RE: Renaultsport Megane 250: PH Fleet

RE: Renaultsport Megane 250: PH Fleet

Friday 13th April 2018

Renaultsport Megane 250: PH Fleet

The Megane hasn't moved far recently. But its overhaul is complete nonetheless



After tackling my hefty daily duties to and from Twickenham for six months, and covering 10,000 miles in the process, VU11 WLD has had a well-earned rest over the winter. The other French hot hatch on the fleet has done a great job of filling some big boots in the meantime.

However, a mileage shortfall does not mean a lack of progress. With power sorted and the Clio sold, some of the funds have been redirected into turning the Megane into my very own Trophy-R replica. For a start, the steering wheel, gear gaiter, handbrake cover and gaiter were all sent off to Royal Steering Wheels to be retrimmed. And what a fantastic job they did; Alcantara just makes everything better, doesn't it?


Next stop, the seats, which in standard format are hopeless on track as you spend half the time sliding around on the leather, trying not to fall off. There was only one option; a set of Recaro Pole Position ABE seats with aluminium side mounts which you'll find in a proper Trophy-R, albeit in slightly different trim. And finally to complete the interior, a Trophy-R replica rear bar from CGR Automotive with a genuine Sabelt cargo net.

With just enough pennies left in the piggy bank, I went to my go-to suppliers for track wheels and tyres. I'm useless when it comes to understanding wheel offsets but thanks to some advice from another Megane owner, my car was subsequently fitted with a set of Team Dynamics 1.3 in 8.5x18 ET45 to sit flush to the arches and wrapped in the always grippy Avon ZZR in 225/40/18.


Naturally all this needed testing, and our final Silverstone Sunday Service of 2017 provided the perfect place backdrop. With a dry track laid on to make the most of Avon's expertise, the car performed faultlessly - even in the face of three-hour endurance session involving repeat passenger rides.

Compared to my last outing at Rockingham, the difference in pace was unmistakable. The combination of 360lb ft of torque from 3,500rpm and the racket coming from the now unshielded exhaust made the hard work all worthwhile before the first corner had even been rounded. No less impressive were the Megane's fresh set of brake discs; the Carbon Lorraine RC5+ pads pulled the car up at every corner with fail, no fade or judder throughout the session. They're seriously impressive for a relatively budget pad, and will be my new go-to over the Ferodo DS2500.


The real star of the show though were the ZZRs. There's just so much grip everywhere, which means that you not only brake later and corner faster, but do everything with untold levels of confidence. Throw in the Megane's stellar chassis, and there are surely few finer ways to spend your time and money.

Which does of course make the question of its replacement rather tricky. Certainly it'll be hard to beat for performance, reliability and practicality, although with a 200 year-old cottage to renovate, some funds definitely need freeing up. Frankly it's hard to imagine life now without a Renault Sport product on the fleet (and, for me, the Megane 250 is the perfect answer to the used hot hatch conundrum), but that sad day is fast approaching.


FACT SHEET
Car:
2011 Renault Megane 250 Lux
Run by: Ben Lowden
Bought: May 2017
Mileage: 62,384
Last month at a glance: Well it's not a proper track car without some Alcantara now, is it?

Previous reports:
Renaultsport swap as Megane 230 goes for Megane 250
Why stick with 250hp when you could have 320?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


[Silverstone action pics: Chris Teagles]

Author
Discussion

MikeGoodwin

Original Poster:

3,339 posts

117 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
Glad someone else thinks the sportster isn't that great. I wanted to swap mine out for some pole positions for road use nevermind the track.

culpz

4,882 posts

112 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
It's such a mean-looking car and is clearly extremely capable too. Gotta get myself one of these at some point! I love how race-car it looks inside, with the alcantara steering wheel and the new seats, but with the contrast of that huge nav/infotainment screen. It's sort of a bit reminiscent of a 991 GT3 inside.

I'm sad to hear of it's potentially imminent departure. However, as always, cracking progress and another great update Ben, keep it up (for as long as possible) biggrin

Edited by culpz on Friday 13th April 09:40

323ti

128 posts

121 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
Pole Positions always look the business, even though they only come in one - small - size.
But they look like they are mounted very high, and extremely reclined.
Literally a laid back seating position?

BenLowden

6,033 posts

177 months

PH Marketing Bloke

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
MikeGoodwin said:
Glad someone else thinks the sportster isn't that great. I wanted to swap mine out for some pole positions for road use nevermind the track.
If you haven't bought any yet, I can thoroughly recommend ADN Motorsports. They're based in Spain but by far the cheapest around.

culpz said:
I'm sad to hear of it's potentially imminent departure. However, as always, cracking progress and another great update Ben, keep it up (for as long as possible) biggrin
Thanks Sam! It has been the best all-rounder that I've owned so far without a doubt. I'll hopefully always have something interested to read about though smile

323ti said:
Pole Positions always look the business, even though they only come in one - small - size.
But they look like they are mounted very high, and extremely reclined.
Literally a laid back seating position?
Might just be a trick of the camera as I'm not one for heavily reclined seats. There are two holes on the rear of the side frame and four on front, so they do offer a fair bit of adjustment but the setting you see is what I found most comfortable for a combination of road and track use. You can't bolt them straight to the floor so I used K-Tec subframes, but they're still lower that standard seats and don't feel too high when you're sat in them.

