RE: Renault Rafale gets 300hp Atelier Alpine version

RE: Renault Rafale gets 300hp Atelier Alpine version

Thursday 16th May

Renault Rafale gets 300hp Atelier Alpine version

We've been waiting to see the Alpine effect trickle down - apparently it starts here


If the new Renault Rafale has passed you by, don’t worry - it’s considered Renault’s flagship coupe-SUV, but on the basis that it's a fairly modest front-drive hybrid and is distinctly underwhelming to look at, there’s no reason it would’ve popped up on your radar. Until now that is, with the introduction of the Rafale E-Tech 4x4 300 hp. Clearly Renault is trying to cover a lot of ground with that name, yet it misses out on the important bit from a PH perspective because here, finally, is a mainstream model that is said to have benefitted from ‘the support of the experts from the Alpine brand’. 

Indeed, the uprated ‘Atelier Alpine’ version is said to push ‘the boundaries of excellence still further in terms of sheer driving pleasure’ as it benefits not just from the additional power - which introduces a new rear-mounted electric motor to deliver adaptive all-wheel drive - but gets a new active suspension system and a wholesale recalibration of its chassis components, including the four-wheel steering system. This is obviously significant when you consider what has resulted in previous years when Renault Sport was given free rein to develop its own ‘dampers, springs, jounce bumpers [and] front and rear anti-roll bars’. 

For now, Renault doesn’t go into detail on how the self-adjusting suspension system works, although with a camera mounted at the top of the windscreen, it’s evidently the sort of predictive setup that aims to adjust the damping to best suit the road surface directly ahead. At any rate, the Atelier Alpine gets its own Chassis Control modes, with Comfort, Dynamic and Sport said to reflect Dieppe’s opinion of what the damping profile and rear-wheel steering angles should look like - an opinion that usually proves spot on in the real world. 

Obviously you’ll still need to make peace with buying a hybridised 1.2-litre three-cylinder engine, although Renault says this has a new turbocharger to achieve an upgraded 150hp output. Combined with the existing 70hp front-mounted electric motor and the 136hp one now permanently connected to the rear axle, the manufacturer says you’ll get a maximum system output of 300hp, which translates into a 0-to-62mph time of 6.4 seconds (compared with 8.9 seconds for 200hp E-Tech Hybrid). 

So it’ll be brisk, at least. And very mildly better looking thanks to ‘Satin Summit Blue bodywork, a Starry Black floating spoiler, and special 21-inch 'Chicane' wheels with Continental tyres’. Although with the interior gaining nothing fancier than ‘mats in the iconic blue of the arrowed A logo’ it’s probably safe to assume that all the developmental budget has been spent underneath. You won’t find us complaining about that - and nor are prospective buyers likely to sniff at the 62 miles of all-electric WLTP-rated range you get from 22kWh battery, or the 621 miles of total range Renault reckons the car will cover when 100 per cent charge is combined with a full tank of petrol. 

A more affordable Esprit Alpine trim will sit under the Atelier when the Rafale goes on sale, although Renault has declined to provide any starting prices at this stage; it promises to rectify that next month ahead of first availability in the autumn. With any luck, by that stage we might have sneaked behind the wheel to see if Alpine has managed to weave the old Renault Sport magic that it was previously famous for. Here's hoping, eh...


Author
Discussion

mrclav

Original Poster:

1,330 posts

225 months

Thursday 16th May
quotequote all
It's giving Audi Q6 e-tron from the rear...

LotusOmega375D

7,736 posts

155 months

Thursday 16th May
quotequote all
Never heard of it. Maybe time for a thread about cars with the same name as aeroplanes? There’s loads.

Alpenus

131 posts

32 months

Thursday 16th May
quotequote all
needs smaller silver wheels and clear glass

AmyRichardson

1,151 posts

44 months

Thursday 16th May
quotequote all
So you rebuild a near-forgotten brand by way of a sports car that rightly won accolades, primarily for the lightness and delicacy that defined it.

