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Renault Latitude Reviews

You'll find all our Renault Latitude reviews right here. Renault Latitude prices range from $6,490 for the Latitude 20 Dci Dynamique to $16,500 for the Latitude 20 Dci Privilege.

Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.

The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Renault dating back as far as 2011.

Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the Renault Latitude, you'll find it all here.

Tips to get an EOFY bargain
By Neil Dowling · 21 Jun 2013
June 30 is D-Day. The end of the financial year is the best time to buy a new car because there are always special deals in showrooms. As carmakers and dealers aim to clear their outdated stock, Toyota uses a June push to cement its showroom leadership. Some of the special deals are on cars that have done demonstrator duty, or were built in 2012, or are just not selling as well as expected. So they're not the tastiest fruit in the bowl.But there is great buying across the board as demand for new cars fuels one of the longest growth periods in motoring. The bottom line is that you can save money -- and lots of it. So here's a look at the June sales, with Carsguide's assessment of the best deals on wheels.CITROENThe new importer is pushing hard so the Aircross SUV starts at $31,990 drive-away front-wheel drive or $33,990 with AWD, a saving of $3800. There's $5000 off the C4 Seduction turbo diesel auto hatch at $25,990. Carsguide says: The Aircross isn't great, but the C4 discount is tasty.FORDThe death notice for the Falcon and Territory has not helped buyer confidence but a 2.9 per cent finance push on Fiesta and Focus still looks good. The superseded Kuga SUV from $31,990 drive-away is a $10,000 saving. You can save about $3000 on a 2012 Escape SUV from $27,990 drive-away.The Territory gets a $6500 tickle, the TX seven-seater at $38,490 drive-away (third-row seat usually costs $2500). The impressive Mondeo liftback starts at $29,990. Good buying on Falcons, thanks to the arrival of the VF Commodore, from $33,990 and better if you haggle.HOLDENAs the VF Commodore creates queues, the outgoing Z-Series starts at $34,990 with five years' warranty and roadside assist. That also applies to the SV6 at $35,990 and the Cruze SRi and SRi-V at $23,490 and $26,990. Last year's Barina CD hatches are $15,990 drive-away with a sunroof. The Colorado is $39,990. Hard to see past the excellent Cruze SRi.HONDAClipped prices and free on-roads. The City VTi sedan is $17,990 and the (slightly) more lavish VTi-L automatic version starts at $21,990. The bigger Civic sedan is being cleared from $21,990. Free auto on the Jazz VTi at $19,990. The Civic is worth a look at $2500 off.KIAFree on-roads, discounts and $1000 gift vouchers on many models. A five-door Rio S is about $3K off at $15,990 drive-away with a $500 gift card; the three-door Rio is $14,990 and the five-door Si is $18,990. Runout Cerato TD sedans start at $17,990 for the S, saving about $5000, the Si sedan is $23,990 and hatch at $17,990. All get a $1000 gift card. Cerato SLi and SLS have drive-away pricing but miss the gift card. All Optimas have free on-roads. A 2012-build Optima Platinum is $37,990, saving about $4000 with a $1000 gift card. Most Sportage SUVs include on-roads and a $1000 gift card. Carnival and superseded Rondo pricing is drive-away. The Sportage diesel and Optima are top-notch.MITSUBISHIThe manual Lancer gets an old-school value pack on the Special Action Model for $19,990 drive-away. The Mirage is $12,990 drive-away for the ES manual, with a $500 cash-back that also applies to the auto.Driveaway prices also for the compact ASX at $24,990 for the 2WD manual, the Outlander LS 2WD auto at $29,990, Pajero GLX-R auto at $54,990 or $59,990 for VRX. Both come plus $3000 cash-back, saving about $6000.The Triton ute is now tackling Great Wall from China at $19,990 drive-away for a GL single-cab 2WD with alloy tray, or add luxury for a GLX dual-cab 4WD diesel at $31,990 drive-away with $2000 cash-back, saving about $14,000. The utes look good at those prices.NISSANA 2.9 per cent finance package, with agreed value after three years, makes the Pulsar ST sedan look good at $49 a week or $19,990 drive-away. The X-Trail ST 2WD petrol manual cops a $4000 reduction to $25,990 drive-away, while the Navara RX 4WD dual-cab manual is cheaper than ever with a $9500 cut to $30,990 drive-away. The Pulsar sedan deal is attractive.OPELThere are drive-away deals across the range. The basic Corsa is down by about $2500 to $16,990 drive-away, the Astra is from $22,990 drive-away for the 1.4-litre turbo petrol hatch with three years of free servicing, saving about $5500. The top-line Insignia sedan is from $39,990 drive-away with heated leather seats. The Astra is easily best of