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Renault Latitude Luxe 2011 review

WHEN you think of French cars, you probably think of odd-looking hatchbacks with exorbitant prices and questionable reliability. They do well in Europe but less well here because the Japanese can bring them in cheaper, make them better looking and screw them together so they don't fall apart.

But of course the French also make large cars. These have much higher prices and are even more expensive to fix. Furthermore, sometimes they are so odd even the French won't buy them.

Citroen is generally cited as the mad one, although that would overlook the crazy heights scaled by Renault. A decade ago it came up with something called the Avantime, a bizarre combination of the worst bits of a hatchback and people-mover. It was big but had only two doors.

Undeterred by an almost total absence of buyers it followed up with the Vel Satis, a large executive hatchback that swapped weirdness for ugliness. The French president was driven around in one. But he had little choice.

After both cars flunked in Britain, it didn't bother trying to sell them here. For some time Renault's largest offering here has been the Laguna. This was a modest mid-size hatchback until Renault's design department caught up with it three years ago and made it very ugly indeed. Buyers responded by shunning it in droves.

Now Renault has brought in another large car, the Latitude, which arrives to sit atop a rejuvenated range. It replaces the Laguna, although in reality the Latitude is substantially larger and even bigger than the defunct Vel Satis.

Nevertheless, in Australian terms, it's still classified as a mid-size car and goes up against the Toyota Camry, Mazda 6 and Ford Mondeo, although it's a shade longer than all of them.

Renault in Australia recently went through one of its periodic relaunches. Although it returned here a decade ago, it's still struggling to get traction and sales have been in decline. Its latest reinvention is the most thorough so far. As well as a swag of new cars, it has a new executive team and a different attitude to buyers. In the past it expected buyers to stampede Renault showrooms with cash, blinded into paying premium prices by the prospect of driving something so exotically Gallic. Hence its repeated disappointment.

VALUE

Belatedly, it has lowered the prices to compete against the mainstream, which is where the cars belong.

The Latitude starts at $36,990 with the four-cylinder diesel, driven here, and a petrol V6 at the same price. The fully loaded version, with either engine, is $42,490. That's at least $2000 cheaper than the Laguna and right in the middle of mid-size prices. It could cause some buyers to detour on the way to the Mazda showroom.

Equally confusing will be the fact the Latitude comes with an awful lot of kit. In the top-spec luxe version I drove it was hard to find anything missing. There's leather, sat nav, parking sensors, reversing camera, heated seats with massage function, triple-zone climate control, keyless start, electronic park brake, cornering headlights, foglights, a speed limiter and panoramic sunroof.

A lot of these are options on similarly priced cars. In fact, a lot of them are options on more expensive cars.

DESIGN

There's that especially French contribution to motoring pleasure, the fragrance diffuser, controlled by no fewer than three buttons on the dash. Talk about unique selling proposition ... All this is backed up by a decent amount of room inside. The rear seats are slightly higher than the fronts so the kids can see out, and they split-fold to access the 477-litre capacity boot.

Buyer doubts will remain, of course, so Renault has added reassurance about reliability. Last month, it introduced a five-year warranty, the first European brand to do so.

Unusually for a new French car, the Latitude hasn't taken very long to get here. It was revealed at the Paris motor show last September. In showrooms, barely seven months later is setting quite a pace.

The main reason is that the Latitude engineers did not have to start with a clean slate. The car owes its origins to the Japanese half of the Renault-Nissan alliance. Underneath, it's the Nissan Maxima launched here two years ago. The Maxima is one of those middle-of-the-road cars that wins awards when all the points are added up but is so monumentally dull it's hard to imagine someone actually wanting one.

The Latitude avoids blandness and tries hard not to offend. This is an advantage in a segment where good looks are in short supply. Next to a Subaru Liberty, Honda Accord or Toyota Camry, the Latitude is relaxing on the eye. Inside, the 10 shades of black are broken here and there by a daring bit of chrome. It's all quite tidy and padded to the touch.

DRIVING

It's a relaxing drive, because there's little in its dynamics to tear you away from counting fenceposts. The steering lacks on-centre feel while its handling isn't precise enough to satisfy those for whom driving is a pleasure rather than a chore. The car's composure can get flummoxed by some surfaces and the way it tips into corners doesn't inspire a great deal of enthusiasm.

The Latitude has the merits of a cruiser, especially with the diesel engine in the test car. It's a chuggy sounding unit, something the best diesels avoid these days, but gets better after it's warmed up and, while it won't convert petro-holics, it does have the right temperament for a long trip.

It's also much more frugal than the petrol alternative, a 133kW 2.5-litre V6 shared with the Maxima, using a respectable 6.5 litres of fuel per 100km against 9.7.

There's a manual mode in the six-speed automatic but it doesn't relinquish much control, rejecting downshifts and changing up at 4500rpm.

So sit back and play with the toys. You'll need a little familiarity to grasp the fussy French logic to the controls, despite a demonstration, the radio had me fuming for a while, and there's a separate cluster of buttons for the sat nav. The ride isn't perfect (does anyone expect the French to lead on this quality any more?), but it's comfortable enough for long highway stretches.

"Good enough" pretty much sums up the car, too. It excels at nothing, and sells on value and equipment.

In the two years since its sister, the Maxima, arrived it has failed to meet its showroom targets. Renault's goals for the Latitude are more modest, hoping to lure 200 buyers away from the default choices. That looks achievable. What it won't do is bring about wholesale change to the way.

Read more about prestige motoring at The Australian.

Pricing guides

$10,450
Based on third party pricing data
Lowest Price
$7,920
Highest Price
$12,980

Range and Specs

VehicleSpecsPrice*
2.0 DCi 2.0L, Diesel, 6 SP AUTO $7,920 – 11,220 2011 Renault Latitude 2011 2.0 DCi Pricing and Specs
2.5 V6 2.5L, PULP, 6 SP AUTO $8,580 – 12,100 2011 Renault Latitude 2011 2.5 V6 Pricing and Specs
2.0 DCi Luxe 2.0L, Diesel, 6 SP AUTO $9,240 – 12,980 2011 Renault Latitude 2011 2.0 DCi Luxe Pricing and Specs
2.5 V6 Luxe 2.5L, PULP, 6 SP AUTO $9,240 – 12,980 2011 Renault Latitude 2011 2.5 V6 Luxe Pricing and Specs
Philip King
Contributing Journalist

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Pricing Guide

$7,920

Lowest price, based on third party pricing data

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