ZX10R NIN

27,604 posts

125 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
Nice work the seats look the business.

tomkingshott

54 posts

145 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
really do like this shape megane especially in the grey and white they look excellent. even more so when fitted with some proper seats up front and nothing in the rear.
wouldn't mind scratching the itch to get hold of one of these now they're coming down in value thinking about it

nickfrog

21,149 posts

217 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
MikeGoodwin said:
Glad someone else thinks the sportster isn't that great. I wanted to swap mine out for some pole positions for road use nevermind the track.
I have found them to be near perfect for both track and road use and particularly in the context of a daily driver, where a fixes bucket is not that great IME. The harness did help on track but even on normal belts, the support is spot on even on semi slicks.

BenLowden

6,033 posts

177 months

PH Marketing Bloke

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
nickfrog said:
I have found them to be near perfect for both track and road use and particularly in the context of a daily driver, where a fixes bucket is not that great IME. The harness did help on track but even on normal belts, the support is spot on even on semi slicks.
I actually had the standard heated leather seats so can't comment on the Sportsters, but they certainly look like they'd offer more support over the standard seats. The Pole Positions are surprisingly comfortable though for a bucket seat and easy to live with in a daily. They were standard fit in my Mk1 TT Quattro Sport I had a few years ago and I never got bored of them!

Dale487

1,334 posts

123 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all

A couple of questions;

How much were all the additions?

And why spend a decent amount of money making the car more specialised and probably harder to sell if you knew you a have a house which sounds like quite a hefty project? (Man maths?)

BenLowden

6,033 posts

177 months

PH Marketing Bloke

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
Dale487 said:
A couple of questions;

How much were all the additions?

And why spend a decent amount of money making the car more specialised and probably harder to sell if you knew you a have a house which sounds like quite a hefty project? (Man maths?)
Well to start, I have a PhD in Man Maths so any purchase can be justified. I dread to think what I've spent, but somewhere in the region of £4-5K. The fact that it may be harder to sell doesn't bother me, because I've achieved what I've wanted to. I've always sold every single one of my cars to the first person to look at them, so I must be doing something right smile

The costs on the house have escalated with things like boilers needing replacing, but at least I've achieved what I've wanted to with the Megane, it has been fantastic and everything I hoped it would be. I've made money on a few cars with smart buys at the right time, but then I've lost money on plenty of them too. Even if it's more of the latter, as long as I've had a good time, that's something I can happily live with!

nickfrog

21,149 posts

217 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
BenLowden said:
I actually had the standard heated leather seats so can't comment on the Sportsters, but they certainly look like they'd offer more support over the standard seats. The Pole Positions are surprisingly comfortable though for a bucket seat and easy to live with in a daily. They were standard fit in my Mk1 TT Quattro Sport I had a few years ago and I never got bored of them!
I think Mike assumed you had the Recaro OE Sporsters.

Dale487

1,334 posts

123 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
BenLowden said:
Dale487 said:
A couple of questions;

How much were all the additions?

And why spend a decent amount of money making the car more specialised and probably harder to sell if you knew you a have a house which sounds like quite a hefty project? (Man maths?)
Well to start, I have a PhD in Man Maths so any purchase can be justified. I dread to think what I've spent, but somewhere in the region of £4-5K. The fact that it may be harder to sell doesn't bother me, because I've achieved what I've wanted to. I've always sold every single one of my cars to the first person to look at them, so I must be doing something right smile

The costs on the house have escalated with things like boilers needing replacing, but at least I've achieved what I've wanted to with the Megane, it has been fantastic and everything I hoped it would be. I've made money on a few cars with smart buys at the right time, but then I've lost money on plenty of them too. Even if it's more of the latter, as long as I've had a good time, that's something I can happily live with!
Thanks - I guess that making your living from writing about cars does make it a lot easier to justify the expenditure to yourself & a little easier to justify to your other half, if required.

Clearly I need to work on my man maths - I'm far to cautious & sensible, I really wanted a Golf GTI and could get a stonking deal on the last of the MK7s before they went to the MK7.5 (hardly any more expensive than an 18 month old one) but went for a Leon FR ST instead as it was the car that better met my needs.

How much was the Alcantara re-trim, it looks factory to me.

DoubleD

22,154 posts

108 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
Yeah that steering wheel looks good. Does it wear badly where you hold it?