this breed.PEUGEOTFree on-roads at Peugeot on most models but not the cool new 208. The 4008 SUV cops a $1500 saving from $29,990 drive-away and there are deals on the outgoing 4007. Nothing to see here.RENAULTA Koleos from $26,990 drive-away looks even better with interest-free finance. The Megane hatch is from $22,990 drive-away with finance pegged at 1.9 per cent. The slow-selling Fluence and Latitude sedans are available with 2.9 per cent finance. The Megane CC convertible goes from $43,990 including on-roads. The sporty Clio RS is from $34,990 drive-away and the hotrod Megane RS has 2.9 per cent finance.Commercial deals start with the short-wheelbase Kangoo petrol manual with dual sliding doors from $20,990 drive-away, moving up to the Trafic short-wheelbase manual for $29,990 and the long-wheelbase manual for $32,990, while the Master large van starts from $46,990 drive-away. There's a five-year/200,000km warranty on all light commercials ordered in June. Hard to argue against a $3000 bonus on the Koleos but stocks are tight.SUBARUDrive-away pricing -- for savings of $3000 to $4000 -- is the bait, with Impreza pricing from $23,990 (excluding the WRX, of course). The Tribeca from $54,990 now includes on-roads but you need to visit a dealer to get the full story. Nothing outstanding.SUZUKIThe front-drive SX4 gets a Navigator pack with voice-controlled 6.6-inch satnav with Bluetooth for $19,990 drive-away for the manual and $21,990 auto. That also applies to the 2WD auto Grand Vitara at $29,990 drive-away, including reversing camera and satnav with Bluetooth. The Alto GL manual also gets satnav for $11,990 drive-away for the manual, with the Swift GL manual at $17,490 drive-away including cruise control and Bluetooth. The Grand Vitara is a polished piece.TOYOTAThere's 2.9 per cent finance on Aurion and Camry with the Camry Altise looking best at $29,990 drive-away. Other drive-away deals include $15,990 for the Yaris YR five-door, $21,490 for the Corolla Ascent automatic, $39,990 for the Kluger KX-R 2WD five-seater, $60,990 for the Prado GXL turbo diesel auto and $39,990 for the HiLux SR 4WD dual-cab ute. The right time for the cabbies' new favourite, the frugal hybrid Camry.VOLKSWAGENDrive-away pricing on passenger cars and zero finance on commercials. The Polo is $16,990 on-road, the Jetta is down to $25,990 and the Passat $36,690. The Polo is Carsguide's 2010 COTY.VOLVOFuel and servicing for three years or 60,000km plus roadside assistance. There are conditions -- with a pre-paid BP card based on 15,000km a year and $1.50 a-litre pricing -- and the latest V40 hatch is excluded. Clever twist on bargaining but a pity it doesn't apply to the V40.Paul Gover's 10 COMMANDMENTSYou must still do your homework. You must still check the fine print. You must still be prepared to haggle and compromise.But do it right, crunching the numbers and running right to the dealer's deadline, and you can drive away in something special at a special price.The starting point is all the deals, from sticker specials to cheap finance and steak knife-style free extras, being offered by most of the 60-plus brands in showrooms today.If something you want is on special, go for it. But check that the car was built in 2013, and is not a geriatric old-timer from 2012, and ensure your target is exactly what you want - not a stripped-out stocker, perhaps missing an automatic gearbox - that will cost thousands to get the way you want it.Once you lock down a target, don't think the advertised special is the end of the deal. You also need to negotiate for a better price on delivery and on-road costs, and avoid the trap of buying over-priced extras such as paint and upholstery protection, window tinting and extra-long warranties.No-one can expect to go into the ring with a showroom professional and expect to win, because buyers only get a new car occasionally and sales staff are dealing every day. But, by concentrating on the real bottom line - the changeover price - and being prepared to compromise, you can come out ahead.The best tips are the simplest. Run as close as you can to June 30 to sign the deal and get the car, because dealers are all aiming for targets that can mean tens of thousands in bonus money from headquarters. Also be prepared to take a car they have in stock, even if it's not your favourite colour, because dealers are aiming to clear everything they have on the lot.And have your finance in place before you arrive, especially if you're taking up a special deal, because that makes things quicker and you'll also be spared any hassle and potential extra costs.Watch out for 2012 cars because the warranty clock has already been running, don't forget that a big discount today will also mean less at changeover time, and remember that a demonstrator car could have had a hard life already. 
