Diagnostic: Hard starting on Renault - Causes and Prices

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Renault ClioRenault MeganeRenault CapturRenault ScenicRenault Talisman

Hard starting on a Renault (Clio, Megane, Captur, Scenic) shows as the engine taking a long time to start, idling roughly before picking up, or only starting after several attempts. Depending on TCe (petrol) or dCi (diesel) engines, common causes and costs differ.

Renault petrol (TCe)

On TCe engines (1.0, 1.2, 1.3), hard starting is often linked to the battery (age, low charge, cold), the starter (solenoid, electric motor) or worn spark plugs and ignition coils. A clogged fuel filter or faulty injection system can also delay starting. When cold, a weak battery or worn plugs worsen the problem.

Renault diesel (dCi)

On dCi engines, hard starting is frequently linked to the battery (diesel needs more current to start), glow plugs (faulty or clogged) or the starter. Clogged or faulty injectors cause poor atomisation and laboured starting, especially in cold weather. An AdBlue or DPF issue can sometimes limit starting.

What to do

Check the battery age and condition (voltage, charge). If starting is mainly difficult when cold, glow plugs (diesel) or spark plugs (petrol) are common causes. An electronic diagnostic (fault codes) and checks of the starter and battery help pinpoint the cause.

Order of magnitude for costs

  • Battery: about €80–200 (depending on capacity and technology).
  • Starter: about €250–600 (parts and labour).
  • Glow plugs (diesel): about €80–200 (full set).
  • Spark plugs and coils (petrol): about €80–250.
  • Diesel injector: about €300–600 per injector.

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