

On the motorway, the Captur needs to be revved hard in low gears to pick up speed, although the five-speed manual in our car felt nice and slick. The saving grace is that the claimed fuel economy of 47.1mpg looked easily achievable on our drive through the Cotswolds. The 99bhp unit can only muster 160Nm of torque, and it’s every bit as pedestrian as the 13.3-second 0-62mph figure suggests. The Captur’s biggest failing? That’d be the 1.0-litre petrol engine tested in this TCe 100 model. So it’s good news that Apple CarPlay and Android Auto connectivity is also standard. The graphics are sharp enough and the screen responsive, but the set-up is not as intuitive as systems in VW Group rivals. Shove the bench right back and you’re looking at 422 litres of volume.īase-spec cars come equipped with automatic wipers and climate control, while lane-keep assist, lane-departure warning, traffic-sign recognition, active emergency braking and cruise control are thrown in, too.Ī 4.2-inch digital display within the instrument cluster is teamed with a seven-inch colour touchscreen, and navigation is provided on all but entry-level Play models. There’s a caveat, though: the rear bench now slides back and forth, and that headline figure assumes you’ve pushed the seats so far forward they are virtually unusable. Rear legroom has improved, Renault says, and boot space has swelled to 536 litres. The new platform and bigger dimensions have brought gains in passenger space and practicality. Used Renault Captur (Mk1, 2013-2019) review.Used Renault Captur (Mk2, 2020-date) review.New Renault Captur Plug-in hybrid 2020 review.New Renault Captur E-Tech Hybrid 2021 review.Renault Captur E-Tech: long-term test review.Hyundai Bayon vs Citroen C3 Aircross vs Renault Captur.Honda HR-V vs Renault Captur vs SEAT Arona: 2021 group test review.
