Tag Archive | "2011 renault knysna hillclimb"

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Pedigree With Punch: Renault Clio Gordini RS

Posted on 25 May 2011 by SACarFan

Following last year’s launch of Renault Sport’s Twingo Gordini RS, Renault South Africa has expanded the Gordini range with the launch of the new Clio Gordini Renault Sport at the 2011 Knysna Hillclimb, sponsored by Renault.

Clio Gordini is to Renault, as John Cooper Works is to Mini and DS3 is to Citroen, that is, a fast hot hatch with an added dash of style and exclusivity. ”The Clio Gordini Renault Sport combines the award-winning credentials of the Clio Renault Sport with the proud heritage of the Gordini name to produce a truly segment-defining hot hatch,” says Xavier Gobille, managing director of Renault South Africa. “Accordingly, it will appeal to a growing number of drivers seeking an exclusive yet affordable performance car with a distinctive character and a race-inspired legacy to match.”

Amédée Gordini established the Gordini company that transformed production cars into racers, modified regular engines for competition in endurance and grand prix racing, and even built specialist racing cars under his own banner. In 1956 Renault approached ‘The Sorcerer’, as he was commonly known, to develop its rear-engined Dauphine sedan into a competitive rally car and the rest, as they say, is history. Eventually the Gordini company was merged into Renault and it became the foundation for Renault Sport Technologies (RS), which has gone on to produce the impressive RS versions of the Clio, Mégane and Twingo over the years. It’s fitting, then, that Renault pays homage to Amédée Gordini and the legendary cars that he spurred the development of.

In the case of the new Renault Clio Gordini Renault Sport, the hatch retains all the virtues that make it our favorite hot hatch of the moment, but adds the eye-catching and unique Gordini styling. Easliy identifiable from the standard or Clio RS ’20th’ Special Edition models, the Clio Gordini wears exclusive Malta Blue paint, together with twin white stripes that extend from the bonnet, over the roof to the tailgate – paying tribute to the racing Gordinis of the 1950s, 60s and 70s. Further styling enhancements include white exterior mirror housings and F1-style aerodynamic front splitter, diamond-effect 12-spoke aluminium alloy wheels, as well as ‘Gordini Series’ badges on each flank.

The Gordini spirit continues in the cabin too, with Gordini-badged Renault Sport seats, trimmed in black leather with blue accents along the lower and upper side bolsters. The top section of the leather-trimmed three-spoke sports steering wheel is finished in blue leather, with two white stripes to indicate the straight-ahead position. Similarly, the gear lever features a blue leather gaiter and a metallic Gordini-branded gear knob, bolstered by a numbered Gordini plaque on the gearlever console, carpet mats with blue edging and Gordini branding.

The instrumentation echoes this performance hatchback’s racing disposition, including a rev counter dial with white background, as well as the on-board Renault Sport Telemetry Display that made its debut on the Mégane RS Cup. The system provides the driver with real-time performance and vehicle data, as well as several options to tailor the throttle and engine response.

As mentioned, the Renault Clio Gordini RS retains the virtues of the standard Clio RS, meaning a superb chassis and suspension system, matched to a potent, high-revving naturally aspirated engine. The Clio Gordini RS features the sportier Cup chassis as standard, which offers a firmer and more focused set-up, providing an even more exhilarating driving experience than the standard car. An independent steering axis front suspension ensures precise steering and together with low-profile 215/45 R17 tyres, endows the hatch with serious levels of grip. Stopping power comes courtesy of Brembo four-piston callipers that bite into ventilated 312 mm front discs and 300 mm solid discs at the rear. ABS with Electronic Brakeforce Distribution is standard. The Electronic Stability Programme (ESP) can be turned off for spirited driving, such as at the Knysna Hillclimb where media raced the cars up the 1.9 kilometer course.

At the heart of the Clio Renault Sport is a 2.0-litre naturally aspirated 4-cylinder engine that develops 147.5 kW, or a class-leading 75 kW per litre. The engine pulls strongly all the way to the 7 500 r/min redline, although peak power is achieved at 7 100 r/min. Torque of 215 Nm is available at 5 400 r/min, but as media found out after the first few smokey starts at the Knysna Hillclimb, the Clio Gordini is plenty quick off the mark without the tacho needle pointing skywards. Once on the move, the slick-shifting six-speed manual gearbox is one of the most satisfying to use and plays an important role in the Clio’s 0 – 100 km/h sprint of 6.9 seconds.

As the range-topping variant in the Clio Renault Sport range, the Gordini boasts a premium level of standard features, including a rain sensor and automatic headlight activation, dedicated cornering lights and electrically folding exterior mirrors. Other convenience features include cruise control with speed limiter, Renault’s hands-free key and ignition card, automatic climate control and dark-tinted rear windows. On the audio front, the Gordini Renault Sport is equipped with an 80-watt CD receiver with MP3 playback, a separate dashboard-mounted display and steering wheel controls, as well as Bluetooth and multimedia connectivity with USB and iPod connections.

Whether you have penchant for hot hatches, historic racing heritage and stand-out styling, or even if you don’t, the new Renault Clio Gordini Renault Sport is a car that will never fail to involve its driver from the moment the brilliant, naturally aspirated, 2.0-litre engine fires into life. In fact, we feel like getting our hands on a set of keys and driving one right now!

