They say less is more. Then again “they” say a lot of stuff, much of it incoherent, unhinged or, at best, just flat wrong.
Even so, one can make a powerful argument for less being more, so perhaps they’re on to something here.
We’ll go one better and say that adding more to less, thereby transcending the more you thought would happen by getting to the true core of “more” by actually winding up with less, is more.
This tortured prose is what seems to result from any discussion of the Lotus Elise and Exige, flyweight sports cars that leverage their lack of mass into an abundance of performance. A standard Elise comes equipped with modestly sized tires and a somewhat mundane engine, but manages to outperform far more muscular and aggressive cars merely by weighing a single ton. Because there’s just not much car to move, it moves so much more easily.
But what happens when you add more to that less? What happens when you replace those modest tires with more aggressive ones, or augment that average engine to superhero status? Can the lithe and light Elise and Exige handle the pressure of all these expectations?
Hayes Harris, owner of Wire Wheel Classic Sports cars and purveyor of fine Lotus Elises and Exiges, presented to us a small fleet of these cars that perfectly demonstrates that question: How do they react when the knob is upped to 11?
Falling Through the Cracks
Wire Wheel deals in all sorts of used sports and race cars, but one of their specialties is the Elise and Exige. Thanks to timid insurance companies and extensive use of large fiberglass panels, especially front and rear clamshells, the Elise and Exige are highly likely to be written off as “totaled” by underwriters after even minor fender-benders (or, in this case, fender-crackers).
Most high-volume body shops don’t have the proper tools or training to do composite repair, so many slightly damaged Lotuses turn up on the used market, no longer able to be sold with clean titles.
This is where Wire Wheel steps in. The ability to do proper composite repairs–which Wire Wheel is fortunate enough to have access to–can turn a technically totaled Lotus back into a top-flight sports car. Because of their once-totaled status, these cars must be sold with “rebuilt” titles, but the reality is that they have had repairs done to them that would never affect the value of a metal car. Their “rebuilt” status reflects the insurance companies’ unwillingness to pay for composite more than the actual state of the vehicle.
In addition to providing fine values on gently used street Lotuses, Wire Wheel has also developed a niche as the go-to place for track-prepared Elises and Exiges, including ones with racing pedigree. Like most things, when you have a lot of something hanging around, more tend to show up. Harris also brought out a couple genuine racers for us to sample just how much more could be added to all of this less.
Lotus Elise
We began our track sampling behind the wheel of a regular Lotus Elise, which was sold stateside and with relatively few changes from 2005 through 2011. Hayes Harris described it as a pretty representative example of the kinds of used Elises his company sells with rebuilt titles. If that’s the case, one of these cars just made our short-list of future projects.
We’ll admit that there are certain mental alarms that automatically go off when we hear the words “rebuilt title.” The reality, however, is that these are cars that suffered only minor cosmetic damage, with no damage that actually affects their ability to be cars.
And what cars they are. Even a “standard” Lotus Elise is pure joy from behind the wheel. Weighing in at under a ton, the Elise feels less like a car and more like you grew tires on your hands and feet. Despite being such a physically small automobile–it’s just a bit more than 12 feet long by five and a half feet wide–there’s a surprising amount of room to work inside the cockpit. The driving position is likewise surprisingly excellent.
Sure, your legs are almost straight out toward the pedals, but that’s because your butt is practically on the floor and separated only by a thin, featherweight, upholstered shell of a seat. There’s no seat adjustment aside from fore and aft, but chances are you won’t need much else. And despite their simplicity, these seats fit a wide variety of body types and can be lived in for extended road trips.
The trick is not being in the Elise cockpit, though, it’s getting into the Elise cockpit. The wide, high doorsills, low seat and low window line conspire to force all but Cirque du Soleil veterans into dignity-shedding contortions to enter the fun zone. It’s worth the squeeze, though, and even with a helmet there’s room to work for all but the tallest among us.
On track, the most amazing thing about the Elise is how benign it feels for a mid-engined car. Lotus has managed to make the steering responsive without feeling overly edgy, and the lack of power assist means astounding feedback. And with just a little over 700 pounds on the front axle, steering effort is light enough to park one-handed.
Lotus Exige S
It’s hard to spot actual flaws in the Elise. It’s so naturally responsive and easy to drive that you get out thinking that it’s the perfect track companion–one that can also get you to and from the circuit in air-conditioned comfort.
Then you drive an Exige S.
The Exige is essentially an Elise with anger issues. Take a standard Elise, complete with its 1.8-liter, 189-horsepower Toyota Celica GT-S based engine, bolt a fixed hardtop in place of the removable roof panel, add some additional downforce-developing body accessories, and tell your family you’ve left the motorcycle enthusiast organization to join a biker gang. The Exige S takes it one step further with the addition of a supercharger that adds another 51 horsepower.
These stock Toyota power plants are relatively robust units, save for a few potential oiling issues that are easily solved with the addition of a baffled oil pan. (Unless already equipped with an Accusump, all track Elises and Exiges sold by Wire Wheel receive baffled oil pans as a matter of course.) Adding some boost fattens the peaky torque curve of the stock engine and provides strong evidence that there actually is a replacement for displacement.
