Hyundai's South Pole Stunt is Good for Marketing, Better for History Geeks

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Northerners, and almost all Canadians, will tell you that starting your car in -28 Celsius (-18.4 Fahrenheit) weather is a drag, but at least it wasn’t colder that morning.

With this in mind, the temperatures experienced during an expedition to the South Pole in that continent’s high summer aren’t outside the realm of personal knowledge. A good many of us have gauged the frostiness of the outside air by the speed in which our nose hair freezes.

Still, Hyundai’s recent stunt, which put famed explorer Ernest Shackleton’s great-grandson behind the wheel of a modified Santa Fe Sport, impresses. It’s not solely the distance covered, the conditions experienced during the 3,600-mile crossing of Antarctica, or the mechanical feat of turning a pedestrian crossover into the most rugged of all-terrain vehicles. It’s the historical tie-in.

If you grew up reading — and re-reading — Endurance: Shackleton’s Incredible Voyage, you know what I mean. Hollywood writers could not have penned a better adventure, nor can any scientific-minded person believe that such a feat was even survivable.

Let’s start by giving credit where it’s due. The expedition organized by Hyundai led to a modified Santa Fe becoming the first vehicle to drive across Antarctica, taking 30 days to traverse 8,000 foot-high hard-packed snow and ice sheets that could crack at any moment.

Running on A-1 jet fuel and boasting a beefed up suspension, engine pre-heater, balloon tires and an extra-large fuel tank, the Santa Fe crossed the continent from Union Camp on the South Atlantic side to McMurdo Station on the South Pacific side. It then drove back, gassing up at aviation fuel depots all the way. Iceland’s Arctic Trucks was tasked with the mods, as well as leading the expedition.

For automakers, Antarctica represents a challenge and an opportunity. Want to prove a vehicle’s ruggedness and craft some great PR? Send your latest model way Down Under. Toyota does it regularly, usually sending a fleet of Hilux pickups for that all-important shot next to the South Pole marker.

This is where history makes things interesting.

Hyundai tapped Patrick Bergel, a British entrepreneur and software designer, to take the wheel. While his name might be unfamiliar, his great-grandfather’s probably isn’t: Ernest Shackleton. Hyundai’s — and Bergel’s — plan was to retrace the footsteps of a planned expedition that went pear-shaped on day one, and should have easily killed every man on the mission.

The Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition of 1914 was a disaster. The ship, crushed by pack ice, sank. No member of the crew ever set foot on the Antarctic mainland. And yet, everyone survived. Shackleton sailed home to England in May, 1917.

Shackleton’s plan was to sail the hardened expedition ship Endurance to the Weddell Sea, set up a base camp, then take dog sleds to the South Pole (which had already been reached by another explorer). For bragging rights, the team would then continue to the opposite side of the continent, where another ship and crew was waiting. Everything should have gone off tickety-boo, but nature intervened.

From January 19, 1915 to August 30, 1916, the crew of the Endurance was trapped. First, in ice, and later forced to find refuge on a deserted Antarctic island, using rocks and overturned boats as shelter. Shackleton sailed one of the open lifeboats 720 miles through notoriously violent seas to reach help at the South Georgia whaling station. Arriving on the wrong side of the island, his party was forced to scale 32 miles of previously untraversed mountains to find the station.

Shackleton then borrowed a ship and returned to save the trapped men. The UK later named a maritime patrol aircraft after him.

Bergel, driving a vehicle you’ll see littering the parking lots of your child’s soccer games, helped mark the 100th anniversary of the Endurance crew’s salvation. Good on him for honoring his great-grandfather by completing his journey. Also, good on Santa Fe and crew for beating the elements, and kudos to the company for calling attention to an amazing historical feat, albeit in a somewhat self-serving way.

Now, everyone go and read that book — it has excellent descriptions of the dangers of frostbite.

(Oh, one more historical fact: Shackleton was the first person to ever drive a car in Antarctica. The vehicle, a 12/15 Arrol-Johnston, took part in the 1907 Nimrod Expedition.)

[Images: Hyundai]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • OldManPants OldManPants on Apr 20, 2017

    All I'm seeing are those marvelous tires. I'd love to let some air out and drive those around here. Die Rimz; Hail Peak Tire!

  • Brandloyalty Brandloyalty on Apr 20, 2017

    Even though the average speed was something like 27kph, the motor and transmission operated normally because each wheel hub contained reduction gearing. Custom subframes and suspension supposedly rounded out the modifications. Must have been some bodywork also. They ran on jet fuel because that's the only fuel available in Antarctica. Fuel caches were set up by aircraft. Drivers drove up to 20 hours per day. Probably to stay in a window of suitable weather and snow conditions. Not much other information available on the Internet.

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    • Salzigtal Salzigtal on Apr 30, 2017

      @Lou_BC Thanks for reminding me. As a Fahrenheit Monkees in Upper Mexico, I glossed over the conversion in the first paragraph. Only -18 F, beautiful Panguitch, UT often sees 20 degrees colder. I hear North Dakota is worse. One of these years I'll visit Montreal six months after the F1 race and watch experts deal with cold.

  • Spookiness The Mazda interior really is nice. I recognize the rationale for the Mazda infotainment interface design in lieu of a touch screen, but the filthy masses have spoken. As with the rotary engine, it's time to move on. To sell more cars they'll need to have touchscreens. Other carmakers have evolved beyond the iPad-screwed-on-top-the-dash look, so I'm sure Mazda can come up with something aesthetically pleasing and user-friendly. (Another quibble: I really don't need or want AWD, so I wish it wasn't forced. But again, the masses have spoken.)
  • Lou_BC “We are always listening to the customer. "You sayin' the baller/gangsta types don't want Escalades on 24's that don't make vroom vroom rumbly sounds?
  • AZFelix I shall fully endorse the use of autonomous cars on public roads once they have successfully completed my proposed Turing test for self driving vehicles. This test requires the successful completion of an at fault incident and accident free 24/7 driving session in Buffalo and upstate New York from October 1st until March 31st, and throughout the city of Jakarta, Indonesia for one consecutive year. Only Level 1 and Level 5 vehicles are permissible.
  • Lou_BC I'd go Rav4. No Mazda dealer in my town and from what I've seen, Mazda's tend to rust.
  • Steve Jacobs I've got a bright Red Kia EV6. Easy to find in a parking lot.
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