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Lotus Elise SC tested

2008-10-07 14:13

The Lotus Elise SC. Primarily plastic and aluminium - which means it would be at home in a contemporary kitchen as an appliance – it features Toyota power. An odd blend it might be. Toxically addictive to drive it most definitely is.

    Vehicle Specs
    Manufacturer Lotus
    Model Elise SC
    Engine 1.8l, supercharged, in-line four
    Power 163kW @ 8 000r/min
    Torque 212Nm @ 5 500r/min
    Transmission Six-speed manual
    Zero To Hundred 4.6 seconds
    Top Speed 241km/h
    Power To Weight 189kW/t
    Fuel Tank 43.5ll
    Fuel Consumption 8.5l/100km
    Weight 860kg
    Boot Size 112l
    ABS Yes
    Airbags Yes
    Tyres Front: 175/55 R16, rear: 225/75 Yokohama Advan Neova AD07
    Front Suspension ouble wishbone, coils, anti-roll bar
    Rear Suspension ouble wishbone, coils,
    Price R599 000

    Author: Lance Branquinho

     

    What’s it about

    A contemporary incarnation of the legendary, vintage Lotus 7, Elise SC is a light-weight performance car owing most of its considerable prowess to intelligent design and low-weight engineering principles.

    Lotus founder Colin Chapman was an engineering maverick. The Elise continues the tradition of Chapman’s vision: performance by virtue of lightness – not power.



    Features

    Although the Elise appears cheap and tinny – especially if you rap the plastic body panels with your knuckles – this is an extraordinarily trick piece of automotive engineering.

    With its low, rakish nose and sculptured flanks it’s disarmingly cute yet purposeful, especially the tapered-off rear, with those Ferrari F355-like rear lights.

    Chapman used his aeronautical background to great effect in his race winning designs during the 1950s and 60s. Echoing tradition then, Elise features an advanced epoxy-bonded aluminium chassis. 

    Essentially the Elise constitutes an aluminium ‘tub’ with driver and passenger inside the largest part, whilst the engine occupies a secondary, smaller, tub at the back. The entire chassis is only 27 components strong – about what Porsche uses in its cup-holders.

    It yields a very small, low-slung yet exceptionally rigid car. Well under 4m in length, only 1.1m from tyre contact surface to roll-bar top and tipping in at only 860kg, you’d hardly call the Elise supercar overkill although it has ballooned in comparison to the original Elise that weighed a touch over 700kg.

    The mid-engined configuration houses a transversely mounted - wait for it – supercharged Toyota RunX RSI engine. Now, the RunX RSI mill was hardly Toyota’s finest performance effort, yet in the low weight Elise application, with a blower taking power to 163kW and torque to 212Nm, you’ll see the ‘Toy’ mill in a vivid new light.

    Unequal length double-wishbones at each corner are balanced by Blitstein mono-dampers and evened out with Eibach coaxial coil springs. Steering is unassisted – you would expect no less – and turns 2.8 times from lock-to-lock.



    On the inside


    Let’s not be coy. The Elise is no posers’ car. If you like wafting along the beachfront in your drop-top sports car, imitating a suave demeanour, the minimalist nature of the Elise will be an affront to your image sensibilities.

    There is little in the way comfort and convenience features. The interior bares itself in stark aluminium. In touring pack trim you have an Alpine CD-front loader, audible at town-driving speeds, and a heater and air-conditioning combination well up to the task of regulating temperatures within the small cabin.

    You even have electrically operated windows which were not even an option on the original Elise in 1996. The one piece slot-mounted central cup-holder – an aluminium ring with support sling – is the stuff of industrial design genius and deserves an award.

    As expected, the steering wheel is not height or reach adjustable. You can move the thinly padded bucket seats under your own power, but the driving position is pretty much chassis design dictated, if you don’t like it – or don’t fit – you can get out and walk. For 2008 there’s a revised instrument stack and central locking too.  Like, wow!

    Anti-lock brakes are there for emergencies but you have no nanny-aids like ESP to call on when you run out of talent…



    On the road

    So it’s glued together. The body is pretty much plastic. The engine is a recycled Toyota hatchback unit. There’s no power steering and there's no spare wheel - you get an aerosol puncture repair kit instead. A bit hard to see the appeal then? Indeed.

    Swing open the tiny door and you’ll have to call upon your long since forsaken high-school athleticism and flexibility to clear the tub, before dropping unglamorously into the bucket seats. Once inside you’ll appreciate just how low a car with only 130mm of ground clearance is; Polos look like Touaregs from inside the Elise lined up at traffic lights.

    I am 1.8m and was perfectly comfortable, but the cabin is a mite narrow for two average-sized blokes - passengers of the svelte variety work best. Although the seats appear sadomasochistic in their economical use of padding at first, in fact, they’re superbly comfy.

    With the ingeniously simple removable canvas roof off (60 seconds worth of solo handiwork) and stowed behind the engine in the 112-litre boot, you set off, surprised by a surprisingly civil clutch and throttle action.

    Yes, the ride is harsh.

