Background
Following the enhanced measures put in place on March 23 with regard to Covid-19, we would like to assure all customers that as an online business we continue to operate, although our office is closed.
In order to help, we have a wide number of storage and delivery partners across the country who we can provide details to on request.
If there is further information you would like about any of our cars, we are happy to run individual live videos (using WhatsApp, Facetime or similar) of specific areas to your direction.
We thoroughly recommend all, new or old customers, to read our FAQs and our Trustpilot reviews for more information about our operation, and to help with your buying or selling decision. Any questions please contact us.
The standard Renault Clio is a charming little thing; in a market where plodding mediocrity and visible penny-pinching is the norm, the little French hatchback is full of vim and pep. So much so, in fact, that one of our number enjoyed driving one so much on the official launch that he got hopelessly lost in deepest Cheshire, ending up miles where he was meant to be. (He also missed a very good lunch, which is the real tragedy in this story…)
The Clio V6 Renault Sport, on the other hand, is a killer that lurks behind a PTA mum’s smile; if James Dean had been alive in the early noughties it would’ve been a Clio V6 that did it for him: Live Fast, Die Young is the French car’s motto – and we love it all the more for being so fabulously and incurably bonkers.
The Clio V6 Phase 1 of 2001 to 2003 is based on the Clio MKII, although this relationship is more notional than real as they ended up sharing very few components. With a three-litre, 227bhp V6 engine stuffed where the rear seats used to live, the need for extensive strengthening means that it weighs a porky 300kgs more than the Clio 172 Cup, the next fastest car in the range.
Developed and built by Tom Walkinshaw Racing (TWR) in Uddevalla, Sweden, the Clio V6 might only be marginally quicker than a decent hot-hatchback of the era - 0 to 60mph in 6.2 seconds and a top speed of almost 150mph - but it is such an astonishingly visceral car that it renders other comparisons meaningless thanks to a unique cacophony of noise and motion blur.
And, as if that weren’t enough, anyone who has driven one in the wet will confirm that the rear-wheel-drive chassis will spit you off the road given the slightest provocation, although the minimal sound-proofing helps the Renault redeem itself somewhat as the noise it allows satisfies every Group B fantasy you’ve ever had.
Just over 1,500 Phase 1 cars were built before Renault introduced the Phase 2 in 2003. The Phase 2’s two-year production life comprised 1,309 cars plus a power boost to 252bhp and considerably more standard equipment.
The resulting car is less raw, and more civilized and easier to handle in extremis. It is also even faster than the original with a 0-60mph time of just 5.9 seconds and a top speed comfortably in excess of 150mph.
The Renault Sport Clio V6 is, in fact, so good that Jeremy Clarkson once named the Clio V6 one of his top ten cars, which is quite the accolade - and if you’ve ever fancied one, we’ve got a rather nice example for sale right here…