The Renault Clio Gordini Renault Sport is priced at R279 900 and includes a 5-year/150 000 km warranty and 3-year/60 000 km service plan.

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Japanese 4WD’s Dominate The 2011 Renault Knysna Hillclimb

Posted on 24 May 2011 by Scott Hayes

Last weekend’s 2011 Renault Knysna Hillclimb formed the grand finale in the week-long Knysna Speed Festival, which was filled with all kinds of motoring competition ranging from karting to slot-car racing, car shows, a soap-box derby and more. Now in its third year, and with growing sponsorship, including that of title sponsor’s Renault, we’re pleased to see the event going from strength-to-strength in all areas.

Although held in October last year, this year the organisers elected to hold the event in May to capitalise on warmer and dryer weather. The strategy worked, with a weekend of sunshine and partly cloudy conditions for Sunday’s finals. As a result, spectators poured into a new and much improved parking area at Simola Resort to witness the action – 6 000 motorsport enthusiasts enjoyed the qualifying on Saturday alone.

Last year’s winner, Geoff Mortimer, returned to defend his title in his bright yellow Mitsubishi Evo IX, but with a pack of Nissan GT-Rs in the hunt for victory, including a TopSecret tuned R34 with 735 kW (1 000 Hp), it was never going to be easy. Saturday’s practice confirmed this, with Mortimer trailing by 0.205 seconds in second position in a Nissan GT-R sandwich. As the weekend progressed and the drivers got into their rhythms, the King Of The Hill title looked headed for one of three men – Mortimer, last year’s runner-up Wilhelm Baard, and Jade Gudzeit, who was just managing to keep his father, Des, at bay.

And so it proved to be…Just after lunch on the Sunday, the fastest cars in each class had a final run up the demanding and spectacularly fast 1.9 km Simola Hill, with Wilhelm Baard throwing down the gauntlet needing just 42.444 seconds to crest the hill. Father and son, Des and Jade Gudzeit, soon followed and while Des failed to break into the 42-second bracket, Jade managed a 42.659 second run, placing him in second position, two-tenths off Wilhelm. All eyes were on 74-year-old Geoff Mortimer as he lined up on the starting line to begin his run. Spectators held their breath waiting for announcer Roger McCleery to give his time – 43.108 seconds, good enough for a very respectable third place in a 80-strong entry list that featured some very serious machinery in 2011.

So a very emotional Wilhelm Baard became the third King Of The Hill, a highly popular climax to what has been an exciting festival of speed in the Garden Route’s award-winning town of Knysna.

Results
Pos. Driver Car Time (secs)
1 Wilhelm Baard Nissan GT-R 42.444
2 Jade Gudzeit Nissan GT-R 42.659
3 Geoff Mortimer Mitsubishi Evo IX 43.108
4 Des Gudzeit Nissan GT-R 43.558
4 Greg Parton Nissan GT-R 44.741

Renault South Africa also took the opportunity to launch their new GT-Line range of Megane models, as well as the Renault Clio Gordini RS and were well represented on the course, running two events within an event, in the form of the Brat Pack Challenge and Gordini Media Challenge. Mike Briggs, Geoff Goddard, Deon Joubert, Robbi Smith and Duncan Vos, known as ‘The Brat Pack’ in the days of SA’s national touring car championship during the 1990s, along with former SA Production Car driver Phillip Kekana, competed in Megane RS Cup cars over the weekend. Multiple champion Deon Joubert took top honours managing a fastest time of 49.710 seconds, followed by Mike Briggs (50.375) and Robbie Smith (50.690). The Renault Gordini Media Challenge saw local media racing up the hill in the new, blue, Renault Clio Gordini RS, with Ashley Oldfield from TopCar managing the fastest time of the weekend with 53.422 seconds.

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Soapbox Derby To Kick-Off Knysna Speed Festival And Hillclimb Weekend

Posted on 19 May 2011 by SACarFan

Excitement is mounting for the Soapbox Derby taking place on Friday 20 May as part of the inaugural Knysna Speed Festival. The Derby is being run on the bottom section of Simola Hill, which will be closed to traffic from 12h00 to 17h30 on Race Day. The action gets under way at 14h00 with practice sessions preceding the inter-school challenge. There are now 17 teams entered for the Derby.

Last Saturday the teams met in the Pennypinchers car park in the Knysna Industrial Area to assemble and test the soapboxes. All the materials, including the wood, wheels, axles, nuts and bolts where all sponsored by local businesses. Building started at 08h00 and most of the teams were already waiting, raring to go. Sponsors were allocated to the teams and the competitors were shown the safety equipment – helmets, overalls and protective gear – that will be worn on race day. There is going to be a prize awarded to the best decorated soapbox and some of the children had sleepless nights thinking of their designs! The youngsters responded enthusiastically to the help and guidance provided by the teachers, and some teams even went so far as to help their rivals when things got complicated.

Twelve primary schools will be competing in the event, which forms part of a number of events held round this year’s Knysna Speed Festival. Also on the Friday, from 14h15 there will be a parade of many of the cars involved in the festival – and especially the Hillclimb – driving through the centre of town before being put on display in the Waterfront, a cavalcade that over the last two years has proved to be a major attraction for residents and visitors alike.

For full details of the Knysna Festival of Speed and Renault Knysna Hillclimb, visit www.speedfestival.co.za and click here to watch a demo run of the Renault Knysna Hillclimb course.

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