Lotus Evora 400. REVIEW

Does the fastest Lotus Evora yet truly offer ‘supercar performance’? We find out with a quicker-than-expected spin in the new 400bhp Evora 400

Engine Power Torque 0-100kph Top speed Weight Basic price
V6, supercharged, 3456cc 400bhp @ 7000rpm 302lb ft @ 3500-6500rpm 4.2secs 299kph 1395kg (291bhp/ton) $110,500

Lotus Evora 400 01

Image 1 of 19

Rating
Star-4.5
Pro
Among the most electric sports cars available today
Con
Bring back the manual gearbox*

 

HIGH RES downloadable wallpapers available HERE

*Since our drive, we have been informed by Al Futtaim Motors that the Evora 400 is now available to order in the region with a manual gearbox

Our time with the Lotus Evora 400 is almost ruinously short, the marketing vehicle Al Futtaim has retained briefly in the region intended for promotional purposes rather than test-drives. Indeed, having picked up the car from the showroom, we only have until 6pm tonight before we need to drop it back again. Hence you find me on one of my regular haunts around CnP GHQ, a 5km loop encompassing fast switchbacks, long sweepers and the occasional sprawl of mid-afternoon traffic. The opening stretch in particular is one of my favourites, a long-sweeping left hander through one of the nearby underpasses, through which it’s customary to give several flicks of the left wrist, bring the gears down, the revs up, and hear whichever engine we happen to be testing sing. Okay, here we go…

…wait…what the hell was that?

I hadn’t expected that. After all, beneath the aggressively sculpted bodywork of the Evora 400 is a 3.5-litre supercharged V6, pushing 400bhp, 302lb ft of torque and capable of a little under 300kph. Gutsy then certainly, but the high-pitched intonation reverberating from the back end – reminiscent more of a slightly muffled Ferrari V8 – is a far cry from the more rorty V6 timbre I’d expected. My ears playing tricks on me? Perhaps, and since I’m nothing if not thorough (stop laughing), I swing the nose around for another run, windows down. That same beautifully ornate noise rattles both the tunnel walls and the hairs on the back of my neck at barely over 4000rpm. What is going on?

Lotus Evora 400 crankandpiston-6

So, how does it drive?

Though essentially an Evora S at the base, Lotus’ newest plaything has received some serious tweaks to produce, what the company calls, its ‘fastest road car of the new millennium’. Indeed, two thirds of the lighter, more powerful 400 is brand new, including a more structurally rigid chassis, new suspension geometry, larger AP Racing brakes, lightweight seats, and updated aero courtesy of a three-part rear spoiler, five-blade airflow diffuser, and aggressively raked front air intakes. Combined, it’s a recipe for one of the most potent Lotuses yet. Or, as Lotus itself puts it, ‘supercar performance.’ The noise alone suggests this is not just preamble.

At the next roundabout shortly after the tunnel run, I make another U-turn relieved to find Lotus’ beautifully detailed steering feel still intact. Having given electronic power steering the elbow, there’s considerably more physicality required under turn-in, but superbly textured feedback means there’s a much greater sense of engagement when loading up the front end too. Revised dampers ensure composure is similarly sublime.

What’s surprising me through is the underlying sense of aggression, a factor we rarely see from Lotus. From standstill, acceleration is seriously punchy, 0-100kph taken care of in a shade over four seconds, but it’s the traction out of the tighter corners that really impresses: so keen is the 400 to put its power down that the front end can be ushered into understeer on occasion, but feathering the throttle tucks the nose back in, allows the tail to swing, and you’re back into that Ferrari-esque soundtrack within seconds.

Lotus Evora 400 crankandpiston-2

And what’s the conclusion?

Not that this scintillating experience is without its faults though. Sliding into the cabin is far easier than a standard Evora thanks to considerably slashed side sills, but head and legroom is still at a premium. Sublime poise and aggressively tinged acceleration will still set you back the same deposit you’d fork over for a Porsche 911 Carrera, which is hardly an unyielding truck in itself. Most grating of all though is the six-speed automatic gearbox*. We have taken issue with Lotus’ transmission in the past, it offering neither the same slick changes nor engagement as its manual alternative. Sadly much is the same with the Evora 400. Upshifts are crisp and rapid, but downshifts are considerably more finicky, the weighty ‘ker-chunk’ tangible through the left paddle eroding that innate interaction. Surprisingly physical steering we can accept and applaud, but the gearbox is another matter.

Lined up for yet another run through the tunnel, the Evora 400 is already straining at the bit. Purists may argue that the 400’s innate aggression corrupts Lotus’ decades-born philosophy, but the results speak for themselves. As ever the company has produced a car utterly spectacular through the corners, spell-binding to listen to, and a driving experience more engaging than more prestigious rivals could dream of. Even if the slightly truculent automatic gearbox keeps the fifth star out of range*. Now, if you don’t mind, the tunnel is in sight…

*Since our drive, we have been informed by Al Futtaim Motors that the Evora 400 is now available to order in the region with a manual gearbox

Technical specifications available on page 2

HIGH RES downloadable wallpapers available HERE

Categories: Car Review

,,

Comments are closed