Hyundai Grandeur
Big naturally aspirated V6 with serious output. Chain-driven, silk-smooth, but drinks accordingly.
Reliable workhorse, full stop
The Grandeur is big, comfortable, and completely uninterested in cornering speed.
Engine Weaknesses 6
Lambda II 3.3 T-GDi accumulates soot on intake valves via direct injection. The turbocharged version worsens the blow-by effect. V6 with six cylinders is more expensive to clean.
Symptoms: Rough idle, power dip, misfires, increased fuel consumption.
As a 3.8L GDI engine without inlet port fuel wash, the G6DJ's intake valves carbon up heavily. High-performance use accelerates the process since EGR gases are continuously fed in.
Symptoms: Stumbling in the mid-rev range, power loss under partial load, misfires, check engine light.
The CVVT phasers on the G6DJ can leak oil internally due to aging O-rings. The camshaft sensor gets contaminated and sends false signals. Oil consumption also rises gradually.
Symptoms: Check engine light (VVT fault code), rough idle on cold start, elevated oil consumption, tapping noise on cold start.
The timing chains on the G6DJ rattle on cold start when oil change intervals are exceeded or the wrong oil is used. Extended intervals significantly accelerate chain wear.
Symptoms: Chain rattle for the first 10–30 seconds after cold start, VVT fault codes, power loss under partial load.
The 3.8L Lambda GDI tends toward elevated oil consumption due to stuck piston rings, similar to its 3.3L sibling. The GDI variant has a shorter expected lifespan than the MPI predecessor.
Symptoms: Oil consumption above 0.5 l/1,000 km, blue smoke on cold start or hard acceleration
Like all Lambda V6 engines, the G6DJ uses solid bucket tappets without hydraulic compensation. Valve clearance inspection and adjustment every 100,000 km is mandatory, otherwise increased noise and valve damage will result.
Symptoms: Ticking from the valvetrain, increasing engine noise, especially during cold running
Vehicle Weaknesses 4
Input and output speed sensors for the automatic gearbox fail and put the gearbox into limp mode. Transmission electronics considered unreliable. On motorways, hard shifting impulses can occur on failure.
In the 3.3 and 3.8 V6 engines of early production years (2011–2012), inferior hydraulic chain tensioners were fitted. Timing chains become too slack and rattle. In the worst case the chain jumps.
Electrical systems and electronic steering show above-average failure rates. Control units and sensors in the comfort system fail sporadically. Most common fault sources: electrics (10 cases), steering (7 cases).
The electric rear window sun blind fails on almost all examples with increasing age. Drive or mechanism jams, leaving the blind stuck in the half-extended position.