from lotus to ferrari - experience

from lotus to ferrari - experience

Author
Discussion

bordseye

Original Poster:

2,044 posts

199 months

Monday 18th April 2016
quotequote all
Its a move that I have just done after 7 or was it 8 years with an Elise R. I thought that some might be interested in the comparison because it isnt silly at all to compare a Lotus with a Ferrari .

The car I have bought is a 430 and it is for all the world like a grown up Elise, easier to live with and to get into but very similar driving experience. Thats why I bought it. In my dotage - I am 70 - I was finding it more and more awkward getting into the Elise and I could have sold videos of my wife getting out of the car. Wouldnt have done much for the marriage but they would have been really funny! And TBH the Elise was becoming just a bit too hard core for me.

But I really struggled to find a car that was as much of a drivers car but more civilised. The mass produced SLK / Z4 didnt appeal at all, and the Porkers, the Boxter in particular, are just too character free. The Vantage is a big GT style lump. I was sold as soon as I drove what I now refer to as the Big Elise.

Cons? Yes there are a few, not least the cost of running it ( 15mpg, service £1000), the attention and jealousy it attracts and the impracticality. Can you park in a city side street? Can you leave it in the marina car park for a week? What use is 186mph max FFS? And then of course there are the tracker you have to have and the agreed value insurance that leaves you arm-less and leg - less. But going out in it is a special occasion. The F1 flappy paddle box is a delight. And down a twisty B road its every bit as much fun as the Elise provided you keep speeds sensible.

So I guess what I am saying to you Lotus types is that in driving terms you arent missing anything at all. In fact the Elise is an outright bargain for what it gives you. And when you get old you can always have something Italian and flashy cant you?

If they ever make an Evora soft top I will return.


Moospeed

550 posts

272 months

Tuesday 19th April 2016
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I do remember someone I used to work with likening the steering of his 355 with a previous S1 Elise to which another colleague said "what? only as good as a hairdressers car?". 355 man soon put him in his place about how Mondeo* man had literally no clue as to what he was talking about.

  • I say Mondeo man because he literally had a Mondeo. He was very proud when he came in having bought his first sports car and revealed it was a Mondeo ST. Hard to stop laughing when he was talking about taking it easy at first as it was so powerful and a bit of a handful.

Rick101

7,015 posts

157 months

Tuesday 19th April 2016
quotequote all
Interesting comparison and good to know.
Never really been a massive Ferrari fan but good to know they are still making drivers cars.

Did you try anything newer? 458 488? Similar experience?

andy_s

19,607 posts

266 months

Tuesday 19th April 2016
quotequote all
bordseye said:
If they ever make an Evora soft top I will return.
Supposed to be mid-2017 for the convertible Evora, plenty of time to enjoy the Italian in the mean time...

Jonty355

4,423 posts

220 months

Tuesday 19th April 2016
quotequote all
I've just made a jump the opposite way around from a F355 Spider to a S2 Exige. To be honest, I find the Lotus far better because I can drive it without worrying how much it'll cost me later in wear and tear.

I've also driven tons of different Ferraris, Lambo's, Mclarens, Mercs, Veyron etc and the Exige is still one of the most fun cars I've every driven with the exception of the Ferrari F40 and the BAC Mono. Ok, so if you want some sort of luxury as well as performance, they're not that great and you'd be better off with a Ferrari or whatever. But put it this way. I could blow up my engine every 3 years and it would still be cheaper to run the Exige as getting a second hand engine and replacing it in the Exige is still cheaper than the 3 yearly cambelt service on a 355!

bordseye

Original Poster:

2,044 posts

199 months

Wednesday 20th April 2016
quotequote all
Rick101 said:
Interesting comparison and good to know.
Never really been a massive Ferrari fan but good to know they are still making drivers cars.

Did you try anything newer? 458 488? Similar experience?
No. Outside my budget but I did test 911/boxter/vantage/morgan+8/ F type and the only one of that lot that appealed as a sports car with character was the plus 8 - the current version with an ally chassis like the Elise and a big BMW v8 in it. Went like stink in a straight line but the handling could do with a bit of development by Lotus.