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Renault Latitude diesel 2012 review
By Paul Gover · 15 May 2012
Things changed when the Renault Latitude landed in Australia last year.For the first time, the French maker had a car that didn't sit alongside 'quirky' in every sentence, or hang its future on a hatchback tail borrowed from J-Lo. The Latitude looks and drives like a run-of-the-mill mid-sized family sedan, not something oddball from France, and Renault Australia also managed to end its earlier battles against high-priced hopefuls with a bottom line from $36,990. The Carsguide crew has spent more than 2000 kilometres with a Latitude to compile a local report card, with solid Bs in most areas but a "Must do better" bottom line because of the classy competition in faces in Australia.VALUEThe basic Latitude has everything you need for family motoring, and a few surprising bonuses. The leather seats and side blinds are great for child-friendly motoring and a satnav system with built-in speed zone alerts, thanks to TomTom programming, works for everyone. The pricing plan works because the Latitude, despite its Renault badge, is a global hybrid. It picks up a mechanical package from Nissan and is built by Samsung in Korea.But, to put it into perspective, the Latitude has the same bottom line as the classy and well equipped Kia Optima Platinum and costs more than a basic Honda Accord Euro. In a mid-sized class that's loaded with contenders, and class, the Latitude is still struggling to win friends and only 208 cars were delivered through the first 11 months of 2011, compared with 17,637 for the Toyota Camry.TECHNOLOGYThere is nothing special about the Latitude, although the long-termer comes with the solid diesel engine and six-speed automatic that gives it great economy and long legs for touring. The chassis picks up Maxima bits and that shows with good handling and ride comfort that's good, but not as great as we remember from cars such as the Laguna.DESIGNThe Latitude is very conservative by Renault standards, and doesn't really sit all that way in a family of cars that is dominated by chic little Megane models. But there is nothing wrong with the shape or space, or the boot, or the dashboard layout and controls.SAFETYRenault was one of the world's first carmakers to commit to five-star ANCAP safety and, without including a big crash in the test program, there is nothing to fault. The car sits well on the road, the brakes are strong, and you know it has an ESP safety net for bad weather or some sort of silliness by someone else.DRIVINGLiving with the Latitude is easy, and enjoyable. It's no sports car, but it gets along nicely, works well for a family, and will puddle to the mall or handle a long country run. The diesel engine has plenty of shove, even with bicycles on the back end and fun stuff filling the boot, and is averaging around 8.2 litres/ 100km despite spending most of its time in the city and 'burbs. The car is quiet, the aircon works well, and the headlamps are good, but the seats are a major disappointment. They lack support and cushioning, which means the Latitude starts down the list for any trip over two hours. The biggest shortcoming in the Latitude is nothing to do with the car, but its position and its opposition. It just doesn't have enough zing or attitude - whether that's the bland styling or the lack of 'Renaultness' - in a class where there is lots of class. Our current favourites include the Ford Mondeo, the new Camry and - for value - the Skoda Octavia. So the Renault is doing the job, and still has some time left to impress, but it's not the first choice for a mid-sized winner.VERDICTThe Latitude is good, but not great. In a class with standouts like the Ford Mondeo, and even the new Toyota Camry, it's going to be a slow burn - at best - in Australia.
