Junkyard Find: 2012 Hyundai Equus

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

When the first Hyundai Excels appeared on American streets as 1986 models, bearing shockingly cheap price tags, did anyone imagine that someday there would be a big, ostentatious Hyundai luxury sedan with serious V8 power available here? It happened, and I found one of those machines in a car graveyard in Tulsa, Oklahoma, a few weeks back.

To give you an idea of just how amazingly cheap the first US-market Excels were, the only new cars that could undercut the 1986 Excel on MSRP were the wretched Yugo GV and the miserable Subaru STD three-door hatch with four-on-the-floor manual. Even the horrifically obsolete Chevy Chevette cost more—a lot more—than the Excel in 1986.

Even as late as 1992, when "Glengarry Glen Ross" hit theaters, everyone watching knew exactly what Alec Baldwin meant when he told Ed Harris, "You drove a Hyundai to get here tonight. I drove an $80,000 BMW. That's my name!"

Hyundais just got better and better during the 1990s, though, and memories of those shoddy Excels faded.

Back at home, Hyundai had been selling credible luxury machinery (admittedly, often based on Mitsubishi hardware) for quite some time.

The Hyundai Genesis showed up here as a 2009 model and sold quite well. The second-generation Equus debuted in South Korea as a 2010 model, so it seemed like a good idea to ship it across the Pacific.

The Equus first appeared in North America as a 2011 model, and the MSRP for the cheapest version was $58,900 (about $81,136 in 2023 dollars).

I reviewed the 2014 Equus Ultimate and thought it was damn near as nice as the Lexus LS 460. It was more than ten grand cheaper, too (though almost certainly not built as well).

Not many were sold, though. Starting in the 2017 model year, the successor to the Equus became the Genesis G90.

A luxury car this new, no matter how obscure, generally won't show up in a yard like this unless it crashed hard. That doesn't seem to have been the case here, though, since the airbags aren't deployed and junkyard shoppers have purchased most of the front body parts.

We may never know why an 11-year-old Equus met such a fate.

True. Prestige. Equus.

What kind of…?

[Images: The Author]

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Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • Ribbedroof Ribbedroof on Jun 03, 2023

    In Oklahoma, no less!

  • Zerofoo Zerofoo on Jun 03, 2023

    "Hyundais just got better and better during the 1990s, though, and memories of those shoddy Excels faded."


    Never. A friend had an early 90s Hyundai Excel as his college beater. One day he decided that the last tank of gas he bought was worth more than the car. He drove it to empty and then he and his fraternity brothers pushed it into the woods and left it there.

  • Blueice "You're describing a police state, not Communism or Marxism.'" Flyer, they are part and parcel. The Cheka and Gestapo were bothused as criminal police and political enforcement. FBI has reformatted itself into another Cheka. BTW, the Oilers looked impotent last night! I own a ED clinic and they are welcome for free treatment, with a dozen of pucks and sticks.
  • 3-On-The-Tree I was referring to my 2009 C6 Corvette which is pretty low to the ground probably lower than a stock challenger. I’m retired and disabled from the Army and I have to sit in sideways and pull my legs in and reverse to get out. I also drive a 2021 Tundra Crewmax and like it because it has a lot of room making entry and exit easier.
  • EBFlex "Dystopia indicates a state of great suffering or injustice, typically one that is totalitarian or post-apocalyptic. Or, simply that Matt has a flare for the dramatic."Daily reminder everything TrollGhost says is a lie and he thinks a diesel engine has no emissions.
  • Tane94 Too wagon-ish to succeed in the U.S. See Volvo V60 and V90 and Buick Regal X for reference.
  • Golden2husky I'd never recommend a modern Ford at this moment in time - not only the continual recalls, but there seems to be a lot of marginal parts and poor engineering ideas (an internal water pump, really?)...Almost overnight I am seeing Cybertrucks with increasing frequency. Teslas in general are thick on the ground around here but was surprised to see the trucks appear so quickly. They need better assembly quality and in the right light, some of the stainless panels seem to be a different hue from the neighboring panel.
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