    Yes, the cacophony of noise drowns your synapses at even the tiniest throttle opening.

    Yes, at night you can’t see anything through the rear view mirror thanks to the instrument cluster glare off the rear window.

    Yes, you knock your right knee (hard) against the tub through fast left-hand corners.

    But, these things are pithily inconsequential compared to what the Elise gives in return…

    The handling benchmark? Is that a question?

    Think you know something about steering feel and feedback? You don’t, none of us do. Until you drive an Elise.

    The SC renders steering so direct and communicative it completely unnerves at first, overwhelming the driver with road surface, camber and front-wheel angle information.

    Nimble, benign and utterly engaging the Elise exhibits complete body control and rolling is not in its technical frame of reference. Forget about lurid power slides though, on the limit at low speeds it has safety first understeer designed into the package – especially prevalent with the 175/55 front, 245/45 rear tyre combination.

    Oversteer is available with brutal corner entry braking or lift-off tactics, best experienced on a track with plenty of run off available. The optional limited-slip differential should quell any wet-weather twitchiness for the easily unnerved.

    Capable of Playstation GT4 pace in real world conditions, the Elise, with its ridiculously low driving position allows you to ‘think’ the car through fast sweeps. Its flickability through tight second-gear corners at stupefying speeds inspires unflinching confidence.

    From tight second gear hairpins to fifth-gear flat out sweeps, the tactile driving experience is intoxicating at either end of the speed spectrum, yielding a tremendous fun coefficient for all skill levels. The flat under-tray aids stability too, allowing the Elise to track with tremendous reassurance in crosswinds despite its low mass.

    The supercharged Toyota engine provides ample urge about 4 000r/min. Between 6 500- and 7 800r/min it’s simply in supercar territory with accelerative verve, rushing from 0-160km/h in 10.7 seconds.

    A slightly loose gearchange action vexed as the single average part of this fabulous dynamic package.



    Verdict

    At a touch on R600 000 most would dismiss the Elise as a ridiculously overpriced kit-car. It has very little posing appeal – despite being disarmingly cute aesthetically.

    It makes an excellent first-date car for leg caressing thanks to the narrow cockpit and offset first gear, though ladies despise the narrow door aperture which requires very unladylike entry and exit behaviour.
    If you love driving, you’ll understand why the Elise remains such an alluring choice despite its manically minimalist design parameters.

    It remains an undiluted performance car – without the excess and sporting entirely acceptable 12.8l/100km on-the-limit driving economy too. You can average under 10l/100km if apex clipping instincts are curtailed sufficiently.

    An irrational purchase? Most definitely. Bear in mind though, most cars with comparable performance can't touch its efficiency and it treads a delightfully conscience soothing emission and fossil fuel footprint.

    I spent an inordinate amount of time driving the Elise during its test period. Despite the lack of so-called comfort and convenience features it never fatigued me. You only need to stop for fuel, food and a comfort break. But you’ll never want to stop driving an Elise – ever.

