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The Renault Captur is a series of subcompact crossover SUVs manufactured by the French automaker Renault. [1] [3] The production version of the first one, based on the B platform, made its debut at the 2013 Geneva Motor Show and started to be marketed in France during April 2013. [4] The Captur Concept was first shown at the 2011 Geneva Motor Show.
Coupé SUV based on the Clio/Captur platform (Europe and others) or Duster platform (Russia). Also known as the Renault Samsung XM3 in South Korea. Austral: 2022 2022 — C-segment SUV. Captur: 2013 2019 2024 B-segment SUV based on the Clio platform. Duster: 2012 2019 — Rebadged Dacia Duster for markets without the presence of Dacia.
02/2012- : H5Ft, 1197/1198 cc, turbo-charged petrol engine used on Renault Clio IV, Renault Captur, Renault Kangoo II, Renault Mégane III, Renault Mégane IV, Renault Scénic III, Renault Scénic IV, Renault Kadjar, Dacia Lodgy, Dacia Dokker, Dacia Duster. Marketed as the 1.2 TCe, this engine has been plagued by abnormal oil consumption. [2]
The Japanese models are powered by the 4B10 1.8 L petrol engine mated to a manual or INVECS-III continuously variable transmission. [26] North American, Singaporean, Chinese, Indonesian, Malaysian, Philippine, and Australian vehicles get the larger 4B11 2.0 L and 4B12 2.4 L engines starting from 2015 model year, while the European ASX use a new ...
The first CMF-A car, the Renault Kwid, was launched into the Indian market in September 2015. [2] [8] [9] The platform currently also supports electric powertrain, for the Renault City K-ZE and its rebadged models. Vehicles using platform (calendar years): Renault Kwid (2015–present) [8] Datsun redi-GO (2016–2022) [10]
The first mainstream sub-4 metre SUV to be launched in India was the Ford EcoSport (in 2012) which was a high-selling model due to the lack of competition, [56] followed by the Maruti Suzuki Vitara Brezza. Soon after, many other manufacturers followed suit, with 10 models available in the sub-segment as of 2021. [57]
This is a list of vehicles that have been considered to be the result of badge engineering (), cloning, platform sharing, joint ventures between different car manufacturing companies, captive imports, or simply the practice of selling the same or similar cars in different markets (or even side-by-side in the same market) under different marques or model nameplates.
Template:Renault vehicles timeline, European market, 1980–2019; Template:Renault vehicles timeline, European market, 2020 to date; Template:Renault vehicles timeline, Latin American market, 2020 to date