It's as coarse and undiluted as a concert hall filled with Limp Bizkit fans on crack, and just about as refined. It's also quite easily the most entertaining car we've ever experienced and without question one of the most unique automobiles on the planet. Sun International's Lotus Elise, with a Honda B18 stuffed neatly in place of the original Rover K-series engine, makes no apologies for being the most fun-to-drive car in the world.
It speaks to the pure, hard-core car enthusiast in all of us like no other car we've driven. It's as simple, light and uncompromised as a modern automobile can be and still be called a car. Plus, it's blindingly quick. Not quick like a Lancer or WRX. It's doesn't have that go-anywhere-on-any-road kind of speed that we love so much at Sport Compact Car. It's a different sort of thing altogether. Take the spirited, fun loving nature of the Miata, cross it with the dynamics and power delivery of a shifter kart and turn it loose on the road with a shapely and ultra-lightweight Fiberglas body. That's Sun International's Lotus Elise.
Go
Describing the Lotus's power delivery is going to sound familiar to anyone who reads SCC very often. We've already dedicated far too many pages of this journal to describing how well the B18C5 (yes, the Type R engine) motivates the aging Integra chassis. What we haven't done is tell you what it sounds like 18 inches behind your head in the plastic-bodied Elise. It's weird, it's loud and it's fast.
First up, the noise. If you like the sound of Honda's high-overlap B-series engines, you'll like what you get in the Elise. Although the two cars we drove had slightly different intake configurations, there's no escaping the Honda engine note above 6000 rpm. In the Elise, however, it's not damped by the firewall or hood. In fact, it resonates through the little car's plastic body like a fire alarm in a steel culvert. With all that noise comes the most insane, Honda-motivated acceleration we've been part of. Luckily, It's not just the Honda engine that makes the tarmac disappear so rapidly under the British roadster's flanks. The rest of the Type R drivetrain is working inside the Lotus chassis as well. The entire Type R transaxle, including the Helical limited-slip differential, hides beneath the Lotus's bonnet. That means, and we've said this before, every shift at redline places the engine right back in VTEC-land where it can once again pound back to speed without the delay of a cam switchover. It also means the Lotus is graced with one of the most effective and livable limited slips available today.
Standing on the gas around a corner gave us the results we had always hoped for in this car. Even before the cam switch, the Elise will power sideways with controlled authority. This little car speaks a language we understand. Its tongue is part Miata, part Lotus, part Honda and part full-on racecar. All of which becomes immediately obvious from behind the wheel.
We won't waste your time rambling on about power-to-weight ratios and loony acceleration numbers. Those things aren't what this car is all about. The Elise is about the experience of uncompromised driving pleasure.
Besides, the numbers are so good there's no point in that kind of hair-splitting here. Want to beat the car beside you to the next stoplight? No problem, mash the gas and go. Nothing short of a Porsche Turbo or Corvette Z06-neither of which could provide the minimalist driving experience of the Elise-will keep up.
Turn
Up to this point, our benchmarks for dynamics in small cars have been Mazda's wonderful Miata and Toyota's different, but equally capable, MR2 Spyder. There's no comparison with an Elise. It's got the chassis rigidity the Miata can only hope for and the suspension the MR2 deserves-with weight that makes both camps green with envy. It's a straightforward, no-holds- barred cornering machine.
In fact, its focus is so evident it makes our first-generation Miata project car feel like a couch by comparison. And it's not just the suspension that sends that message. Every surface of the Elise serves a purpose, every angle of its body fits that purpose and every driver interface is sharp and precise. The Miata is a toy, while the Elise is a tool. Bend the Elise through a slalom and every input and correction seems second nature. Balancing power with grip is an intuitive compromise in this car-everything just works right together. It's as if the B18 was meant to be there from the beginning-at least as far as the dynamics are concerned.
Our time with the car was too short to offer a comprehensive look at the car's road manners. But we have enough seat time to be confident of one thing. The shortcomings of a car this size are easily overlooked by spending two minutes behind the wheel. Even without 200 hp (stock Elises come with 120 hp), this is a lot of car. There's no doubt that Colin Chapman's philosophy drove the design of the Elise.
If there is any area to fault, it's the Elise's lack of suspension travel; we noticed it bottoming on very small bumps. However, that's a shortcoming common to almost any car this size-and the only one we could find.
Purity
The best part? The simple lack of unnecessary crap. And we mean that in the most appreciative way. After squirming over the wide sill (necessary for the huge rigidity present here but rarely found in other roadsters), our hind ends found comfort and support in a simple piece of aluminum covered with leather. The beauty is in the details. The seats are hard as hell, there's no question about it. Their design, the shape of the aluminum and the placement of the one or two pieces of padding, is exacting and perfect. They're simple and decidedly effective just like the rest of the car.
The seats are just the beginning. The whole car follows this theme. In fact, the driving experience is so overwhelming we can't even recall if our test car had a radio. The driving is simply that involving. Nothing matters except the next corner. During testing of the Elise, we found ourselves asking why other cars can't be this good. And, without hesitation, we reached one simple conclusion time after time. Weight. Or to be more precise, lack of weight.
With the exception of a Lotus Europa, which was built with the benefit (if one chooses to see it that way) of 1960s-era safety standards, this is the lightest car we've driven. At 1,710 lbs., there's simply no room for excess. No air conditioning, no spare tire, no power anything. It takes driving back to what it should be-the simplest of interactions between man and machine.
The lack of weight is evident everywhere in the Elise. Its doors and A-pillar must be handled with care; their paper-thin construction makes one instantly aware of their fragility. Don't lean on the body or hang on the door or you'll likely end up with pile of broken Fiberglas. Don't plan on being babied with amenities or catered to in any way. The Elise was designed with one focused goal-hard, fast driving
It doesn't like to be coddled either. Sure, there's room for mechanical empathy, but we get the feeling from our test that this car likes a beating. We pounded it up and down our test facility for more than an hour without a break. Short shifting is pointless as the B18 feels right at home at 8000 rpm-which, incidentally, is the last increment on its Stack tachometer. So our technique-bury the tach and shift, bury the tach and shift-took some time to get used to, but was truly enjoyable.
It's loud, it's buzzy and it has its share of harshness. But none of that matters. We would have given anything for a 500-mile road trip in this car. It's just that much fun.
By Josh Jacquot
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