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| It’s still a car you have to take great care with, but this one doesn’t feel like it’s trying to kill you | |
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Having said that, this particular V6 feels much better than previous mk1s we’ve tried. There’s none of the nasty roll-oversteer we’ve encountered before, and the V6 feels freer-revving. It’s still a car you have to take great care with, but this one doesn’t feel like it’s trying to kill you. Yes, you always strive to make measured, precise inputs, and when you sense understeer you know that snap oversteer is just a lift of the throttle away, but this car keeps its weight in check brilliantly and even feels drivable just the other side of the tyres’ limits. According to owner Mark Garner, this car had some crash damage (surely not?) and was rebuilt using all original parts by Clio V6 experts Mark Fish Motorsport (who used to race V6s). Let’s just say it’s been optimised.
Where in the Audi or even BMW you’d be ultra-committed, in the Clio you wind back your bravery a touch. Green explains: ‘You never want to make a correction in this car; you make sure your initial input is right and then let the grip and the torque see you through. And everything you touch you do so as smoothly as possible: the lovely short-throw ’box, the slow but tactile steering. Basically you slow down a bit but nail every element of a corner as accurately as you can.’ Sounds dull? It isn’t. It’s wonderfully rewarding. In effect you become the V6’s central nervous system; you’re hardwired in.
For an alternative review of the latest Renault Clio visit our sister site carbuyer.co.uk


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