Then you slop the badge onto the side of mini-crossover pensioner-special. But, 300hp, well whoop-di-do.

nismo48

3,832 posts

209 months

Thursday 16th May
quotequote all
Looks OK and will probably blend in with the other EV'S without any problems

georgeyboy12345

3,563 posts

37 months

Thursday 16th May
quotequote all
300 bhp, but can only muster the sort of acceleration many cars can with only 200 bhp, probably because it’s so damn heavy

Twoshoe

863 posts

186 months

Thursday 16th May
quotequote all
Looks horrible to me - ridiculously large wheels, and far too tall. Nice colour though I suppose.

Quickmoose

4,528 posts

125 months

Thursday 16th May
quotequote all
AmyRichardson said:
So you rebuild a near-forgotten brand by way of a sports car that rightly won accolades, primarily for the lightness and delicacy that defined it.

Then you slop the badge onto the side of mini-crossover pensioner-special. But, 300hp, well whoop-di-do.
hmm, and that brand has yet to really break through... this move is waaay too early and waay too far from what Alpine stand for.
Tbh The Alpine A110 will be the best they ever do...its all down hill (or at the very lest heavier) from here on in.
Praise the lord for the A110.
I hope the EV hatch comes good, but like a lot of brands the last century of history and brand building is going to be used and abused as the industry gets turned on its head.

Wonderman

2,300 posts

197 months

Thursday 16th May
quotequote all
Quickmoose said:
hmm, and that brand has yet to really break through... this move is waaay too early and waay too far from what Alpine stand for.
Tbh The Alpine A110 will be the best they ever do...its all down hill (or at the very lest heavier) from here on in.
Praise the lord for the A110.
I hope the EV hatch comes good, but like a lot of brands the last century of history and brand building is going to be used and abused as the industry gets turned on its head.
esprit Alpine (like a R-line equivalent) is already out on their new EV Scenic:
https://www.renault.co.uk/electric-vehicles/scenic...

Mark_Blanchard

763 posts

257 months

Thursday 16th May
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I'm literally so excited about this I can hardly contain myself.

Om

1,818 posts

80 months

Thursday 16th May
quotequote all
Never has a picture been such a let down after reading the title. Also, comedy wheels...

The Rotrex Kid

30,477 posts

162 months

Thursday 16th May
quotequote all
Just what Renault needed, an SUV Crossover rofl


CoupeKid

767 posts

67 months

Thursday 16th May
quotequote all
How the mighty have fallen.

There used to be Renaults everywhere. Distinctive looking cars and a reasonable mid market choice.

And now... I barely see any and wouldn't recognise any of the models. Considering the resources they have you'd think they'd produce something less anonymous with no USP.

The above also applies to Ford.

They all might as well join Stellantis which would give us a choice of Chinese/Korean/Stellantis/VAG/BMW/Mercedes/Geely.

What a time to be alive. And I don't mean that in a good way.

V 02

2,063 posts

62 months

Thursday 16th May
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Am I the only one who thinks that looks cracking?

MDMA .

8,980 posts

103 months

Thursday 16th May
quotequote all
V 02 said:
Am I the only one who thinks that looks cracking?
My dog likes it. Although she might not tomorrow.

PorkerHam

74 posts

44 months

Thursday 16th May
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It just looks completely generic to me. I can't tell it apart from lots of other crossover SUV things.

Marcodude

61 posts

128 months

Friday 17th May
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I quite like it. Renault make much more reliable cars that they ever have. Unfortunately, they have become more dull at the same time.

However, I'd say this is better looking than that overweight EV6 spaceship Kia have updated.

coolsteve

5 posts

111 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Looks a bit like the Toyota CH-R

smilo996

2,825 posts

172 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Well, BMW and Audi have each mangled their long established racing brands in order to make SUV drivers part with even mor money.
A least Renault resurrected one from the dead, built the fabulous A110 2.0 Alpine.....and then set about mangling it. A new Megane with that treatment tho👏🏻



alex_2015

155 posts

37 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Actually Renault Rafale is likely a Nissan Qashqai with different body panels.
Now it got the Alpine treatment. Looks like a Hotweelz car with those cartoonish massive wheels.