Assumedly revivalist, a “distant successor” of an icon from the past that indelibly marked its era, it arrives on the market 40 years after the end of production of the original model, and right away with propulsion technology considered to be the future.
Today, it is rare to find someone who does not have fond memories of the famous Renault 5 and its successor, the Super 5. The French brand is now betting on its 21st-century successor, the Renault 5 E-Tech 100% Electric, analyzed in detail for AutoGear by journalist António de Sousa Pereira, in a test that you cannot miss of a model that aims to be decisive in making electric mobility more accessible, just as its predecessors contributed to democratizing individual mobility in the last century.