There’s just nothing confronting here – unless in the always dubious pursuit of ‘personalisation’, buyers take up the option of staining the handsome cabin with streaks of dayglo-like colour that appear to be applied with a paintball blunderbuss. Top marks for a comfy driving position on plump cushions, ample ventilation, excellent instrumentation, plentiful storage and one of the simplest touchscreen multimedia systems around. Perched some 100mm higher than the Clio that spawned it, the Captur’s solidly presented interior is both roomier and more versatile than most, with an unusually agreeable layout for a French car. Neat, well proportioned and with just a hint of individuality in the two-tone roof treatment and lower-sill trim kink, the Renault ought to sell on styling alone. For starters, the design from ex-Mazda doodler Laurens van den Acker is appealing. The Spanish-built Renault Clio-based crossover still feels fresh in the face of its rivals.Ī runaway Euro bestseller, the front-drive-only Captur has a few aces up its sleeve. It now scores five stars due to changes in the scoring system introduced on January 1. Renault denies it delayed the local launch because the lack of rear-seat airbags would have resulted in only a four-star ANCAP crash rating. IS IT May 2014 yet? That’s when we expected to see the Captur here, but massive demand and production constraints delayed the compact SUV by nine months. MINUS: Sluggish acceleration rear drum brakes no diesel or 0.9L turbo auto PLUS: Design packaging value comfort connectivity efficiency warranty No other light SUV in Australia quite hits the same high notes, particularly in terms of design, packaging, driver enjoyment, efficient drivetrains and features for the money. The Renault Captur has been selling up a storm abroad will it do the same against the promising new Mazda CX-3 and Honda HR-V?įord EcoSport, Holden Trax, Honda HR-V, Mazda CX-3, Nissan Juke, Peugeot 2008, Skoda Yeti, Suzuki S-CrossĪfter the chunky little Clio, Renault’s gets it right again with the Captur. ![]() Since the current rash started arriving a couple of years ago, the B-segment SUV brigade has hardly consisted of overachievers, but suddenly three hopefuls are here to change things for the better. Remarkably, Renault really got the spec right, with the Captur ticking all the necessary boxes, then adding a few extras. No wonder it's going gangbusters globally.īuilt in Spain, the current Clio-based Captur follows the class norm in being front-drive and petrol-powered only (for now), slotting beneath the ageing Koleos in the Holden Trax/ Mazda CX-3 market segment. Renault’s foray into the booming world of front-drive light SUVs brings real style and efficiency to a patchy competitor set, while also appealing to those who like low prices and high specs.
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