RE: Renault Megane R.S. 300 Trophy-R | Spotted

RE: Renault Megane R.S. 300 Trophy-R | Spotted

Thursday 9th May

Renault Megane R.S. 300 Trophy-R | Spotted

There'll never be a R.S. hot hatch like it again. Good job it went out on a high


We’ve been busy testing the Hyundai Ioniq 5 N on home soil this week and (spoiler alert) it’s really rather good. Needless to say, there’s a fair amount of trepidation around what the rise of the electric car means for the hot hatch, but the Ioniq 5 N proves that with a great team of engineers and the right mindset, EVs can deliver some of the feel and emotion that a conventional piston-powered car can. And it needs to because the hot hatch is in danger of being thrown out with the combustion engine. 

Take the Renault Megane, for instance. For the best part of two decades, the humdrum family car has served as the basis for some of the all-time great hot hatches and a fair share of Nurburgring record holders to boot. But the arrival of the all-electric Megane E-Tech back in 2022 saw the combustion model assigned to the history books, and with it any hopes of another entry in the R.S. lineage. It’s long been rumoured that Alpine may have a crack at Megane E-Tech platform, and it’s already working on Renault 5-based hot hatch, the A290_β, but whether it’ll be as scintillating as R.S. of old remains to be seen.

Frankly that was always going to be a high bar in any format, although the R.S. 300 Trophy-R like the one we have here raised it to stratospheric heights. Arriving in 2019, the final edition of the Trophy-R took everything that made previous track-special Meganes so rapid and dialled them up to 11. Like the R26.R and 275 Trophy-R, the 300 ditched the rear bench, thinner glass and the rear-wheel steering (standard on non-R models), which required a redesign of the axle. So extreme were the weight-saving measures that Renault even installed a smaller infotainment screen, shaving off just 250g.

Alongside the drastic diet, Renault Sport raided the top draw of its motorsport teams for the very best - and expensive - hardware. Fully adjustable Ohlins dampers were standard fit, lowering the right height by up to 16mm, as were lighter springs and an uprated Brembo braking system with four-pot callipers up front. Special attention was also paid to the aerodynamics, with tweaks made to the underfloor to help channel more air towards the 30 per cent larger rear diffuser. Power from the 1.8-litre turbo four was left unchanged at 300hp, but that was enough for Renault to clinch a third front-wheel drive ‘Ring record at seven minutes and 45.389 seconds. 

To no surprise, the record car was even more extreme with carbon fibre wheels, saving 16kg over the already 8kg-lighter stock wheels, and carbon ceramic brakes. These were available as optional extras, with the brakes costing £9,000 and the wheels a staggering £12,000. That meant that, when factoring in the already punchy price tag of £51,140, those after a record-spec Trophy-R would need to fork out north of £72,000. Crazy money even now - and remember this was back before car prices went really mad.

Accordingly, of the 32 cars earmarked for the UK, just two were kitted out in full record spec while 13 were upgraded with carbon wheels.

This has neither, which means that kerbs and potholes won’t be quite as terrifying, nor will the bill when it comes to replacing the brakes. It has, however, had its wheels painted black to mimic the look of the carbon rims. Despite its rarity, this comes with a pretty big discount at £37,995. Mileage is relatively low at 8,200, it is completely stock and has a full main dealer service history. That’s a lot of boxes ticked, especially when you consider that this modified 275 Trophy-R is just £2,000 cheaper. Old or new, which are you taking?


SPECIFICATION | RENAULT MEGANE R.S. TROPHY-R

Engine: 1,798cc four-cylinder, turbocharged
Transmission: six-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Power (hp): 300@6,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 295@2,400rpm
MPG: 35.8
CO2: 180g/km
Year registered: 2020
Recorded mileage: 8,200
Price new: £51,140 (plus £12,000 carbon wheel option)
Yours for: £37,995

See the original advert here

Author
Discussion

asci.white

Original Poster:

389 posts

74 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
Sounds crazy but i've always found the lack of design / care to the engine bay's design left me wanting.

Fab car though, just don't lift the bonnet for wow factor.

fantheman80

1,475 posts

50 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
asci.white said:
Sounds crazy but i've always found the lack of design / care to the engine bay's design left me wanting.

Fab car though, just don't lift the bonnet for wow factor.
Its does look gash, like its been badly modified. Did all meg rs look like that?


McLarenLad

101 posts

12 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
Not a fan of the decals on the R. It's got a real "MSV Track Days Instructor Car" vibe to it.

