2023 Renault Austral |
2023 Renault Austral |
Priced at 33,400 Euros plus additional costs, the first-ever Renault Austral is basically the French equivalent of the Nissan X-Trail, just like the old Kadjar it replaces. Despite the Japanese connection underneath, courtesy of the alliance, the Austral is as French as the France Rugby team who aren't afraid to get themselves dirty. Dirty aside, the Austral has a clean slate due to its electrification implemented, making it capable of the new normal.
Starting with the exterior, there's nothing show-off about the Austral's exterior, apart from the first-ever Esprit Alpine variant (which is the new name of sporty variants that used to be called RS Line) with sporty detailing. With modern design DNA flowing through its rugged looks, the Austral is quintessentially Renault from top to bottom without the drama.
2023 Renault Austral interior |
Come to the interior, the Austral showcases its French side because of its bent-over touch-screen in the middle reminiscent of the aged iPad that you've accidentally bent but still functional. Sounds unorthodox but the real shocker is that the bent touch screen in the middle runs on Google, meaning it's a bent Android tablet with plenty of features to play with such as Google Maps, Amazon Music, and Waze, among many others. Apart from the bent touch-screen panel, the Austral features Harman Kardon high-fidelity sound with 12 speakers and sound spatialization technology for a much clearer listening experience for various reasons.
Asking about space, the Austral is a five-seater crossover just like the Kadjar and because it's bigger than the Kadjar it replaces, it's surprisingly roomier as well. Even the boot space saw some bump into it with up to 1525 liters of boot space with the rear seats folded down. With this much space, the Austral is a free-for-all crossover fit for various situations.
2023 Renault Austral |
Despite being an SUV, the Austral is front-wheel-drive only, meaning it's only capable of driving through city streets and some dirt, but not too much dirt, and because it's now running on an entirely new platform, the Austral drives slightly better than the Kadjar it replaces.
Coupled with the MULTI-SENSE and the 4CONTROL Advanced four-wheel steering, the Austral behaves like a midsize sedan for various reasons. There's an optional Extended Grip Pack which adds two new modes into the MULTI-SENSE such as "Snow" and "All roads", meaning this crossover is ready for weekends with Hannibal. It's a French thing to do for a crossover like this.
Because of the new platform's electrification goals, the Austral features a 1.2L turbo mild hybrid petrol engine mated to either a 6-speed MT or a CVT, and the 200PS 1.2L E-TECH Hybrid mated to a 7-speed AT capable of a combined 4.6L/100 km of fuel economy. Mind you, this E-TECH Hybrid powertrain may be slightly less powerful than the Nissan X-TRAIL e-4ORCE but its fuel efficiency is worth winning for the French.
Because this is a crossover built for the new normal, the Renault Austral features a total of 32 ADAS that can be grouped together into three categories; driving, parking, and safety. These include Active Driver Assist, level 2 autonomy, Automated Park Assist, Blind Spot Warning and Lane Departure Prevention, Rear Automatic Emergency Braking, RCTA, and Occupant Safe Exit, among many others.
So, the first-ever Renault Austral. What can I say? Although it's front-wheel-drive only, it's surprisingly the evolved version of the Kadjar that is proven to be worth driving than the Nissan X-TRAIL it was based on, despite being two seats less. Looks like the French are on the roll with this newest Renault crossover built for the new normal.
Photo: Renault
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