Renault 6 | |
Manufacturer: | Renault |
Production: | 1968–1986 |
Layout: | Front-engine, front-wheel drive |
Class: | C-segment subcompact economy family car |
Assembly: | Boulogne-Billancourt, France Valladolid, Spain Envigado, Colombia Haren-Vilvoorde, Belgium (RIB) Santa Isabel, Argentina (IKA) |
Body Style: | 5-door hatchback |
Weight: | 7500NaN0 (1970)[1] |
Length: | 38601NaN1 |
Width: | 15401NaN1 |
Height: | 15001NaN1 |
Related: | Renault 4 |
Predecessor: | Renault Dauphine[2] |
Successor: | Renault 5 Renault 14 |
The Renault 6 or R6 is an economy C-segment small family car, manufactured and marketed by French automaker Renault from 1968 to 1986. The R6 entirely used the Renault 4's platform, initially including its small engine, and was technically near-identical, but its five-door hatchback body was larger and more modern. Visually it resembled the larger Renault 16, but distincly boxier.
The Renault 6 (R6) was launched at the 1968 Paris Motor Show,[3] and was intended as an upmarket alternative to the shorter R4; and the R6 aimed to compete with the Citroën Ami 6 and the just launched Citroën Dyane (both based on the Citroën 2CV, being a rebodied and a reskinned version of it, respectively). It used a dashboard-mounted gear-lever with forward, over-the-engine reaching gear-shift linkage, principally the same as those used in both the Renault 4, and in the subcompact Citroëns it competed against.
The R6 was produced in France from October 1968[4] and sold in Europe until 1980, continuing elsewhere until 1986.
In its first two years of production, the R6 was criticised by the press for the R4-derived engine's lack of power in the heavier R6. In part because of this, the R6 had worse fuel economy than the larger but outdated, rear-engined Renault 8 saloon, which had a bigger engine and still performed better.[1]
A variant of the R6 using the Cléon-Fonte engine (an engine used in the Renault 8 since 1962) was unveiled at the 1970 Paris Motor Show and was widely regarded as a big improvement.[5] Power was increased from 34to. The smaller engined model continued to be available until June 1979; it was sold as the Renault 6 L after August 1977.
The new car also had higher equipment levels as well a new gearbox, cooling system and front disc brakes.[6] The new cooling system necessitated a supplementary grille beneath the original one (in the place occupied by the license plate of the R6-850), while the disc brakes meant slightly redesigned rims with openings in them. For the Spanish market the R6 was made available with a engine, due to vehicles over receiving higher taxation under Spanish regulations. Later, a engine was fitted, and from 1981 the unit appeared in the 6 GTL. The one-litre version has 500NaN0 DIN and this engine was also fitted to Spanish-built 5s and 7s.[7] The R6 continued to be built in Spain until 1986, with a total of 328,000 cars built there.[8]
In 1973 the Teilhol/ACL-built 6 Rodéo appeared. This was an open, plastic-bodied utility vehicle in the style of the Citroën Méhari, which was sold by selected Renault dealers. A four-wheel-drive system by Sinpar was also available to the Rodéo as well as the 6 saloon.[9]
In June 1973 the R6 was revamped with square headlights, new rear lights, a plastic grille, and new bumpers. The front indicator lights also moved from between the bumper and the headlights to the bumper itself. The mechanicals remained untouched.[10] In 1978 there was a very mild facelift, with a black grille being the most obvious change.
Production and sales in France and most of Europe ended in 1980 with no direct successor, but in Spain and Argentina the car was still produced and sold until 1986. Renault had launched a similar-sized hatchback, the Renault 14, in 1976 - aiming it directly at Volkswagen's highly successful new Golf, which popularised the hatchback bodystyle on cars of this size more than any other model in Europe at this time.
In Argentina, where the car was built by IKA-Renault, the original design (without the additional grille seen on European 1100s) continued until it received a facelift in 1978 along with a name change to "6 GTL".[11] This meant a one-piece black grille, including the headlight surrounds, as well as black bumpers. Meanwhile, a 1397 cc engine (M1400) with 600NaN0 SAE was fitted to the Argentinian-made cars.[11] From 1969 until 1978 it was fitted with an 1118 cc version of the Cléon engine (M1100) with 510NaN0.[12] In total, 80,869 R6s were built in Argentina, with the pre-facelift model accounting for 57,534 (71 percent) of the total.[12]
In Colombia the car was discontinued in 1984, when the Renault 9 started production.