Would much rather a 300 Trophy in liquid yellow.

resolve10

1,035 posts

46 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
My Trophy (non R) was exactly the same under the bonnet. My favourite bit was the tin foil like coating on the pipework!

Cracking cars though.

CG2020UK

1,576 posts

41 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
Absolutely love it!

Would love to own one.

Its ring time is bonkers for a car that comes from such humble beginnings.

Justin-ow582

155 posts

106 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
asci.white said:
Sounds crazy but i've always found the lack of design / care to the engine bay's design left me wanting.

Fab car though, just don't lift the bonnet for wow factor.
Are any modern i4 lumps anything special to look at though? (Possible exception being the MX-5 ND).
Most modern i4s have a plastic cover masking a mess underneath.

Scott-R

113 posts

106 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
https://jamesglen.co.uk/used-cars/renault/megane/1...

One of the 13 with carbon wheels is for sale here for £44k

birdcage

2,842 posts

206 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
Tedious ad push

The Rotrex Kid

30,412 posts

161 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
I sold one of these to a PH’er. Great car and they were smashing them out with like 30% off towards the end, RUK were desperate to get them registered.


BlackandWhite

363 posts

195 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
In the top three best cars I’ve ever owned. Nothing quite like it at any price. Renault couldn’t give them away.

fantheman80

1,475 posts

50 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
Justin-ow582 said:
Are any modern i4 lumps anything special to look at though? (Possible exception being the MX-5 ND).
Most modern i4s have a plastic cover masking a mess underneath.
I dunno, I think the i4 and engine bay in general in the Fk8 manages to look good


WeirdNeville

5,969 posts

216 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
BlackandWhite said:
In the top three best cars I’ve ever owned. Nothing quite like it at any price. Renault couldn’t give them away.
The problem being they weren't giving them away... £72K?!?!

AKjr

404 posts

12 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
Genuine question; is this really worth the extra over the more standard and much more financially attainable versions?

The Rotrex Kid

30,412 posts

161 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
WeirdNeville said:
BlackandWhite said:
In the top three best cars I’ve ever owned. Nothing quite like it at any price. Renault couldn’t give them away.
The problem being they weren't giving them away... £72K?!?!
There was only one fully spec’d ‘£72k’ customer car in the UK, I would wager that the buyer of that didn’t pay that money for it either.

I think there were like 10/12 with CF wheels, the rest were ‘standard’ cars, I can’t remember exactly but I think the one I sold actually sold somewhere in the high £30k bracket, a long way short of the £51k list price.

nismo48

3,793 posts

208 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
fantheman80 said:
asci.white said:
Sounds crazy but i've always found the lack of design / care to the engine bay's design left me wanting.

Fab car though, just don't lift the bonnet for wow factor.
Its does look gash, like its been badly modified. Did all meg rs look like that?
My Renault Clio RS200 Cup looked OK with bonnet up..
But this Megane is not for show in that respect

The Rotrex Kid

30,412 posts

161 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
I just checked and the one I sold had its first MOT last year and had a heady 32 miles on the clock!!

CedricN

821 posts

146 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
Its a bit sad they went from wild cars like this to absolutely nothing, RIP Renault sport.

GreatScott2016

1,226 posts

89 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
What a thing, love it!

KIWIRS

13 posts

100 months

Thursday 9th May
quotequote all
CedricN said:
Its a bit sad they went from wild cars like this to absolutely nothing, RIP Renault sport.
Cheer up, the Trophy-R wont be the last and most certainly wont be the best.

Its just a name change really, the Dieppe company was Alpine, then become Renault Sport and is now Alpine again, same mad people building mad cars for mad people who don't care about what engine bays look like and prefer driver enjoyment.

We have the "final edition" A110 to look forward too, and any existing A110 in the mean time.

Personally, I'm Interested to see what they do with the EV hot hatches, the A290 in particular, that is being launched in LM in a few weeks. I'm sure we can expect to see that evolve over time as Renault Sport / Alpine have done with all other models, ie Cup, Trophy, Trophy-R etc.


British Beef

2,231 posts

166 months

Friday 10th May
quotequote all
CedricN said:
Its a bit sad they went from wild cars like this to absolutely nothing, RIP Renault sport.
Where Renault (and Ford) left off with their great hot hatches, Toyota has picked up the slack and is making even better, faster and more reliable hot hatches, and in todays money they are cheaper. Win win, unless you need to buy French!