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Renault Latitude 2012 review
By Stuart Martin · 30 Mar 2012
There's something about Renault that is not quite getting the Australian public's attention. Although that may slowly be changing. The Clio and Megane side of the French brand's catalogue, as well as the Koleos SUV, are finding some favour but the larger vehicles have historically are yet to make a big impact. The Laguna was a low-key model in sales terms for the brand here but the car maker would be hoping the Latitude gives the sales figures more altitude.VALUEWe're in the top-spec petrol V6 model that has so far this year proven the most popular - the Luxe, priced at $42,490 (one of the few models that charges the same money for the turbodiesel), the Latitude has a features list that suggests a higher pricetag might be expected.The Luxe flagship (which represents over 90 per cent of sales since April) has a 10-speaker Bose surround sound system, filtered tri-zone climate control with ioniser and a "fragrance diffuser," TomTom satellite navigation, Bluetooth phone and audio link, the obligatory (for Renault) key card with auto-locking doors and keyless go, power-adjustable front seats with heaters, the driver gets a massaging function as well, reach and rake adjustable leather-wrapped steering wheel, a switch-operated electric parking brake, power-adjustable folding heated exterior rearvision mirrors, leather trim, 18in alloy wheels (including a full-sized spare) and a two-pane glass sunroof.TECHNOLOGYThe Latitude's petrol V6 has come from the Nissan Maxima - with the six-speed auto in place of the CVT - so not a cutting edge drivetrain, but perhaps proven might be an appropriate adjective. The Latitude does get some interesting features that are far from common - the air ioniser, fragrance diffuser and air filtering  system within the tri-zone climate control.The Luxe employs a Samsung air ioniser which Renault says produces active hydrogen atoms and negative oxygen ions to counter positive ions which can lead to stress and fatigue, according to the French car maker.The system can also produce scents (from a choice of six and in varying degrees) via the climate control system. The Latitude also has the brand's auto-locking function, which comes into effect if the driver walks away from the vehicle and doesn't use the manual lock button on the keycard.The car then locks itself and can be opened keylessly; lock it manually and it requires a button-push to unlock the car. The nicest (for the driver at least) feature is a massage function for the driver's seat, which uses five rollers within the driver's seat backrest to massage the driver - just the thing to reduce stress behind the wheel ... "cut me off, I don't care."DESIGNSomething of a Renault staple, the Latitude seems to have had a bypass on the design styling front - given that it shares plenty with the Nissan Maxima perhaps that's no surprise. It's no monstrosity but it's not going to win any design awards either, but Renault calls it generously-proportioned and elegant. The Latitude's cabin is not built for taller folk - seat adjustment range and headroom suggest occupants under 190cm would be well looked after, but above that the dimensions will start to struggle. Four adults within normal height ranges would be easily accommodated in head and leg room, with a 477-litre boot also able to swallow a decent load as well.SAFETYThis brand made a name for itself with active safety and the Korean-built Latitude follows that path - anti-lock brakes with brakeforce distribution and emergency brake assist (which kicks the hazard lights into action), stability and traction control (with an understeer control function), dual front, side and curtain airbags.Also on the list are seatbelt pretensioners and load-limiters on the front seats, lap-sash seatbelts for all seating positions, parking radar front and rear, a cruise control with speed limiter function, automatic windscreen wipers, automatic headlights, anti-dazzle rearvision mirror, a reversing camera and a tyre pressure monitoring system.DRIVINGA Maxima with a Korean dad and a French accent would be a cynic's view of the Latitude. The conservative exterior won't win any beauty contests and the interior takes the low-key line as well, but it's comfortable and well-equipped. The Nissan-sourced V6 was last experienced with a CVT directing outputs to the front wheels - the V6 is a smooth, if not overly powerful unit that requires a solid amount of force on the right pedal to get things underway with purpose.A relaxed gait is this car's forte - an attitude easily adopted with ionised air, soothing tunes on the excellent Bose sound system and the massager working nicely on the vertebrae.The serenity is ruined to a small degree by the six-speed auto, which has a tendency to roughen up the mood with sharp shifts without provocation.Nasty Australian bitumen - especially the oft-repaired roads with lots of little imperfections - don't always agree with the 18in wheel/tyre package, but aside from that the ride quality is good.The Latitude can be hustled along a little to maintain a brisk pace on a country road, turning in with more intent than first expected and able to corner with reasonable dexterity, but it's no super-tourer road-racer. Seating front and rear looks inviting and are comfortable if a little small in area (in the front), but the rear half of the cabin is a little tighter than you'd expect from the generous exterior dimensions. The highset rear bench and the falling roofline conspire to keep headroom at a premium for taller adults - children dwell easily and are fond of the door-mounted and rear window blinds. Satellite navigation is controlled by an iDrive-like set-up, which is easier to use and much better than the remote-control system offered in the smaller Renaults.VERDICTThis multi-cultural UN style Renault sedan should easily eclipse its Laguna predecessor for sales volumes, thanks to a sharp pricetag that belies an extensive features list and a smooth petrol V6 drivetrain that's only let down by the auto's sporadic clunks. With German, Japanese and French product all wading into the mid-size battleground, the medium car buyer is becoming spoilt for choice. The Latitude falls more into the cruiser category.
