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We are 25 miles west of Seville in Spain, where Renault is launching its new
Mégane Coupé- Cabriolet (CC). A digital readout tells us the exterior
temperature is 35C, so we pull over to raise the roof. Because, ironically,
the sunblasted wastes of southwest Spain are about the last place you’d want
to spend hours in a roofless coupé.
No sir, if you want to come to real convertible country, it’s right here in
the good old UK. Which is why Renault hits us with two facts before setting
us loose in the car. First, Britain is the largest market for convertible
cars in Europe, and second, Britain “is damp and cold for most of the year”.
Which, according to the PR line, makes the Mégane CC the ideal convertible for
these shores. The reasoning is that with its solid glass roof the Mégane CC
is a light, bright place to be, even when the roof is fixed in place.
It’s true. With the roof raised — it scissors neatly into or out of the boot
in no time — the cabin feels airy and spacious, unlike lots of fabric-roofed
convertibles. And because you sit an inch lower than in the Mégane
hatchback, the CC’s cabin feels secure and enveloping. It’s a nice place to
be.
Even though the Mégane CC shares its platform with the hatchback, the only
common bits of body are the grille, headlamps and bonnet. Everything else
has been styled for the CC with the intention of giving it a sleeker,
cleaner look than other hard-top convertibles such as the Peugeot 307 CC
have achieved. From some angles the Mégane looks very elegant indeed. But
from others it looks dumpy and bottom heavy, partly because of big overhangs
at front and rear.
That’s the problem with this new breed of coupé cabriolet — the designers are
handed a brief to “make it pretty, and also make sure we can fold a solid
roof into the boot”. But even though the CC looks compromised from some
angles, to my eyes it’s the best looking effort of its kind.
Renault also makes a lot of noise about the Mégane CC being a genuine
four-person convertible. That is true, but only if they are very small or
very uncomfortable.
The car will be offered with two petrol engines, a 115bhp 1.6 litre and 136bhp
2 litre. Unusually, there will also be a 120bhp direct-injection turbo
diesel. Renault expects the diesel to be popular as a company car. It also
says that a number of companies that vetoed cabriolets because of security
and insurance are now happy to include the CC as being a coupé.
Just don’t come to the Mégane CC expecting a sports car experience. With all
the structural stiffening to keep it from flexing with the roof down, plus
the roof itself, which weighs 172lb, the CC is a heavy old thing. That’s
revealed in the performance, which has the Mégane CC struggling on long
inclines and less than eager to dispatch slower-moving traffic, even when
you’ve got the more powerful petrol or diesel engine underfoot. We tried
both and preferred the lazy flexibility of the diesel, which better suits
the boulevardier character of the car.
Likewise, the Mégane’s handling is more suited to the streets of Monte Carlo
than the Brenner Pass. The body tends to wallow through fast dips, and you
get a fair amount of lean through tighter corners. The variable assist
steering felt pendulous and offered little useful feedback.
It seems that Renault accepts that the CC could use a bit more poke — next
year a turbocharged 165bhp 2 litre engine will find its way under the
bonnet, possibly even a punchier 140bhp turbo diesel.
Priced from £16,500 for the entry level 1.6 litre model and up to £20,200 for
the top of the range 2 litre version, the Mégane CC hopes to talk you out of
alternatives such as the Peugeot 307 CC, not to mention rag-top competitors.
The Mégane CC is a pretty neat piece of work, and that glass folding roof
really does the business. Accept that such a trick comes at the cost of
performance and handling, and this might be just the car for our cold and
damp land.
No wonder they’re putting the thing on sale in November . . .
VITAL STATISTICS
Model: Renault Mégane Coupé-Cabriolet 2.0 16V
Engine type: Four cylinders, 1998cc
Power/Torque: 136bhp @ 5500rpm / 141 lb ft @ 3750rpm
Transmission: Six-speed manual
Fuel/CO2: 34.4mpg (combined) / 196g/km
Acceleration: 0 to 62mph: 9.9sec
Top speed: 140mph
Price: £18,200
Verdict: The best looking sub-£20,000 folding hard-top, but performance
and handling are compromised