1. We have moved to a new Forum System. Please let us know if you have any issues.
    Dismiss Notice

Renault Alpine A110-50 concept does its papa proud

Discussion in 'Car News' started by garagegeeks, May 25, 2012.

  1. garagegeeks

    garagegeeks The All Mighty Geek!

    Filed under: Concept Cars, Motorsports, Coupe, Performance, Etc., Europe, Renault, Design/Style

    [​IMG]

    Renault has officially released details on its Alpine A110-50 Concept. Designed to pay homage to the original Alpine A110, the machine wears a body crafted from carbon fiber and dipped in a shade of the same iconic Alpine Blue we all know and love. Up front, designers worked in a set of half-ring yellow LED lights reminiscent of the hood-mounted fog lights found on the original. That's pretty much where the similarities end, however. Based loosely on the crushingly-sexy Renault Dezir Concept, the new machine boasts proud fender arches, a wild split-wing rear spoiler and scissor doors.

    As we'd heard before, the A110-50 Concept rolls on the same chassis as the Megane Trophy, complete with adjustable Sachs dampers, 21-inch wheels and the notable absences of on-board nannies like ABS or traction control. Hefty 14-inch front brake discs are pressed by six-piston calipers, while the 13-inch discs out back make due with four-piston units.

    Renault placed a 3.5-liter V6 mid-ship with a full 400 horsepower on hand. A roof mounted-intake funnels air from outside the engine bay into the machine's carbon-fiber intake. Meanwhile, a dual-clutch six-speed gearbox allows the driver the choice of disengaging the transmission via a floor-mounted clutch pedal or shifting via steering-wheel mounted paddles.

    Scroll down to check out the full press release as well as a couple videos.Continue reading Renault Alpine A110-50 concept does its papa proud

    Renault Alpine A110-50 concept does its papa proud originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 25 May 2012 10:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.



    Permalink | Email this | Comments
     

Share This Page