Skip advert
Advertisement

Renaultsport boss: exclusive interview at the Paris show

The development boss of Renaultsport has defended the decision to switch the next generation Clio RS to a turbocharged petrol engine.

Renaultsport boss: exclusive interview at the Paris show

The development boss of Renaultsport has defended the decision to switch the next generation Clio RS to a turbocharged petrol engine.

‘We chose the 1.6 turbo for many reasons,’ Christophe Besseau told evo at the Paris motor show, CO2 and fuel economy were two of them, but so was performance, and the driving pleasure of the immediate torque.’

Advertisement - Article continues below

The Clio gets a version of Nissan’s 1.6-litre turbocharged petrol engine, and although its 198bhp output is more than in the standard Nissan Juke DiG-T it will be matched by the forthcoming Juke Nismo (which also made its debut in Paris.) Despite the two cars’ close mechanical relationship, Besseau insisted that there was only ‘limited contact’ between the two development teams.

Besseau was also predictably keen to justify the decision to only offer the Clio with a twin-clutch gearbox, telling evo that ‘this will be a first for Renault.’ There are no plans to offer a manual gearbox with the RS Clio, nor a stripped out ‘Cup’ version – instead the firmer ‘Cup’ chassis settings will be an option on the standard car.

evo also learned that the RS Clio will have a three mode dynamic selector switch, with standard, ‘sport’ and ‘race’ settings. The only way to fully deactivate the stability control will be to switch this into ‘race’, which will also alter the throttle mapping, gearbox software and the assistance of the electric power steering system. Let’s hope that the finished article doesn’t lose the driving purity that’s made previous RS versions of the Clio firm evo favourites.

Besseau also confirmed that there are no plans for a diesel version of the Renaultsport Clio, although it’s still possible that we’ll see an oil-burning version of the Megane RS. And it’s still possible that we will see faster version of the Megane before it is replaced in two years’ time in response to the Astra VXR.

‘It’s very important for us to be in the top three,’ Besseau told us, ‘but preferably the top one.’

> More Paris motor show news here

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Porsche ditches Bugatti as tensions with Mate Rimac come to a head
Bugatti Tourbillon – side
News

Porsche ditches Bugatti as tensions with Mate Rimac come to a head

Mate Rimac joins forces with investment firm to take full control of hypercar company
24 Apr 2026
This secret British sports car is a £5m gamble, inspired by Lotus and with Ferrari looks
Wells Vertige
Features

This secret British sports car is a £5m gamble, inspired by Lotus and with Ferrari looks

Robin Wells fancied a new sports car so decided to build his own. The result is the Wells Vertige, and now you can have one too
28 Apr 2026
Jaguar Project 8 (2018-2019) review – how to make a BMW M5 CS look tame
Jaguar XE SV Project 8 front
In-depth reviews

Jaguar Project 8 (2018-2019) review – how to make a BMW M5 CS look tame

The XE SV Project 8 is the wildest creation to come out of Jaguar’s 5-litre V8 era and a unicorn of a type that will not be repeated
24 Apr 2026