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Renault Latitude V6 2012 review
By John Parry · 16 Mar 2012
If you think Renault's mid-sized Latitude looks familiar, you are right. It's basically a Nissan Maxima with a Renault nose, tail and interior, built in Korea by Samsung.Renault is not expecting a rush to the Latitude, perhaps a few hundred a year, but it does serve as a replacement for the discontinued Laguna, albeit with less panache.Smaller inside but as long outside as a Commodore or Falcon, the Latitude is classed as mid-sized while the Maxima is classed as a large car.PRICES AND ENGINESKeen pricing, lavish equipment and a diesel engine priced the same as the V6 petrol version are the big attractions. There are two models, the entry level at $36,990 and the Luxe at $42,490. The 2.5-litre V6 engine comes from the base Maxima and produces 133kW and 235Nm and has a combined fuel use of 9.7 litres/100km.The two-litre turbo diesel is similar to that in the Renault Koleos and Nissan X-Trail manual. It produces the same 127kW, but torque is up 20Nm to 380Nm. Combined fuel use is 6.5 litres/100km. Both engines drive the front wheels through six-speed automatic transmissions.DRIVINGDynamically, the Latitude is competent rather than inspiring. The V6 is smooth and frugal, but needs plenty of revs to keep it on the boil and the transmission is set to change up early, which has it hunting between ratios more than is desirable. This makes the diesel the better option. After some lag the relatively quiet diesel gets into stride and provides strong and linear thrust.Handling is balanced and secure enough at moderate speeds, but the insensitive steering and a tendency to push at the front near the limit don't inspire spirited driving. Ride is compliant and composed on big bumps, but it can be lumpy and busy on minor irritations.The interior is tasteful, well-equipped and with clear main instruments and multiple seat adjustment, but it is offset by the sombre trim and complicated audio and navigation controls.WeekltTimesNow
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Renault Latitude luxury sedan 2011 review
By Bill Buys · 03 Dec 2011
Renault, established in 1898, has always been as French as crepes suzettes, pommes frites and the guillotine. But its latest model, the Latitude, has a Nissan engine  and it's built in Korea by Samsung. That said, the luxury sedan, Renault's biggest yet in Australia, is quite a car.With a longitude of just on 4.9m, about the same as a Commodore or a BMW 5 Series, it has the panache to steal sales from any rivals in the $35,000 to $45,000 bracket. The elegant car comes in 2.5litre V6 petrol and 2.0litre turbo-diesel form and in standard and Luxe (say it 'looxe') trim.Prices are from $36,990, for the standard model and $42,490 for the Luxe version, in either petrol or diesel. It's considerably less than the Laguna, which is being phased out.A big attraction is a new five-year, unlimited distance warranty plus five years of 24/7 roadside assistance, which applies not only to the Latitude, but also most of the new Renault passenger range. Also new is the brand's own financial services arm.The Latitude is different in that it does not have the customary Renault quirky styling. It has conventional good looks and is very well-equipped.Standard high-end fare includes integrated SatNav, an Arkamys 3D sound system, Bluetooth connectivity, smart card key, power adjustable and heated driver's seat, rake and reach adjustable steering wheel and dual climate control.The car rides on 17-inch alloys, has an automatic parking brake, rear window sunblinds, tinted windows, leather trim and a 60/40 splitfold back seat. The Luxe has a Bose audio system, three-zone climate control, an air ioniser, power driver's seat with massage function, 18-inch alloys and a vast panoramic electric glass sunroof. There's also a reversing camera and an electrochromatic mirror.Owners don't really need to open the bonnet. All the info on essentials, like oil and coolant levels and even the tyre pressures, are available on the neat and conventional dashboard.That's all tres bien, but what about the ride?It's another plus.Sprung on MacPherson struts with a multi-link system in the tail, the spacious sedan was a pleasure on the fast sweeping roads and undulations of the terrain north-west of Byron Bay.Comfort levels are high, there's ample space for five and the boot, which holds a full-sized