Renault Megane dCi 110 (2017) review

Published: 02 February 2017 Updated: 02 February 2017
Renault Megane dCi 110 (2017) review
  • At a glance
  • 4 out of 5
  • 3 out of 5
  • 4 out of 5
  • 3 out of 5
  • 3 out of 5

By James Taylor

Former features editor for CAR, occasional racer

By James Taylor

Former features editor for CAR, occasional racer

First drive in Renault’s core Megane model
Wide of track, tall of touchscreen
Can it challenge the Golfocustra status quo?

This is the new Renault Megane. Not the rear-steering, Renaultsport-lite GT model we drove some months back, but the bread-and-butter dCi diesel, the one that needs to regain La Regie’s lost ground in the C-segment heartland.

New Renault Megane – what are the highlights?

As if to intimidate the opposition from the outset, Renault’s pushed the new Megane’s elbows out with the widest track in the segment. The front track’s a full 47mm broader than the previous Megane, and those widescreen wheelarches are exaggerated all the more by a generous quota of LEDs looped across the short overhangs. It’s distinctive, handsome even, if a tad fussy.

Built around the same Renault-Nissan mid-sized platform that underpins Qashqai and Kadjar, it follows the typical new car design rulebook to a T: use a relatively long wheelbase to increase interior space, an electric handbrake to make space for a big centre storage box, fit a big touchscreen and put LEDs everywhere. There are some surprising packaging shortcomings for a new car; rear legroom isn’t great, not helped by a particularly broad transmission tunnel, and rear visibility borders on supercar-obstructive.

What’s it like to drive?

On the road, it feels as wide as it looks, with reassuringly planted handling. Supple ride, too. Key touch points – steering, pedal actions, gearchange – could offer more feedback, but if Dieppe can make the upcoming Renault Sport hot hatch version a little chattier, the foundations are definitely there for a decent driver’s car.

Somewhere among the touchscreen’s various menus there’s a long list of driving modes to choose from, each of them something of a compromise. Take Sport mode for instance, which by making the already synthetic-feeling steering heavier only serves to make the car feel leaden and stodgy, and sound it too in this dCi diesel’s case, as it artificially amps up the engine’s droney note.

Renault Megane interior

That touchscreen dominates the interior and polarises opinion, both in terms of graphics (sparse or shonky?) and distraction factor. Trying to use it on the move can demand similar fine motor control to one of those hoop-round-the-wire buzzer games. The screen’s portrait orientation works neatly though, and it’s crammed with functions.

Verdict

If this review sounds negative, that’s not the intention. The latest-generation Renault Megane is handsome, likeable, and a more colourful character than most mainstream hatches. But it’s no game-changer.

Specs

Price when new: £20,400
On sale in the UK: Now
Engine: 1461cc 8v 4-cl turbodiesel, 108bhp @ 4000rpm, 192lb ft @ 1750rpm
Transmission: Six-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Performance: 11.3sec 0-62mph, 116mph, 76.4mpg, 96g/km CO2
Weight / material: 1387kg / steel
Dimensions (length/width/height in mm): 4359/1814/1447

Other Models

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  • Renault Megane dCi 110 (2017) review
  • Renault Megane dCi 110 (2017) review
  • Renault Megane dCi 110 (2017) review
  • Renault Megane dCi 110 (2017) review
  • Renault Megane dCi 110 (2017) review
  • Renault Megane dCi 110 (2017) review
  • Renault Megane dCi 110 (2017) review
  • Renault Megane dCi 110 (2017) review
  • Renault Megane dCi 110 (2017) review
  • Renault Megane dCi 110 (2017) review

By James Taylor

Former features editor for CAR, occasional racer

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