The radical Renault 5 Turbo 3E will arrive in 2027 as the brand's most powerful and advanced road car ever, packed with 533bhp and Porsche 911-baiting acceleration.
This electric reincarnation of the 5 Turbo of 1980 – also the number of examples that will be built – is said by Renault to have created an entirely new segment: the 'mini-supercar'.
Renault Group design chief Laurens van den Acker said: "Essentially there were no restrictions with this. I think we're living in quite a good era in design at Renault Group at the moment. All our dreams seem to be coming true, and to do a little car with these proportions is a dream."
This was achieved through a one-of-a-kind role reversal between designers and engineers, he said: "We had designed a car before the engineers got their hands on it and then the engineers made it happen, whereas in a normal world it would be the other way around."
The 5 Turbo 3E is loosely based on today's retro-styled Renault 5 electric supermini but with a bespoke platform, its own bodywork and a pair of in-wheel motors.
These combine to produce a claimed 3540 lb ft of wheel torque, although the torque transferred to the road is likely to be more like 10% of that figure.
The resulting performance is a 0-62mph time expected to take less than 3.5sec, 0-120mph in under 9.0sec and a track-only top speed of 168mph.
The in-wheel motors are said to deliver their power to the rear wheels more immediately than conventional ones, while enabling more precise control of each wheel and providing a "significant" weight and space saving at the axle.
The technology – which Autocar understands has been supplied by British specialist Protean Electric – removes the need for an electronic differential.
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In the modern day yes, but the original in wheel electric motor driven automobile was designed by a certain Ferdinand Porsche, the car in question was the Lohner-Porsche Semper Vivus built in 1900!
This looks amazing and will be hugely successful I'm sure.
The big story here though surely is in-wheel motors. I will be corrected I'm sure, but is this not the first 'real' application of in-wheel power on the market?
Great looking car with just the right amount of retro that also has the potential to smash anything else on the market, although I don't understand why it's not 4 wheel drive at that price point.