Weekend Herald

THE GOOD OIL The wildest hot hatch ever?

The Renault Clio V6 was a hot hatch with some supercar genes

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Volkswagen invented the hot hatchback with the Golf GTI Mk1 (1976). Peugeot can convincing­ly claim to have created a benchmark for the genre with the original 205 GTi (1984).

But it’s arguably Renault that has created the most entertaini­ng and revered hot hatches in the most consistent fashion over the past four decades, with RS (that’s Renault Sport) models based on mainstream models like the 5, Clio and Megane.

But Renault also created one of the weirdest and wildest hot hatches of all time with the Clio V6 (2001). The universall­y agreed hot hatch template is of course frontengin­e, four-cylinder, front-drive. The Clio V6 had none of that.

Like the other Clio RS models for mere mortals, it was based on Renault’s popular family hatch of the time.

But its mid-engined, rear-drive layout and bonkers wide-body styling was of course a tip of the hat to the legendary 5 Turbo of

1980, a homologati­on car for toplevel rallying.

The original Clio V6 “Phase 1” was designed by Renault Sport, but developed by TWR. So yes, it’s a distant relation of any HSV you care to name. Really, not much remained from the Clio donor car save some basic exterior components.

The finished car made 172kW/

300Nm, drove through a six-speed manual gearbox and could hit

100km/h in 6.4 seconds. It was an instant icon. It also had a reputation of being tricky to drive and unpredicta­ble in extremis. And let’s face it . . . it wasn’t actually that fast.

For the Phase 2 model in 2003,

Renault brought developmen­t inhouse. Power went up to 190kW, while the gearing was made shorter, with closer spacing of the ratios. That got the 100km/h sprint down to 5.8sec, but the biggest improvemen­t was the redesigned, stiffer suspension that made it more stable under load. Better for trackday drifting, in other words.

Two decades on, a Clio V6 Phase 2 would struggle to keep up with our off-the-shelf Megane RS300 cover car in any driving situation. But with its supercar-like layout and looks, and very limited production (1631 and 1309 for the two Phases respective­ly), the Clio

V6 remains one of the craziest and rarest hot hatches ever. One of only 354 right-hand drive Phase 2 models built sold for $122,240 in the

UK last year.

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