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Extreme racer due from Renault Sport. Image by Renault.

Extreme racer due from Renault Sport
Teaser details from Renault outline a 500hp+, 1,100kg competition car with a carbon monocoque.
<< earlier Renault article     later Renault article >>

 


News homepage -> Renault news

What's the news?

This is cruel of Renault Sport - at the Moscow International Automobile Salon (MIAS), to be held in late August and early September this year, it will reveal a sensational new performance car with one-make competition firmly on its mind. It will be called the Renault Sport Trophy - and we won't get to see hide nor hair of it until its Russian debut.

The aim is for the RS Trophy to join the World Series by Renault in 2015, and the barest bones of its tech-spec make for drool-inducing reading. It will be built by Dallara - the Italian chassis engineering company that has an enviable history in Formulas 3 and 1 - and will feature a carbon fibre monocoque powered by a Nismo-derived engine kicking out in excess of 500hp. This will be mated to a Sadev seven-speed sequential transmission, while Michelin will develop specific rubber for the Trophy - and it should weigh around 1,100kg all in.

The RS Trophy is designed to be used in a single-model championship and has been developed with 'pure performance' in mind apparently. It is also said to be solely for competition use, which presumably rules out any chance of a limited production, cripplingly expensive road-going version (boo!). It will undergo extensive development testing between now and 2015.

Anything else?

It's a bit different from the last bespoke Renault Sport creation, the Spider of the late '90s. That car was also designed with one-make racing in mind, but a road version was built that used the same 150hp F7R engine as found in the exceptional Clio Williams, in this case mounted in an aluminium chassis with plastic composite bodywork. The Spider tipped the scales at just 930kg and around 1,800 were built in three years from 1996 to 1999.



Matt Robinson - 20 Jun 2014








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