Evo India

DEAD ON ARRIVAL

A lack of funding may have killed Caterham’s dream of a new sports car, but its tie-up with Renault did help spawn the brilliant Alpine A110

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The Caterham C120 that never saw the light of day but led to the creation of the Alpine A110 a few years later

ALL TOLD, THIS WAS A BIG MOVE FOR A LITTLE BRITISH COMPANY

IN 2012, CATERHAM BOSS TONY Fernandes brokered a deal to work with Renault on a small, lightweigh­t sports car. ‘If you look at Formula 1, there’s only Ferrari and McLaren, which are extremely expensive,’ he said, teetering on the brink of hubris. ‘We’ll produce a car that many more people can afford with F1 technology.’

As if to prove that he wasn’t talking out of his branded hat, or simply planning to slap his company’s badges on someone else’s homework, Fernandes agreed that Caterham would raise half of the £120million (`11,000 crore) project cost, buying it an equal say on everything involved in its genesis. The 50/50 deal also meant half of the 6000 cars planned to come from Renault Sport’s Dieppe factory every year would be Caterhams. The sports car project was also intended to be the opening act in a bigger plan to create a range of Caterhams from Renault base platforms such as the Clio RS or, less promisingl­y, the European-spec Captur SUV.

All told, this was a big move for a little British company and Caterham gave it the gravity it deserved, turning its old F1 base near Norwich into a road car engineerin­g centre with over 100 staff, many of whom would spend their time shuttling back and forth to France as the lightweigh­t sports car progressed. The intention was for Anglo-French models to share 85 per cent commonalit­y, bringing partsshari­ng prudence while allowing Caterham the leeway to pursue its own suspension and stability control settings, to install a mechanical rather than electrical­ly operated handbrake and, most promisingl­y, to entertain the possibilit­y of offering a manual gearbox in future despite Renault’s preference for paddleshif­t only.

The styling was overseen by a team from Surrey-based design consultanc­y Drive, embedded in Renault’s Parisian studio. As with the engineerin­g, getting the appearance of both cars right demanded a fine balance between prudent commonalit­y and desirable individual­ity. Important and expensivel­y tooled items like lights, glass, mirrors and door handles could be shared, but the Caterham’s aluminium skin was unique, blending little reminders of the Seven – gaping front air intake, sill trims inspired by side-exit exhausts – into a modern whole that looked wedgier and less retro than the taper-tailed Renault.

All went swimmingly until 2014, when expensive tooling had to be ordered for the project to progress as planned, and this, sadly, is where it all came apart. At the start of the deal Caterham agreed to find a total of €75million (about `59,000 crore), but its fundraisin­g had stalled at €20million (about `15,000 crore) and it simply didn’t have the cash to stay in the game. Renault agreed to pay for the work its partner had completed so far and carry on alone, while Caterham was left with little option but to disband its road car engineerin­g team and kill off the C120, leaving just a pair of redundant styling models, one of which can be seen at its Crawley showroom.

On the plus side, Renault’s continuing work on the lightweigh­t sports car project led to the superb Alpine A110 we know today, a car that almost certainly wouldn’t exist without Caterham’s early involvemen­t to get the project off the ground. Better yet, without the obligation to supply 3000 Caterhams a year, the Dieppe factory has been able to make more Alpines to ease the waiting list across Europe. So if you’ve ordered an A110 and it’s turned up earlier than expected, you can say thanks to the stillborn Caterham C120.

 ?? WORDS by RICHARD PORTER ??
WORDS by RICHARD PORTER

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