spare, is long and wide, with 477litres of cargo accommodation. More a comfy tourer than a sporty model, the Latitude has fine steering and handling qualities and we felt fresh as a young grenouille after a day's driving.The V6 produces 133kW and 235Nm and average fuel economy is 9.7litres/100km. The diesel whacks out 127kW and a mighty 380Nm, which handled the steep inclines with Gallic disdain and claims to deliver 6.5l/100km. We recorded 7.7litres/100km on our quicker than average run. Both engines drive the front wheels via a smooth six-speed automatic with manual sequential override.Safety gear includes six airbags, ABS, ESP, speed limiter, cruise control, parking radar and auto-on lights and wipers.As le package complete, the Latitude is a good proposition, especially for people who like a bit of individuality. It's a well-finished product of the combined expertise of Renault Samsung Motors and the latest Renault-Nissan Alliance  and it comes with the best warranty of any Euromobile.For our money, the pick would be the Luxe diesel, but Renault expects a 60/40 split in favour of the petrol version. Either way, it's a handsome smoothie that the makers see as an alternative to the ubiquitous machines cluttering up the landscape. Bon chance. 
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Renault Latitude Luxe 2011 Review
By Peter Barnwell · 18 Jul 2011
There was something familiar about the new Renault Latitude that I couldn't put my finger on.After some digging, I realised it's a Renault version of the Nissan Maxima - with a proper six speed automatic in the 2.5-litre petrol V6. There's also a 2.0-litre turbo diesel four also with a six speed auto which isn't available as a Nissan.It comes in two grades, Latitude at $36,990 and Latitude Luxe at $42,490 and you can have the petrol V6 or turbo diesel for the same money - pretty good eh?But there was something else familiar and it's the look and feel of the Latitude which is uncannily similar to Hyundai's new i45 and Kia's Optima. That's because Latitude comes out of Renault's plant in Busan, Korea.We are fans of the i45 and Optima and the same applies to the Latitude which has a European flavour but at a Korean price.TECHNOLOGYWe drove the top of the range V6 Luxe and it was good but we'd put our money down on the diesel because it has a lot more torque and uses substantially less fuel.The V6 is good for 133kW/235Nm while the diesel cranks out 127kW/380Nm. The V6 offers smooth running and acceptable economy but at 1600kg, the relatively low torque output struggles at times.It's capably dealt with by the slick shifting six speed auto but the turbodiesel would be a lot better. The petrol gets a Euro 4 emissions rating while the turbodiesel is Euro5 and good for a creditable 6.5-litres/100km.DRIVINGIt's big for a medium size car offering generous rear seat legroom and a large boot complete with full size spare. It also has generous equipment with premium audio, satnav, Bluetooth phone and audio streaming, heated front seats, multi-media connection box, smart card entry and ignition and dual zone climate control on the base car.The Luxe gets more including a clever air ioniser and deodoriser. We like the auto on/off parking brake and the five star crash rating. We like the comfortable and controlled ride from the strut/multi-link suspension and we like the styling inside and out.It's different but distinctly European in looks and feel.VERDICTRenault is having a real crack at the local market with Latitude, Fluence and Megane all offering competitive pricing and generous spec' when compared to their competition - apples with apples. Definitely worth a look.RENAULT LATITUDEPrice: from $36,990, $42,490 as testedWarranty: 5 years/unlimitedResale: New modelService interval: 15,000km/12monthsCrash rating: 5 starsEngine: 2.0-litre turbodiesel four, 127kW/380Nm; 2.5-litre petrol V6, 133kW/235NmBody: Four-door sedanWeight: 1600kg (petrol), 1620kg (diesel)Transmission: 6-speed auto, front-wheel driveThirst: 9.7L/100km (91RON petrol) 230g/km, 6.5L/100km (diesel) CO2 170g/km
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Renault Latitude Luxe 2011 review
By Philip King · 14 May 2011
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.VALUEBelatedly, 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.DESIGNThere'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.DRIVINGIt'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.