Dale487

1,334 posts

123 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
DoubleD said:
Yeah that steering wheel looks good. Does it wear badly where you hold it?
That's why I was asking about the cost of the re-trim - as Alcantara is notorious for wearing faster (or at least going flat) compared to leather but has its own befits and this isn't anything a re-trim cycle wouldn't fix if the price was sensible.

Edited by Dale487 on Friday 13th April 14:06

BenLowden

6,033 posts

177 months

PH Marketing Bloke

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
Dale487 said:
Thanks - I guess that making your living from writing about cars does make it a lot easier to justify the expenditure to yourself & a little easier to justify to your other half, if required.

Clearly I need to work on my man maths - I'm far to cautious & sensible, I really wanted a Golf GTI and could get a stonking deal on the last of the MK7s before they went to the MK7.5 (hardly any more expensive than an 18 month old one) but went for a Leon FR ST instead as it was the car that better met my needs.

How much was the Alcantara re-trim, it looks factory to me.
Well, I actually work on the marketing team across our automotive brands so strictly speaking I don't make a living writing about cars. But you only live once right?! Man maths generally works in my favour as I always buy used and don't suffer the depreciation on a new car.

The steering wheel retrim was £150 from memory, and then £90 for the gear gaiter, handbrake cover and gaiter. I think Alcantara will naturally wear more than leather, but it's easy to maintain, looks/feels amazing and will easily outlast how long I'll ever keep a car for! Thoroughly recommend it.

Dale487

1,334 posts

123 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
BenLowden said:
Dale487 said:
Thanks - I guess that making your living from writing about cars does make it a lot easier to justify the expenditure to yourself & a little easier to justify to your other half, if required.

Clearly I need to work on my man maths - I'm far to cautious & sensible, I really wanted a Golf GTI and could get a stonking deal on the last of the MK7s before they went to the MK7.5 (hardly any more expensive than an 18 month old one) but went for a Leon FR ST instead as it was the car that better met my needs.

How much was the Alcantara re-trim, it looks factory to me.
Well, I actually work on the marketing team across our automotive brands so strictly speaking I don't make a living writing about cars. But you only live once right?! Man maths generally works in my favour as I always buy used and don't suffer the depreciation on a new car.

The steering wheel retrim was £150 from memory, and then £90 for the gear gaiter, handbrake cover and gaiter. I think Alcantara will naturally wear more than leather, but it's easy to maintain, looks/feels amazing and will easily outlast how long I'll ever keep a car for! Thoroughly recommend it.
That's not silly money for Alcantara re-trim.

I bought the Leon nearly new & saved £10k on list, for a 10 month old ex-SEAT UK car with only 4K on the clock - but this was the sensible car to buy, isn't man maths justifying buying the car that common sense say you shouldn't buy (too impracticable or potentially ruinous or both)?

Jon_S_Rally

3,406 posts

88 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
What kind of money do you think it will go up for?

Lovely car with a great spec.

BenLowden

6,033 posts

177 months

PH Marketing Bloke

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
Dale487 said:
I bought the Leon nearly new & saved £10k on list, for a 10 month old ex-SEAT UK car with only 4K on the clock - but this was the sensible car to buy, isn't man maths justifying buying the car that common sense say you shouldn't buy (too impracticable or potentially ruinous or both)?
That sounds like a decent purchase! Well you're quite right, but clearly your judgement got the better of you on this occasion biglaugh I'd be telling myself the hypothetical £10K saved could be put to use on something less sensible...

Jon_S_Rally said:
What kind of money do you think it will go up for?

Lovely car with a great spec.
Thank you! I'm afraid it's already spoken for, one of my friends has been waiting patiently to buy it from me when the time comes. But cars of a similar mileage/colour/spec will generally be around the £11-13K mark. If you're in the market I'd suggest keeping an eye on the for sale threads on RSMegane.com

323ti

128 posts

121 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
BenLowden said:
The Pole Positions are surprisingly comfortable though for a bucket seat and easy to live with in a daily. They were standard fit in my Mk1 TT Quattro Sport I had a few years ago and I never got bored of them!
Wow Ben, didn't know you owned a TT sport. They go for crazy ape bonkers prices nowadays..
So both the Meg and the TT are similar in power, weight, manual box, turbocharging and even the PP's, are they anywhere similar to drive? I know the Sport was 4WD but obviously heavily FWD slanted with the Haldex.
Or is it a foregone conclusion where the Meg kills the TT stone dead?

nickfrog

21,149 posts

217 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
BenLowden said:
Well, I actually work on the marketing team across our automotive brands so strictly speaking I don't make a living writing about cars. But you only live once right?! Man maths generally works in my favour as I always buy used and don't suffer the depreciation on a new car.
I lost £135/month on my Meg Cup-S which I sold last week. Bought new but at high discount as was one if the last ones. Not bad for a new Renault !