Renault Fuego


The Renault Fuego is a sport compact car that was produced by French automaker Renault from 1980 to 1986, replacing the Renault 15 and 17 coupés of the 1970s. It was marketed in the United States by American Motors Corporation, and was also assembled in several countries in South America, where production continued until 1992. The official Renault website states that a total of 265,367 Fuegos were produced, with production in France from February 1980 to October 1985 making up 226,583 of the total. Spanish production for European markets continued into 1986.

Design

The Fuego's exterior was designed by Michel Jardin, and the interior by Francois Lampreia, both working under Robert Opron. The Fuego coupé has been described "as the best design Opron produced at Renault." Automotive journalist, L. J. K. Setright wrote: "It is blessed with a body which is not only roomy and aerodynamically efficient, but is also beautiful".
The Renault Fuego was heavily based on the Renault 18, sharing its floorpan and drivetrain, but featuring a new front suspension design developed from the larger Renault 20/30. The design kept the familiar double wishbone layout common with the Renault 18, but no parts were interchangeable and the design incorporated negative scrub radius geometry. The new suspension design would later be added to the facelifted Renault 18, and later, with minor refinements, would be incorporated into the new large size Renault 25. The steering was also improved, with power steering available at the higher end of the range. The Fuego dashboard was added to the facelifted R18 in 1980 and then both updated again in September 1983 for the 1984 model year. European production continued until 1985 in France and 1986 in Spain, while Renault Argentina produced the Fuego from 1982 until ending production in 1992 with the 2.2 litre "GTA Max".
It was the first mass-produced four-seat sports model to be designed in a wind tunnel. The resulting drag coefficient factor of 0.32-0.35 depending on model and year. In October 1982, the turbo diesel model was classified as the fastest diesel car in the world, with a top speed of.
The Fuego was the first car to have a remote keyless system with central locking that was available from the 1983 model year. The system was invented by Frenchman Paul Lipschutz, and later introduced on other Renault models. The Fuego was also the first car to have remote steering wheel-mounted controls for the audio system. This feature became popularised on the new 1984 model Renault 25. While being well specified for a vehicle at the time, the Fuego was also available with options that included leather upholstery, multi-function trip computer, cruise control, air-conditioning, and a full-length Webasto electric fabric sunroof.
A convertible version trimmed with a leather interior was unveiled by the French coachbuilder Heuliez in 1982 aimed at the U.S. market, but never made it to production due to lower than expected sales in the American market - the R11/Alliance convertible taking its place. Three examples were built and finished to American specification.

Marketing

The Fuego became the best selling coupé in Europe during 1980 through to 1982. Variants included: 1.4 litre TL, 1.6 litre economy tuned GTL ; 1.6 litre TS and GTS ; 2.0 litre TX and GTX. The TX was a downgraded version of the GTX, but differences varied by country. This model deleted alloy wheels, electric windows, central locking, air conditioning, fog lights, headlight wipers, etc. depending upon the market. A manual-only 2.1 litre turbo diesel was also produced for LHD European markets in the 1982-1985 period. This model was differentiated by the "bulge" in the top of the bonnet, extra vents in the front bumper, and "Turbo D" badging on the grille, side and rear hatch glass.
The Fuego Turbo was added in 1983 to coincide with the facelift. This facelift included a new front grille, plastic trim on the bumpers, revised dashboard on LHD models, new wheel design, modernised interior trim and fabrics - sepia with dark brown/white striped velour seats; or ash with black/red striped velour seats for the Turbo, and ash or sepia for the other models sold with European specifications. Interior colour now depended on exterior colour, eliminating the large choice of customised options of the previous models. The facelifted GTX was also offered with the 2.2 litre EFI engine from the Renault 25 in certain LHD markets.
The Fuego was sold in the United States through American Motors Corporation dealers from 1982 to 1985 inclusive. It was offered with a fuel injected 1.6 L turbocharged or normally aspirated version in 1982 and 1983; for 1984 and 1985 it was offered with a 2.2 L engine with manual or automatic options, plus the 1.6 litre turbo version. It was "a nicely executed sports coupe" and was to be Renault's "halo" car. The car featured distinctive styling, comfort for four passengers, delivered superior fuel economy, affordable, and the model received good reviews in the automotive media. However, it did not achieve high sales and turn Renault's fortunes around in the United States. By 1984, AMC dealers were eligible for rebates of $300 and $1,000, respectively, on each imported Renault Fuego and Fuego turbo model they sold.
Renault sold the Fuego in the UK aiming it at the market segment occupied by the Opel Manta and Ford Capri. It became the top-selling coupé during 1981 and 1982. The available trims beginning in 1980-81 with the TL, GTS, and GTX, before increasing to the TL, TS, GTS, GTS Automatic, TX, and GTX manual in 1981-82; TL, TS, GTS, GTS Automatic, TX, GTX, GTX Automatic in 1982-83; TL, GTS, TX, GTX Automatic, and Turbo in 1983-84, and down to just two during 1985 and 1986 as sales declined.
In Australia, the 2 litre GTX manual was the main model from 1982 to 1987, fully specified with factory air conditioning, TRX alloy wheels, a passenger mirror with remote control, but no trip computer. There was also a limited run of the more basic TX models. The Australian specifications included side intrusions beams in the doors and emission controls to meet Australian Designs Rules.
In New Zealand the UK specification GTS and GTX manuals were delivered from late 1981 into 1982; GTS, GTS Automatic, GTX, GTX Automatic in 1983; GTX, GTX Automatic, Turbo in 1984; GTX Automatic and Turbo in 1985; GTX, GTX Automatic, and Turbo in 1986.

Timeline

The Fuego was not directly replaced by another model in the Renault range. A Fuego II was planned, similarly styled as the new Renault Alpine GTA, but the development of the new model was canceled at the last minute due to a combination of Renault's financial problems along with the declining demand for sports coupés in the marketplace at that time.