| By
Indians, for Indians perhaps, but mostly for the world
words: gautam sen
Yes, you
have read it right. The car on the cover and in these pages was made in
India. By Dilip Chhabria’s DC Design. To a design brief from –
and under the supervision of – people from Renault. The Dacia Logan
Steppe is a fully working prototype derived from the Renault/Dacia Logan
saloon and provides a ‘preview’ of the estate version of the
French-Romanian car that has become a major hit in Eastern Europe. Since
its launch in September 2004, more than 180,000 Logans have been sold,
with as many as over 13,000 sold in the more demanding markets of Western
Europe too, where sales began recently.
It’s no secret that Renault is planning to launch a shorter hatch
and an estate version of the Logan. The hatch is planned for later, whereas
the estate is due for launch in 2007. Remove the cladding from the wheel
arches and the running board, take off that slim luggage rack on the roof,
replace those butch bumpers with something more like that on the saloon,
and yes, change the wheels back to steel 14 or 15-inchers, and you will
see the production version of the estate. More interestingly, the estate
may be on sale in India too.
And that too, as a seven-seater! Okay, before we get ahead of ourselves,
first things first. The car in the pics, the Logan Steppe was prototyped
by DC Design. No, we don't have this information from DC Design or from
DC himself either, as mum’s the word. Since the problems that DC
faced after the brouhaha of the Aston AM V8 prototyping episode (where
some quarters of the press misinterpreted the proto job as a full design
project, and Aston, along with Ford's Premier Automotive Group, decided
to boycott him) Dilip would – sensibly – prefer maintaining
a very low profile vis-à-vis his proto
work for international majors.
And so he hasn’t been saying anything despite our efforts to extricate
some information. It’s easier with the guys at Renault – they
have no issue talking about their association with DC. Renault, as you
know, own Dacia, and all design and development work that happens for
Dacia is done at their technocentre in the suburbs of Paris. And though
the basic design and engineering happens there, some of the actual
prototyping, especially for concepts, is subcontracted out to prototype
houses in Europe. And for the first time Renault decided to subcontract
to an Indian prototype builder.
The detail design came from Renault as soft copy, that DC translated into
sheet metal, plastics and polycarbonate, or whatever that they use these
days.
Of course, as a concept Renault/Dacia couldn’t show just a run-of-the-mill
estate, so they have had it decked out as the Steppe. It’s all about
accessible freedom and adventure and winter sports. With the removable
rear bench folded down, the occupants can rest and recuperate with flasks
full of appropriate liquids stored in side pockets. Meanwhile, at the
back of the boot, special heated hooks allow wet boots and gloves to be
hung and dried.
A special tool kit allows for the repair of sports gear including the
waxing and grinding of skis… More importantly, the Steppe gives
you a very good idea about what the production estate will be like. Width
and height is expected to remain somewhat similar to that of the saloon:
1.74 and 1.53 metres respectively. But overall length – at 4.47
metres for the Steppe – is decidedly more than that of the saloon's
4.25. Most of that comes from the wheelbase that has been extended considerably
on the Steppe: you can see that the lower trailing edge of the rear pair
of doors is comfortably ahead of the rear wheel arches despite being ‘squared
off.’
The interesting point to note is that the Logan estate – other than
the typical five-seater version – will also be made as a seven-seater.
As the Logan’s product planning manager, Martin Boutard explained,
the Indian penchant for more seats has got the boffins at Renault working
on a seven-seater version, presumably inward-facing individual seats that
fold on to the sides of the boot. The tailgates for the Steppe are a symmetrical
pair with
both doors opening out on hinges that are neatly concealed alongside the
taillamp cluster, with Boutard explaining that that seemed to be the best
and most
convenient solution. Boot volume is an absolutely cavernous 1.7 cubic
metres with the rear bench down. The Logan estate is also expected to
be made in a van version, with the door and rear set of glasses blanked
out. In that configuration the doors make a lot of sense.
We don’t see the van version making it to India, but the seven-seater
estate version seems to be a sure-shot bet for this market. And like the
saloon Logan (to be launched by the Mahindra-Renault joint venture latest
by early next year), the estate version will also be made with the 75bhp
1.4 and the 90bhp 1.6 petrols, and the new and very potent 1.5 dCi diesel.
Boutard assured us that for India too that the diesel, along with the
petrols, were under consideration. Given the increasing acceptance that
the Tata Indigo Marina seems to be seeing, the estate Logan too has more
than a fair chance at succeeding, especially
with the seven seats as its ace.
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