6 Things I Learned From A Passenger Ride In The New Alpine A110

Could the Alpine A110 be the proper Porsche Cayman rival we've been waiting so long for? After a passenger ride, we reckon it might be...
6 Things I Learned From A Passenger Ride In The New Alpine A110

Pros

Cons

After a prolonged absence from the motoring world, the Alpine brand is back, having been resurrected by Renault - its new owner. Previously the purveyors of curious rear-engined sports cars, the brand is in the process of launching an all-new, mid-engined Porsche Cayman rival, expected to cost around £50,000.

I was fortunate enough to spend some time in the passenger seat of several A110s at Renault’s Aubevoye test track ahead of the car’s media launch this Autumn, and from what I’ve seen so far, it’s looking very, very promising…

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These days, the phrase ‘turbocharged inline-four’ usually makes me want to fall asleep, and I was indeed worried I’d be presented with a monotonous drone from the transversely-mounted, 1.8-litre unit. But, Alpine has managed extract a pleasing din from the all-new engine.

It’s quite throaty and angry at mid to high revs, with the aural experience enhanced by a sound tube that pipes noise from the airbox into the cabin through a hole in the bulkhead.

You also get a nicely aggressive ‘thwack’ every time the seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox swaps a cog, which goes some way to make up for the lack of manual option.

2. It's a hero in the corners

6 Things I Learned From A Passenger Ride In The New Alpine A110

The Alpine seems to roll very little, and can change direction with savage speed and efficiency. Grip certainly doesn’t seem to be an issue, and during the drifty segment of the day, it took some provocation for the test driver to get the A110’s rear to step out.

Being a mid-engine car, once pushed beyond the limit, the back does step out relatively quickly. But, as Laurent Hurgon (the driving badass responsible for Renault’s Nurburgring records) explained to us, the ESP system will cut in to stop you spinning even in Race Mode.

6 Things I Learned From A Passenger Ride In The New Alpine A110

So, it’ll make you look like a hero without the risk of something highly embarrassing happening. Oh, and you can turn the ESP off entirely, should you wish.

It’s hard to draw any firm conclusions when sat in the ‘wrong’ seat, but so far, the A110 looks to be an incredibly well-rounded car in the handling department.

3. The interior is great, mostly...

6 Things I Learned From A Passenger Ride In The New Alpine A110

Jumping in the A110, the first thing that hits you is the size of the cabin - it really isn’t big in there. It’s a lovely space though, with the deep, quilted bucket seats and the ‘floating’ console in the middle of the two chairs being highlights in particular.

Some of the switchgear - taken from the Renault parts bin, as you’d expect - isn’t the nicest however, and some of the materials used for the dashboard feel cheap. But since less hefty-feeling materials keep the weight down, we aren’t going to complain much.

4. It doesn't feel hugely fast

6 Things I Learned From A Passenger Ride In The New Alpine A110

The 250bhp offered up by the A110’s 1.8-litre turbocharged engine may not sound much, especially when you bear in mind the Porsche 718 Cayman S puts out 345bhp. But with a kerb weight of 1080kg, the A110 is over 300kg lighter than the Porsche, meaning the power-to-weight ratio isn’t all that far off.

It’s all thanks to an obsession with weight saving. It’s constructed largely from aluminium, and is a particularly compact car overall. The Otto Fuchs wheels measure a relatively modest 18 inches in diameter, and the tyres aren’t even that wide - you’re looking at 205/40s at the front, and 235/40s at the rear. And those seats we’re so fond of? They’re just 13.1kg apiece.

The healthy power-to-weight enables the A110 to do 0-62mph in 4.5 seconds. A decent innings, but it’s worth pointing out it doesn’t feel particularly fast or dramatic at full throttle. It’s the handling you’ll be enjoying here most, not the straight-line performance.

5. It's weirdly comfortable

6 Things I Learned From A Passenger Ride In The New Alpine A110

You won’t find a fancy (and heavy) adaptive suspension system on the A110. Instead, the car (which also has double wishbones front and rear) just uses a very well honed set of dampers, complete with hydraulic bump stops.

With no suspension modes to fiddle with, you’d think the A110 with its stellar body control would be stupidly stiff. But no - over the course of our day at Aubevoye the engineers and test drivers were awfully keen to hammer home the point that this is supposed to be a sports car you can daily, not some uncompromising track car.

