“Yann had bought Compomotive alloys, but they were white and still in their boxes, eaten through by mice. He’d actually been sent four front wheels, so I had to go back to Compomotive to get two rears and gave the others to Gavin. We had them repainted Pewter, a Land Rover color.”
Now painted a Land Rover color, the alloys were a period option, with Alpine centre caps
The body itself glistens in black, the color part of Guezel’s dream because at 18 years old his first fast 5 was black. A plaque sits on the sill in Yann’s memory, and to celebrate all involved.
Out has gone the long, soft clutch for an AP Racing competition set-up, which might be swapped back for something more suited to the life the car leads around the Sussex Downs.
All manner of other mods and updates have been done. Within the original engine is a hotter cam, uprated pistons and rings. “The usual sort of things to make them more robust,” Alex says. “It has a high-pressure oil pump as well.”
The special plaque that remembers Yann Guezel and others in this car’s story
The turbo has been rebuilt, the manifold is Cevennes-spec, the intercooler is bigger and the K-Jetronic injection has been replaced. Poking out beneath the rear bumper is that six-speed.
Even the dials read more clearly – the kind of improvements you’d expect from a couple that designs airports and cargo systems for a living.
There’s an OMEX ECU, and the headlining is velcroed using a hack Alex saw on YouTube.
The sixpence-sharp brakes are cadmium-plated, with Porsche 911 calipers and to Tour de Corse spec, along with the widened front arches.
The delicate slats in the cooling vents have been re-engineered and 3D printed, testing the skills of SCAN HD, and a set of sidelights (shared with the Citroën LNA) were somehow found.
Getting the details right – historically and emotionally – was a big job
Once a hefty dose of throttle settles the Renault 5 Turbo 2’s idle, it all combines for a mechanical, metallic tone, which has onlookers scouring the landscape for the source of the noise.
The Bilstein dampers skip the R5 over broken British roads, any softness fully deserted from the car, but, that said, it’s still comfortable.
Yet not all is new. The radio is the one Alex’s dad bought them and two of the spotlights are from their garage, where they’d waited for 15 years having been a gift from Helen’s parents.
The stickers in the window remain, along with the tax disc from the year of their wedding.
It has been a long journey for this Renault 5 Turbo 2
The 11-month restoration was completed just in time for the Bradleys’ silver anniversary, with ribbons attached by Allison to mark the occasion.
But still the serendipity continued.
“We followed the old route of our wedding for our anniversary and two weird things happened,” begins Alex. “On our big day a girl said, ‘Love the wedding car, wow!’ And we got to the exact same spot and a chap in a van said, ‘Wow, fantastic car!’”
“Then at the venue,” picks up Helen, “when we got married there were two weddings on the same day – ours and a bigger one.
“We got there and asked if we could take a photo outside and they said, ‘That’s really strange, a couple were here earlier and they wanted a photo because they got married 25 years ago today, too.’”
This R5 is a member of two interlinked families
The chances are it won’t be the last time this Renault 5 Turbo 2 features in a repeat-memory photograph, because Yann’s sister has said the car must never leave the respective families.
“She has adopted Yann’s daughter and is returning to Montreal,” reveals Helen. “It was Yann’s wish that she was educated in Canada. She said our story and his are embedded in this car.”
The Turbo 2 now seems destined to stay with the Bradleys, because it could never be worth more to anyone else.
It is an investment of the emotional kind; priceless, heartfelt, and part of the family. Or two, in this case.
Images: John Bradshaw
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Jack Phillips
Volvo-owning Jack Phillips is a contributor to and former Deputy Editor of Classic & Sports Car