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Renault Latitude 2011 review
By Paul Gover · 21 Apr 2011
Korea, Japan and France have each had a hand in the new Renault Latitude. The French brand's latest pitch into the mid-sized field is more controlled and on-target than anything that's driven under the badge in the past, and also comes with a $36,990 opening price that buries unfortunate memories of failures with the over-priced and under-done Laguna in the past.The Latitude still has to overcome buyer resistance, and it needs to answer plenty of questions, but it proves that new Australian management is not stopping after re-positioning and re-pricing the Megane at the start of the year. The Latitude is definitely a Renault, but not as we've known them. It's less 'French', more worldly, and that approach could work for a car that must go up against everything from the Ford Mondeo to Honda Accord and Toyota Aurion.VALUEA starting price of $36,990 looks good and there is a lot of good stuff in the Latitude. For a start, the bottom line is the same for both the turbodiesel and V6 petrol engines, and there is a Luxe package with plenty of added luxury for $5500. Building with Samsung in Korea means the list of basic equipment runs from leather seats and alloy wheels to sun blinds, keyless starting, a 3D sound system, satnav - a TomTom system including speed limits - and dual-zone aircon.The Luxe pack has a claimed $7000 of value, from Bose sound to a glass sunroof, massaging on the driver's seat, a reversing camera and even an ioniser for the cabin air. But the big value boost in the Latitude is the five-year, unlimited-kilometre warranty. "This gives us a flagship model. It has all the luxury features, but also gives us somewhere to move in the brand and moves us into the family market," says Justin Hocevar, managing director of Renault Australia.TECHNOLOGYMost of the technology is loaded into the equipment, not the mechanical package, including the ioniser. The Latitude is standard four-door sedan with two engine choices – the torquey turbodiesel and smooth V6 - and front-wheel drive with a six-speed automatic across the models. But there is some neat stuff hidden away, including the basics of the Nissan Maxima in the mechanical package and the V6 engine.DESIGNThe Latitude will sell in more than 50 countries and that means it is pretty bland. Not offensive, but not a head-turner. The shape ensures there is good space in the cabin - particularly rear- seat legroom - and a big boot.No-one can explain the silly little attempt at a spoiler on the boot, the cabin is effective without much personality, and it's impossible to look at the Latitude and not benchmark it against the classy job done by Kia on its latest Optima. The two cars even have something in common - a shiny black roof that's becoming a must-have item on wannabe prestige cars.SAFETYA five-star safety rating is one of Renault's brand pillars and that's what it is expecting from the Latitude. But it's yet to be tested and so we have to rely on the strength of the French company's body engineering, as well as six airbags, ESP stability control and some smart stuff including anti-pinch electric windows (to protect little hands) and a speed limiter. The brake assist also trips the hazard warning lights in a panic stop, something we've only seen in upscale cars in the past.DRIVINGThe Latitude is a relaxed drive. It's relaxed and comfortable, with some nice surprises from the clever satnav to rear sunblinds. The basics are good, the ride and handling is safe and predictable, and it is fit-for-purpose on the driving front. The turbodiesel engine has solid shove and if you want more then it's available in the V6. It's a sweet motor we've liked in the Maxima, although there is no temptation - not even shift paddles behind the wheel - to encourage anything sporty.Some of the quality looks a bit ordinary, at least compared to the classiness in the new Kia Optima, and it's not nearly as enjoyable to drive as a Mondeo. It's probably closest to the Camry and Aurion, although with the turbodiesel engine and more equipment at a value price.At the end, the Latitude is a much more sensible choice than a Laguna in the past, but it just doesn't have that 'French' look and feel you expect from a French car. That could be a bonus if Renault can lure people into showrooms on a value deal, but we wonder if the Latitude is different and classy enough in a class that's already packed with choices.VERDICTNice car, nice price, nice warranty, but not enough impact."A nice package at a good price, but it's lost the Renault feeling"
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