    Pluses

    Incomparable handling and dynamics

    Dramatic presence

    Outstanding performance/economy blend

    Tactile and unrefined cabin environment


    Minuses

    Tactile and unrefined cabin environment

    Committed ownership mandatory

    No spare wheel

    Sinfully expensive locally

    Can be embarrassing to clamber out of






     
    SLR
    1/2/2009 2:54 PM
    At high speeds I'd drive nothing less than the Lotus Elise dam the handling is the best by far,Im a Merc Fan but no car company not even Merc that have yet designed a car with such precise handling, and full band power
    Charles B
    10/29/2008 11:16 AM
    Rod : Did you have to bring the Elise back to S.A 'cos you couldn't get rid of it in the UK?
    Rod
    10/27/2008 1:32 PM
    I bought a 111S when I was living and working in the UK and my wife and I loved it so much we bought it back to SA with us. My day to day car is a C55AMG which in its own right is no slouch, but you just cannot compare anything to an Elise for pure smile factor. The handling is comparible with nothing out there and it's pure heaven with the roof off. Comparing an Elise to "a pretty quick 3.0 L Z3" is one of the funniest things I've ever heard. The Z3 is a) not pretty and b) definitely not pretty quick.
    Anonymous User
    10/13/2008 1:39 PM
    We had the old Elise and its the best car ever to drive. Enjoyed the SubaruSTI, tried a TT, Boxster and SLK. My advice to anyone who enjoys driving, buy two! (and a spare wheel for passenger seat, you can't talk to anyone at speed anycase).
    Martin(London)
    10/11/2008 11:00 AM
    I have driven most cars, ferrarri's, lamborgini's, porches and the lotus for the price is by far the best overall package taken into concideration price handling etc. I would definitelly recogment the lotus so if you have the money and want to buy most propably the best handling sports car in the world for a fraction of the price of a ferrarri then this is it!!
    Anonymous User
    10/9/2008 8:35 AM
    a toyota engined car for this price...never
    Jan
    10/9/2008 7:08 AM
    Johan - Clearly you have not driven one. Not everything in life is about investments. Live a little, bud. Enjoy life. Go drive one of these.
    Johan
    10/8/2008 9:03 PM
    So it is not an investment - then what is the point of this car? Sounds comparable to a supped up turbo Nissan Champ with better styling. It just doesn't make sense!
    Anonymous User
    10/8/2008 4:59 PM
    Used to ship with the 147kw opel 2.0 T motor before...But i guess weighing <900kg it doesn't really need the torque u get from a turbo mill and no turbo-lag helps too...
    Anonymous User
    10/8/2008 1:09 PM
    ABSOLUTELY FABOLOUS CAR FOR PEOPLE WHO WANT TO BE ENTHRILLED
    Jez
    10/8/2008 12:07 PM
    And don't forget the Opel components as well!! I had an Excige S for a day. It took nearly a week to wipe the grin off my face. If I had the moolah, I'd get one in a heartbeat!! Great article and very, very accurate.
    Anonymous User
    10/8/2008 9:54 AM
    Best sports car....EVER!
    Dr. No
    10/8/2008 8:16 AM
    111R: As an owner of a pretty quick 3.0 L Z3, I can understand what you're saying perfectly. But at R 600 K it just can't be justified, not on it's performance alone. The whole package has to be considered against the sticker price. This car should sell here for arround At R 400 - 450 K (similar to the 350 Z) and then you would have a car equal to it's price and fair value. At that price it would sell far better and accordingly retain improved equity value after purchasing.
    Anonymous User
    10/8/2008 8:09 AM
    Kolkas...wake up from behind the wheel of your Chinese scrap car. You miss the point idiot. Actually most of you do. This is F1 technology. Ever heard of a Noble, guess not, well pretty much the same idea. Compare a Boxter to a SLK or Z4. If you can't afford it walk away and don't even comment.
    Anonymous User
    10/7/2008 7:00 PM
    Blame the governments 100% import duty and ad valorem tax ripoff for the high price. Niche importers get no import points to help keep the prices reasonable before they add any profit
    Kolkas
    10/7/2008 4:49 PM
    Its way overpriced because the word "Toyota" appeared somewhere. Anything with the word "Toyota" floating around it is overpriced in SA.
    111R
    10/7/2008 4:48 PM
    Dr. No: I own a an Elise 111R. I think its a tad overpriced, and its resale sucks I agree. A PORSCHE BOXSTER is decent car, more power but it weighs a lot more then the elise so its acceleration is no better. But let me tell you this, no boxster will ever ever make you you smile (or grin like it's your 1'st date with a supermodel) when you drive it. Every time I drive the Elise all I can think of what an amazing drivers car it is.
    Dr. No
    10/7/2008 4:27 PM
    R600 K for a fancy kit car with a pimped up Corolla motor all stuck together with glue and sellotape. Get real. Two words : PORSCHE BOXSTER. More power, more torque, far more refined, a true thoroughbred. And when you sell the Boxster you'll probably get most of your Tom back. As the man said, you buy the Elise and you'll have it for life, 'cos you won't be able to get rid of it...
    Anonymous User
    10/7/2008 12:41 PM
    Awesome car, but WAYYYY overpriced in SA
    c j
    10/7/2008 12:32 PM
    I agree with a Anon @ 09:54. Pricing is killing this vehicle... the same can also be said about subaru sa. My Birkin 7 gives you the same driving thrills cost under R100k although it doesn't have the cupholder. Pricing aside this is a superb automobile and if you can afford one you probably won't worry about the resale issue.
    Anonymous User
    10/7/2008 10:26 AM
    Mmmmm..plastic car with a Toyota Engine..Euwww!!! But 4 some odd reason it works..I'll take it!!!
    CRV driver
    10/7/2008 10:13 AM
    I have driven the 111R Elise and I will never forget the experience. It is not a normal car. Nothing can prepare you for the raw onslaught and total saturation of the senses. It cannot be compared to anything else and it cannot be used for everyday purposes. If you want a sporty roadster for everyday use, get a SLK, Z4 or Boxter. If you want to *** in you pants and the most real and intense driving experience possible below R1M, buy this.
    Anonymous User
    10/7/2008 10:02 AM
    Stunning car with great peformance, Engine & body co-designed by a south african. would buy one anytime
    Anonymous User
    10/7/2008 9:54 AM
    Lotus SA (under Pearl Automative) are not doing this brand any justice. This is meant to be a well priced accessible vehicle (like it is in the UK), not the rediculously expensive brand it is. Just look at resale values, a quick nip around the corner will set you back several hundred thousand rands in re-sale. This is clear evidence the pricing is wrong. Maybe these guys at Pearl Automative took a leaf out of Seat SA's page, and if Lotus where to do this brand justice they would allocate some one else to distribute these cars. I love the Elise, but it simply isn't worth buying new in SA at that price. Look for a good second hand model, much better bet.
    Anonymous User
    10/7/2008 9:29 AM
    The only real sports car...the rest are too fat, too heavy, overstyled, over-engined and wayyyyyyyy too complex.

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