The Star Late Edition

Clios with clout

With turbocharg­ed 1.6 power, these RS-badged hatches are feisty Frenchmen

- DENIS DROPPA

ENAULT South Africa has launched some Clios with real clout. Following a recent midlife update to the bread-and-butter models in the French-built hatchback range, the rapid RS 1.6 turbo versions have now arrived to shake up the baby hot-hatch league.

They’re available in two guises: the standard 200 Lux version producing 147kW/260Nm and a 220 Trophy derivative spitting out 162kW and 260Nm (280Nm with overboost) - figures that out-muscle rivals like the 141kW Polo GTi and 134kW Fiesta ST. In case you were wondering, the numbers in the badges refer to the outputs in horsepower.

Each RS variant is mated to a six-speed EDC dual clutch transmissi­on with steering wheelmount­ed paddle shifts. With the assistance of launch control the Clio RS Trophy’s able to sprint to 100km/h in just 6.6 seconds and run to a 235km/h top speed, says Renault, with the Lux just a whisker behind with its quoted figures of 6.7 secs and 230km/h.

Both versions get wheelspin-reducing electronic diffs that improve cornering traction by applying more engine torque to the front wheel with the most grip. Stiffened sports chassis ensure taut handling in the Clio RS duo, with the Trophy’s suspension further lowered and stiffened.

External styling is beefed up with a sportier front bumper, a boot spoiler, a rear diffuser, dual exhausts, and a bank of additional fog and cornering LED lights in the front spoiler shaped like a chequered flag. The Trophy version’s further accentuate­d by red brake calipers, 18” mags (the Lux wears 17s), and a carbon-tipped Akrapovic system with a rortier sound.

An RS Monitor provides telemetry on accelerati­on times, g forces, lap times and engine data. Standard spec is generous and includes cruise control, navigation, a handsfree key card, park distance con- trol, and body-hugging bucket seats (leather in the Trophy derivative).

I drove both models at the media launch in Cape Town and enjoyed their ability to cover fast, meandering roads. The turbocharg­ed power felt appealingl­y frisky, with the emotion dialled up a couple of notches by the cheeky four-cylinder symphony. Sharp steering makes the little hatches scamper nimbly through roads that twist through the countrysid­e like spaghetti, while the brakes take a reasonable

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