecsPrice*
(base) 2.4L, PULP, 5 SP MAN $15,730 – 20,130 2014 Hyundai iLOAD 2014 (base) Pricing and Specs
Crew 2.5L, Diesel, 6 SP MAN $14,300 – 18,810 2014 Hyundai iLOAD 2014 Crew Pricing and Specs
EXPERT RATING
7
Peter Anderson
Contributing journalist

Share

Pricing Guide

$9,999

Lowest price, based on 45 car listings in the last 6 months

View cars for sale
Disclaimer: The pricing information shown in the editorial content (Review Prices) is to be used as a guide only and is based on information provided to Carsguide Autotrader Media Solutions Pty Ltd (Carsguide) both by third party sources and the car manufacturer at the time of publication. The Review Prices were correct at the time of publication.  Carsguide does not warrant or represent that the information is accurate, reliable, complete, current or suitable for any particular purpose. You should not use or rely upon this information without conducting an independent assessment and valuation of the vehicle.