- Navy veteran engineering transformed a seven-hundred-dollar abandoned 1960 Renault Dauphine shell into a mid-engine, supercharged VR6-powered widebody monster nicknamed La Brute for the SEMA show.
- The custom-fabricated chassis features a 3.2-liter Volkswagen R32 engine producing 360 horsepower, paired with a Porsche-sourced 01E gearbox and high-performance Yamaha R1 pushrod suspension components.
- Blending French heritage with Group 5 racing aesthetics, this one-of-one build features a carbon fiber widebody twenty-two inches wider than stock while retaining its original desert-find patina.
The Resurrection of a Desert Relic
In the unforgiving terrain of a California desert property, a 1960 Renault Dauphine sat as a skeletal remains of French automotive history. Riddled with bullet holes, stripped of its floorboards, and filled with decades of rat droppings, the shell was acquired for a mere $700 on Facebook Marketplace. What seemed like an overpayment for a rust-bucket was actually the canvas for one of the most radical transformations in modern custom car culture. The builder, a Navy veteran with a background in precision engineering, traded the high-stakes danger of motorcycles for a four-wheeled project to ensure he could share his passion safely with his daughter. This wasn’t just a restoration; it was a total reimagining of what a micro-car could achieve when stripped of its 32-horsepower roots and infused with German muscle.
Engineering Chaos: The VR6 Heart Transplant
The mechanical soul of “La Brute” is a masterclass in packaging and fabrication. At the center of the car sits a mid-mounted 3.2-liter VR6 engine, a narrow-angle V6 sourced from a Volkswagen R32. To elevate the performance from “peppy” to “terrifying,” a Vortech supercharger was integrated, pushing the output to approximately 360 horsepower—over ten times the original factory rating. This power is managed through a rugged VW 01E manual gearbox, common in high-torque Audi and Porsche applications. Because the original unibody could never handle such stress, a completely custom-fabricated tube chassis was engineered to house the drivetrain. The suspension setup is equally exotic, utilizing a pushrod system paired with Yamaha R1 motorcycle shocks, allowing for a low-slung, track-ready stance that defies the car’s top-heavy silhouette.
The Carbon Fiber Widebody and Patina Aesthetic
Visually, La Brute is a jarring contradiction of high-tech aero and low-fi decay. The car features a massive carbon fiber widebody kit that extends the vehicle’s width by a staggering 22 inches, giving it the aggressive footprint of a Group 5 silhouette racer. Despite the modern composite bodywork, the builder chose to retain the original weathered paint and bullet-hole “patina” on the metal surfaces, creating a “derelict” aesthetic that earned it a spotlight at SEMA 2019 and continued acclaim through 2024. The front end is dominated by French-inspired yellow headlights and a custom splitter, while the roof rack adds a touch of utilitarian irony to a car designed for canyon carving. The interior continues this theme, featuring a blend of MK1 Golf GTI upholstery, BMW shifter grips, and—in a nod to the builder’s eclectic taste—Balkan rug floor mats and a digital Android tablet gauge cluster.
A Cultural Phenomenon on Wheels
Since its debut, the VR6 Dauphine has transcended the typical car show circuit, . It represents the “American Dream” of DIY fabrication, where a veteran’s skill set turns a discarded object into a piece of rolling art. Beyond the technical specs, the car challenges the norms of the restoration industry by refusing to hide its scars. Whether it’s the “Iron Giant” comparison of its glowing headlights or the technical debate over its road legality in smog-heavy California, La Brute remains a one-of-one masterpiece. It is a visceral, mid-engine tribute to the Renault 5 Turbo 2, proving that with enough engineering grit, even a $700 shell and dominate the world’s most prestigious automotive stages.