In any case the Ferraris are getting ever further from true sports car in the sense that the current models are full of little electric motors operating everything plus all sorts of drive modes. Bit like the F type in that respect, which is another car that is fast and very capable but somehow lacking in sports car character

F.C.

3,897 posts

215 months

Thursday 21st April 2016
quotequote all
bordseye said:
Its a move that I have just done after 7 or was it 8 years with an Elise R. I thought that some might be interested in the comparison because it isnt silly at all to compare a Lotus with a Ferrari .

The car I have bought is a 430 and it is for all the world like a grown up Elise, easier to live with and to get into but very similar driving experience. Thats why I bought it. In my dotage - I am 70 - I was finding it more and more awkward getting into the Elise and I could have sold videos of my wife getting out of the car. Wouldnt have done much for the marriage but they would have been really funny! And TBH the Elise was becoming just a bit too hard core for me.

But I really struggled to find a car that was as much of a drivers car but more civilised. The mass produced SLK / Z4 didnt appeal at all, and the Porkers, the Boxter in particular, are just too character free. The Vantage is a big GT style lump. I was sold as soon as I drove what I now refer to as the Big Elise.

Cons? Yes there are a few, not least the cost of running it ( 15mpg, service £1000), the attention and jealousy it attracts and the impracticality. Can you park in a city side street? Can you leave it in the marina car park for a week? What use is 186mph max FFS? And then of course there are the tracker you have to have and the agreed value insurance that leaves you arm-less and leg - less. But going out in it is a special occasion. The F1 flappy paddle box is a delight. And down a twisty B road its every bit as much fun as the Elise provided you keep speeds sensible.

So I guess what I am saying to you Lotus types is that in driving terms you arent missing anything at all. In fact the Elise is an outright bargain for what it gives you. And when you get old you can always have something Italian and flashy cant you?

If they ever make an Evora soft top I will return.
I went the other way from a F430 to an Exige, I have no idea where you get the impression its anything like the Lotus, in my experience it was too wide and too heavy for twisty B roads frown
There is no way to hide the extra weight of the Fezza, though a nice drive it was and that sound track cloud9

CTE

1,496 posts

247 months

Thursday 21st April 2016
quotequote all
I've got limited experience with a 458 but after a test drive came back much preferring my Evora S, and my S3 Exige is a completely different animal.
I bet the older ferrari are as previously said, more hands on and more fun. A test drive in a Boxster left me cold.
I'd go for an Evora 400 now as the best all rounder and the V6 Exige with a komotec upgrade as the best hardcore option, other than the specialist track day cars.

bordseye

Original Poster:

2,044 posts

199 months

Monday 25th April 2016
quotequote all
F.C. said:
I went the other way from a F430 to an Exige, I have no idea where you get the impression its anything like the Lotus, in my experience it was too wide and too heavy for twisty B roads frown
There is no way to hide the extra weight of the Fezza, though a nice drive it was and that sound track cloud9
You surprise ma as much as I have surprised you. After trying lots of alternatives that were sensibly sized ( the Elise isnt) I chose the 430 just because it felt like a big Elise. Its just 11% or 7 inches wider outside which certainly doesnt make it too wide for B roads round here. If it is then you cant drive a 911 or an F type down a B road either

240Cup

659 posts

197 months

Monday 25th April 2016
quotequote all
I agree, I went from an Exige 240PP to an F430 (manual) and I always said the Fezza felt like a big Exige. Yes you need a bit more space on the road but on a good cross country blast the chassis feel and grip was very similar.

Am now in a V6 Cup and the 430 wouldn't see which way it went in the really twisty stuff or on the brakes..!

blueg33

38,589 posts

231 months

Monday 25th April 2016
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I like the fact that the chassis of a £40k lotus is as good as the cassis on a £100k plus Ferrari.

In the Pyrenees last year Ferrari 360 and my Evora seemed evenly matched. The 911 was some way behind.

Edited by blueg33 on Tuesday 26th April 18:18

bordseye

Original Poster:

2,044 posts

199 months

Tuesday 26th April 2016
quotequote all
That has to be the only thatched Lotus in existance!

blueg33

38,589 posts

231 months

Tuesday 26th April 2016
quotequote all
bordseye said:
That has to be the only thatched Lotus in existance!
Bloody iPhone auto correct.