This ethos is very clearly translated into the A110’s chassis: it rides incredibly well, even when taken over the rougher parts of the test track. On the typically crap road surfaces of the UK’s B roads, we doubt you’ll be complaining about the ride.

6. It might actually be the Porsche Cayman rival we've been waiting for

6 Things I Learned From A Passenger Ride In The New Alpine A110

Even now it’s lost a pair of cylinders, the Porsche Cayman is still the defacto sports car of choice at this end of the market. And to understand why, you just have to take a look at the car’s rivals.

The Audi TT RS grips like a damn barnacle and has a sensational engine, but it’s a bit of a blunt instrument. The Jaguar F-Type is a bit too big and a bit too heavy to be considered a true rival, while the twitchy, uncompromising Alfa Romeo 4C is a much more niche proposition.

The Alpine A110 on the other hand has the requisite purity in its mid-engined, weight-obsessed design to take on the 718 Cayman, and judging by our passenger rides, it might just have the handling to show the Porsche a clean pair of heels. It certainly sounds better, arguably looks better, and represents a much more interesting choice than the obvious Porsche.

We can’t wait to have a drive…

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Comments

🎺🎺thank mr skeltal

Looks really nice, great to see that manufacturers can still build light cars instead of heavy ones that act like they are saving weight (The Porsche marketing department is circlejerking about these hideous cloth things that replace the interior door handles and save like 100g each)

07/05/2017 - 06:13 |
104 | 0

*while still putting a radio and a satnav inside

07/09/2017 - 15:54 |
4 | 0
Tomislav Celić

IMO it would look perfect if it didn’t have rhose blue thingys. But still 4/5 for design

07/05/2017 - 07:12 |
2 | 0

make the car blue. the foglights yellow and make the wheels kinda smaller and lower it ;)

07/05/2017 - 08:38 |
22 | 0
DL🏁

Its taking them too long to launch sales

07/05/2017 - 07:43 |
2 | 0

[DELETED]

07/05/2017 - 08:38 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

So its a rear engine version of what the GT86 tried to be?

Kudos Renault!

07/05/2017 - 07:51 |
52 | 2
Tomislav Celić

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Why TRIED? GT86 is a great car

07/05/2017 - 09:58 |
16 | 2
AnOrangeHellcat

I want one!

07/05/2017 - 09:31 |
2 | 0
Monty4248

Meanwhile, in America

07/05/2017 - 10:46 |
166 | 0
Dat Incredible Chadkake

In reply to by Monty4248

we have guns and buffets so it’s not all bad news

07/05/2017 - 14:23 |
16 | 8

There are certain cars that you can import into the US for a year under a show and display placard and registration. There are few people that are possibly interested in pursuing this and are not the type of people that keep cars for a long time anyway so a year should satisfy the urge. Like the Clio V6s that pop up at car shows.

07/07/2017 - 05:38 |
0 | 0

sour

07/07/2017 - 22:03 |
0 | 0

well between this and the cayman, i know what im getting

07/08/2017 - 20:06 |
0 | 0
German Perfectionist

No interior pics?

07/05/2017 - 11:17 |
20 | 0
LukeyWolf

Would be perfect if it went rallying

07/05/2017 - 11:26 |
4 | 0
HAYABUSA

Not gonna lie, considering that Renault was behind that project, I wasn’t expecting much when it was announced. But I gotta say this car has come to be what appears to be a very neat sportscar. I would definitely get this over a Cayman if they rezlly do keep the price within the 50.000 bracket

07/05/2017 - 12:56 |
4 | 0

Its looks are wicked too

07/05/2017 - 12:56 |
2 | 0

So your opinion is that none of the cars made over the years by Renault Sport (including oddities like the V6 Clio) are worth anything?

07/08/2017 - 19:56 |
2 | 0
Rob S

While I dig the fact that there will be a new Cayman competitor, I cant get over how it looks compared to the Cayman. It reminds me of the Juke with its weird center headlights just seeming so…out of place?

07/05/2017 - 13:57 |
0 | 0
HCR Writing Space

In reply to by Rob S

That’s homologation design cues for you.

07/06/2017 - 09:58 |
4 | 0