Hyundai N Models to Receive Carbon Fiber Wheels

Matt Posky
by Matt Posky

The UK-based wheel specialist from Dymag and composites wizards from Korea's Hankuk Carbon have announced the development of a line of hybrid carbon-fiber wheels for Hyundai’s N cars. 

A prototype of the new N Performance carbon hybrid wheels were showcased at the Hyundai stand at this year’s Goodwood Festival of Speed alongside the spicy and all-electric Ioniq 5 N. Based on statements from Dymag, it may be the first model to receive them. 


While the world can continue to debate whether Korean automakers have matched Japanese brands in terms of overall reliability, any discussions about performance are over. Hyundai and Kia have been offering some of the most entertaining vehicles in their respective segments and it’s starting to become embarrassing for the rest of the industry. 


Hyundai’s high performance N models are consistently excellent and frequently go the extra mile to cater to driving enthusiasts. The brand always seems willing to push the envelope. Adding carbon fiber wheels are a continuation of that theme, as they were formerly exclusive to super cars regular people couldn’t possibly afford. Though it’s hard to say if this is the best place to spend money if you’re trying to maximize your performance dollars. While Dymag and Hyundai have been cagey on the details, these wheels will almost assuredly be optional extras and likely relatively expensive vs a set of alloys. 


However, they probably won’t be as expensive as what you can option on something like the Chevrolet Corvette. This is because Dymag’s design consists of a composite outer rim and a forged metal center. While it probably won’t help to avoid any cursing when you inevitably curb them, the design should make a set cost a few thousand dollars less than wheels that were made entirely of carbon fiber. 


The N Performance hybrid wheels are supposed to offer 40-50 percent weight savings against a traditional cast aluminum wheel. This is handy for reducing unsprung mass and rolling inertia. However the UK-based company said the units also improve overall stiffness and strength. Under extremely high loads the outer rim will flex, rather than deform like aluminum might. Harmonic characteristics of carbon fiber are likewise supposed to help reduce noise, vibration, and harshness.


Dyman announced its partnership with Hankuk Carbon in May, stating their intention to build lightweight composite wheels at scale. Lowering manufacturing costs was a key component of the joint program. But few were under the impression that Hyundai would be their first customer. 


“The price-point for these wheels will be appropriate for both luxury and performance-oriented versions of road cars, particularly the growing high-end electric vehicle market, thanks to Dymag’s technology benefits in improving EV range and NVH,” Dymag CEO Tom de Lange stated in an earlier release. “For all automotive sectors, the dynamic, durability and aesthetic benefits of carbon composite hybrid wheels will become accessible to a larger number of consumers through OEM programmes [sic].”


The company has since said it’s in advanced development stages with multiple automakers, with further original equipment supply agreements set to be announced in the near future.


“This is the start of what we hope is a long and fruitful relationship with Hyundai, which will bring our game-changing technology to a wider audience of global automotive customers,” said de Lange. “Carbon hybrid wheels from Dymag bring many benefits for high-performance vehicles, with very low capital expenditure for car makers thanks to our patented technology and lean production methods. We look forward to announcing further OEM agreements very soon.”


Full specifications of the wheels will be made available in the coming months.


[Image: Hyundai]


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[Images: Dymag]

Matt Posky
Matt Posky

A staunch consumer advocate tracking industry trends and regulation. Before joining TTAC, Matt spent a decade working for marketing and research firms based in NYC. Clients included several of the world’s largest automakers, global tire brands, and aftermarket part suppliers. Dissatisfied with the corporate world and resentful of having to wear suits everyday, he pivoted to writing about cars. Since then, that man has become an ardent supporter of the right-to-repair movement, been interviewed on the auto industry by national radio broadcasts, driven more rental cars than anyone ever should, participated in amateur rallying events, and received the requisite minimum training as sanctioned by the SCCA. Handy with a wrench, Matt grew up surrounded by Detroit auto workers and managed to get a pizza delivery job before he was legally eligible. He later found himself driving box trucks through Manhattan, guaranteeing future sympathy for actual truckers. He continues to conduct research pertaining to the automotive sector as an independent contractor and has since moved back to his native Michigan, closer to where the cars are born. A contrarian, Matt claims to prefer understeer — stating that front and all-wheel drive vehicles cater best to his driving style.

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4 of 17 comments
  • Bumpy ii Bumpy ii on Jul 29, 2023

    This isn't so much a "CF wheel" as a 2-piece wheel with a CF barrel. Still nice for mass reduction, but comparing it to a cast aluminum wheel is a bit of putting a thumb on the scale. Lemme know how it compares to a lightweight forged wheel of the same size.

  • Lostboy Lostboy on Jul 30, 2023

    2nd that! if the price difference is high enough folks will just go with the forged route instead .

    (does anyone have any idea how CF does in the winter? i'm just thinking not so good so this would def just be a summer wheel IMHO)

    • See 1 previous
    • MrIcky MrIcky on Jul 31, 2023

      Well since toolguy brought up the biking angle- I have had CF mountain bike wheels now for 5 years. Which may or may not be relevant. I ride the bike pretty hard (jumps, rocks, hard side loading, etc.) and I've broken the aluminum spokes but the CF rims have been unkillable. I broke 3 spokes in one ride, pulled the spokes and still road 8 miles out and the rim stayed true even missing all that support. I've only ridden in the cold down into the teens though.



  • Namesakeone I'm thinking that China--and the rest of the world--gets the idea that we don't pay our debts, and as such refuses to trade. Which would send our economy into a tailspin (remember, American companies export as well as import). Which would do a lot more harm than a ding on our Experian credit report; I doubt America could exist as a colony.
  • Rna65689660 Having lived in PA for over 20 years, their state inspections are pretty rigorous. No rust holes larger than a quarter are allowed. I had a fail because I was midpssing the rubber on the foot operated emergency brake. Another car, 72 Spitfire, had to go to 3 garages before one would approve the extra foggy plastic rear window. The mechanic reasoned, since they sell vans without rear windows, you don’t really need to see what’s behind you.
  • Jkross22 if the purpose of tariffs is still the same as it has been historically - protect nascent domestic industries or protect military mfg capacity - I'm not sure where Chinese EVs fall in the mix. How is a Chinese/CCP made EVs different than other electronics we buy from PRC?
  • Canam23 Curiously Mitsubishi has very good PHEV tech which I think is the right transition tech from ICE to full EV. Reviewers always poo poo the Outlander but the owners love them and they are extremely reliable. I really hope they can generate a strong comeback because they have traditionally had some very interesting engineering. Apparently they have been doing much better the past few years, so here's hoping it works out for them.
  • TheEndlessEnigma Contrary to all of the kewl commentator hatred Mitsu already makes good vehicles. Good to seem them moving new product development forward.
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