Alpine A110-50 | |
Manufacturer: | Alpine |
Production: | 2012 (Concept car) |
Weight: | 1940lb |
Predecessor: | Alpine A110 |
Successor: | Alpine A110 (2017) |
Class: | Racing car |
Body Style: | 2-door coupe |
Layout: | Rear mid-engine, rear-wheel-drive layout |
Platform: | Sport Mégane Trophy |
Engine: | 3.5-liter Nissan-Renault VQ35DE V6 |
Transmission: | 6-speed semi-automatic sequential |
Designer: | Yann Jarsalle |
The Alpine A110-50 (codenamed ZAR for "Alpine revival", with Z being the letter used for Renault concepts) is a concept racing car created by Renault to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the 1962 Alpine A110[1] It debuted at Monaco's GP circuit, where Renault Chief Operating Officer Carlos Tavares raced the A110-50 for four laps of the Monaco track.[2] The Alpine A110-50 has all carbonfibre bodywork, a mid-engine layout, and tubular frame. It is built upon the same platform and shares its mechanicals with the Sport Mégane Trophy race car.[1] [3] [4] Because the A110-50's height is lower than that of Mégane Trophy, the roll cage and bracing in the engine bay were lowered in the workshop of Tork Engineering.[3] The entire car weighs 19400NaN0, and its weight distribution is 47.8 percent front and 52.2 percent rear.[5] With a naturally aspirated 395-hp variation of the Mégane Trophy's 3.5-liter V6 based on the Nissan VQ engine,[5] it has a 456bhp/ton power-to-weight ratio.[6] The inlet manifold is fed by a new roof-mounted air intake which broadens the engine's power band, with additional horsepower at all engine speeds.[3]
A110-50's front splitter and rear diffuser generate ground effect, and account for a third of the car's downforce, while the other two-thirds comes from the rear wing.[6] [3] The body can be raised with integrated pneumatic jacks for easier servicing.[5] [3] The steering wheel features a color screen and employs the same technology as a Formula Renault 3.5 single-seat race car.[3] The A110-50 has highly adjustable double wishbone suspension with Sachs dampers.[6] [3] It utilises a six-speed semi-automatic sequential gearbox, which slots longitudinally behind the engine and incorporates a mechanical limited-slip differential.[6] [3]
Designer Yann Jarsalle and Concept and Show Car Director Axel Breun based the A110-50 on the same design language introduced with the DEZIR concept car,[3] but incorporated several design cues from the original A110. These include: half-domed additional headlights with yellow tinted LED lighting; air intakes on each side echo the ducts on the rear wheel arches of the Berlinette; and painting the body in a modern version of the signature Alpine blue.[3] [7] The aerodynamic body was designed using a process called computational fluid dynamics.[3] Its relation to the DeZir is clearly seen in its design, excluding the electric motor and butterfly doors.