Popular Science 09月29日
韩系SUV新秀:韩亚帕里斯德XRT Pro越野版登场
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韩亚汽车推出帕里斯德XRT Pro越野版,增强版热门三排SUV具备轻度越野能力。搭载3.5升V6引擎,输出287马力,配备全地形轮胎、电子限滑差速器和改良前后保险杠,提升接近与离去角度。设计团队与工程师在造型与工程限制间寻求平衡,克服法律规范挑战,将越野功能如恢复钩整合进车身框架,打造兼具外观与实用性的越野利器。

🚗 韩亚帕里斯德XRT Pro是热门三排SUV帕里斯德的越野增强版,采用3.5升V6引擎输出287马力,配备全地形轮胎、电子限滑差速器及改良保险杠,提升接近与离去角度,专为轻度越野设计。

🛠️ 设计团队与工程师在车辆造型与工程限制间寻求平衡,克服法律规范挑战,将恢复钩等越野功能整合进车身框架,确保其越野实用性而非仅作外观展示。

🔧 车辆开发过程中,设计团队争取更激进的车身线条,工程师则提供工程可行性建议,最终在法律规范约束下达成设计目标,实现外观与功能的和谐统一。

📐 恢复钩的整合是设计工程团队克服的显著挑战,需确保其能承受全车重量,工程师最终在保险杠框架上找到合适位置,并与设计团队协作调整格栅设计以融入恢复钩。

🌏 不同市场存在法律差异影响设计,例如韩国市场要求添加前保险杠下结构以符合行人保护法规,这成为设计工程团队必须考虑的关键因素。

Every car company, it seems, is looking to present its most versatile face in the form of dirt-ready vehicles. Even models that might not have been off-road appropriate in the past are toughening up to capitalize on the go-outdoors trend that has exploded in the last several years. Hyundai is no exception to this movement, launching progressively tougher versions of some of its vehicles. The Korean automaker even sponsored a team in the off-road Rebelle Rally competition, outfitting the Brute Squad team with a lifted version of its Santa Cruz, a compact SUV with a small truck bed. 

The newest iteration of Hyundai’s make-it-tougher phase has emerged in the form of the Palisade XRT Pro, a more rugged variant of Hyundai’s popular Palisade. This three-row SUV is one of the brand’s top sellers, and it’s even more versatile now that it’s tweaked for light off-roading. Equipped with a newly developed 3.5-liter V6 engine making 287 horsepower and up to 260 lb.-ft. of torque, the Palisade XRT Pro also includes all-terrain tires, an electronic limited-slip rear differential, and better approach and departure angles due to revised front and rear bumpers. 

In the process of creating the new Palisade, Hyundai’s designers and engineers had to agree on the shape and scale of the vehicle. The end result is a capable, handsome beast; however, some give and take was required to get there. 

Drawings show detailed instructions and requests between the design and engineering team at Hyundai. Image: Hyundai

Managing the inherent tension between engineering and design

Any new car starts with a design–bold strokes of a pen sketching out images of what the brand believes the vehicle can be. Designers are trained to stretch their imaginations, but they also understand the parameters of the automaker’s engineering and persona. Sometimes, the creative team gets to color way outside the lines to dream up a concept car, which may eventually morph into something that resembles it as a production car. 

From the design stage, the engineers and designers converge to figure out how to meet in a mutually agreeable place. The tension between the two departments may grow, but ultimately the winning party must be the car itself. Both parties are used to the push and pull, and it might be a little like a negotiation at an open market: The buyer offers $100, the seller asks for $150. The buyer offers $125 to meet in the middle. 

Soomin Choe is the exterior creative design manager for Hyundai Design Center North America. Over the course of his 35-year career sketching cars, he spent 13 years at Hyundai , and he knows the nature of the negotiation. 

“In order for us to distinguish the XRT Pro, we wanted it to have more aggressive lines,” Choe says. “We talked with the engineers about the production requirement materials, fabrications, and laws, which takes up about 80 percent of our design process. We fight for every single millimeter while we work with the design.” 

In some cases, the law has the final say on what the design will include.

“Every country has different laws and regulations that we must follow,” Choe explains. “For example, in the Korean market, automakers are required to add a lower bumper structure beam in the front for pedestrian law, a feature cars in the US don’t require.” 

All-terrain tires and other off-road-ready features give the Palisade XRT Pro the opportunity to get off the pavement. Image: Hyundai

Incorporating recovery hooks into the frame

One of the biggest points of friction between design and engineering was adding front and rear recovery hooks, a key feature to help pull the vehicle out of a sticky situation off the trail—or to allow the Palisade XRT Pro to assist another vehicle. The Palisade hadn’t included this feature in the past, so the design and engineering teams had to look carefully at the SUV to understand what made the most sense both aesthetically and physically. 

Unlike tow hooks, which are designed for steady movement, recovery hooks are intended for explicit off-road and emergency use. Adding recovery hooks to a unibody SUV like the Palisade is more difficult than it would be on a body-on-frame vehicle, like a Toyota Tacoma. Trucks like the Tacoma are built with two distinct and separate pieces: the body and a rectangular steel frame. 

Some SUVs are fortified with an aftermarket bumper frame that incorporates the recovery hooks, but that alters the overall function of the stock vehicle. In this case, the hooks are built in straight from the factory. Making such an amenity built-in was important to the entire team, to show that the Palisade XRT Pro wasn’t just posing for off-road photos; it is the real deal.

“In order to attach a recovery hook, it requires a lot of strength and the spaceframe is not usually capable of that,” Choe states. “But the engineers fought hard to find this position where we can attach this point and make it functional.” 

To achieve this level of functionality, the recovery hooks had to be able to support the full weight of the SUV. Engineers pinpointed a spot on the bumper frame and located the hooks there. In order to incorporate it into the lower grille design, they worked with the design team for adjustments that made sense for both sides of the team. 

In the end, Hyundai produced a new and improved version of the Palisade that does much more than grocery runs and trips to the soccer field. And with those recovery hooks along for the ride, the route just got a lot more interesting.

The post The tug-of-war between engineering and design to build the Hyundai Palisade XRT Pro appeared first on Popular Science.

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韩亚帕里斯德XRT Pro 韩亚汽车 越野SUV 设计工程挑战 恢复钩
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