Most amazing is how the Elise/Exige chassis just soaks up the extra power and torque. The Exige completely Dunning-Krugers the Elise by actually feeling like a more competent car when you previously didn’t even realize such a thing was possible. The additional power adds a new dimension to the handling, so that you can much more keenly control the cornering attitude of the car with your right foot.
And, like the Elise, the Exige is also completely streetable–although the fixed roof means that every trip in or out requires some flexibility. (Removing the Elise’s top, by the way, allows you to do your best Thomas Magnum impression when getting behind the wheel.)
The creature comforts offered by the Elise/Exige aren’t exactly Cadillac-level, but for cars of this capability, they’re passable. Air conditioning is adequate, but can be easily augmented with high-quality window tint. Interior noise levels are on the high side because of the many exposed metal panels, but plenty of aftermarket carpet kits are available that both quiet the cars and give them a more finished appearance.
Lotus Exige Cup 255
Enough talk of street equipment! These track-prepped variants are about less: less weight, less creature comforts, less anything that isn’t devoted to a) chewing bubblegum or b) kicking ass. And, for the record, the Exige Cup 255 is entirely out of bubblegum.
Built by Lotus’s in-house motorsport division, the Exige Cup 255 appeared as their 2007 replacement for the 2006 Exige Cup 240. Based on the Exige S, the Cup 255 is a 252-horsepower beastie that established the manufactuer’s new “order this car from the dealer and go to the track” option. (Why the 255 designation for a car with 252 horsepower? In overseas markets, it was rated at 255ps.)
The Cup treatment includes an even lighter weight exhaust system, upgraded brakes, adjustable shocks, adjustable anti-roll bars and a full roll cage. This is in addition to the litany of the hardest-core options already on the Exige S option sheet, like the additional aero enhancements.
If the Exige S is your college football-playing nephew, the Cup 255 is the NFL guy you met at that chicken wing place that one time who was really nice. It has all the same athletic moves as the Exige S–the DNA is readily apparent and not at all hidden–but the reflexes have been honed toward a single purpose. Our test example wore Hoosier road race radials, which certainly upped the grip and response, but they were aided and abetted by the stellar chassis and snappy engine response.
All of the physics of the Cup car seem familiar from the Exige S, but they’re in a bit clearer focus. By this point we’ve sort of dropped any pretense of street operation, but the Cup car is pure joy on track. The sticky Hoosiers bring some heft to the steering, but the direct, responsive nature remains.
The additional horsepower is actually the most noticeable difference. Where the Exige S seems to have a broad torque curve, the Cup car’s focus feels a bit narrower, but more explosive when the power comes on. Even with this additional aggression, though, the chassis remains unflappable. With the sticky Hoosiers raising grip to ludicrous levels, cornering speeds increase to the point where the peakier engine response isn’t an issue.
More aggressive brake pads mean a lighter foot provides even harder arresting force, but the chassis is so well balanced that you could easily do a couple of things at once–like trail braking or adjusting your speed mid-corner–without much penalty.
Lotus Exige Pirelli World Challenge
God forbid racers ever be satisfied with anything, though, so next up in our lightweight queue was an Exige S formerly campaigned in the Pirelli World Challenge series by Jim Taggart.
Starting with a standard 2011 Exige S chassis, the Taggart team added even more power behind the driver through additional boost and custom engine management. The result is around 360 horsepower driving through a close-ratio Quaife gearbox and into a limited-slip differential. A full dry-sump oiling system makes sure the 2ZZ Toyota engine always has lubrication.
Handling-wise, the World Challenge racer is surprisingly similar to the Cup car–high but predictable limits, and the quick transitions that one expects from a mid-engined chassis, with little of the tail-heavy feel that many mid-engined sportsters suffer from.
Most mid-engined cars have excellent reflexes. It’s one of the benefits of having most of the mass located so close to the center of the car. Many mid-engined cars are also slightly unpredictable or uncommunicative at the limit–that’s the tradeoff of not having more weight on the nose. But the Elise and Exige are remarkably stable. They’re among the few mid-engined cars we’d actually go so far as to call “novice-friendly.”
The big difference in the World Challenge racer, however, is the engine. Although the Exige is a car with exceptional handling, it competes in a class with V8-powered pony cars, and between those corners it’s all about raw speed. To have some chance of keeping up, this Exige’s engine has been tuned to ludicrous levels, and consequently makes negotiating the more finesse-dependent parts of a race track tricky.
The engine basically has two modes: idle aggressively or explode like a ton of dynamite taking off the side of a mountain. The cornering progression is kind of like this: Brake, turn in, hit apex, spot exit, put right foot down, BOOM! Build a mini-mall in the newly cleared land you just explosively excavated behind you.
The tight confines of our North Florida test course made it a little tricky in the slower, second gear stuff. On the few faster corners where we could let it run a little, we imagined how glorious it would be to light off those explosions at a fast track like Road Atlanta.
Red Bull Lotus Exige GT3
If you follow international motorsport, you’ll probably recognize the name Adrian Newey as the chief tech officer of Red Bull Racing. He’s the guy whose designs have won F1 championships with six different drivers.
So when someone with that kind of mental horsepower decides to do some racing on his own–you know, for fun–it says a great deal about its potential when he turns his attentions to developing the Elise chassis. The “1 of 1” Elise from Red Bull Racing was the final delicious candy in our Lotus Whitman’s Sampler.
Starting with an Exige tub–all of our test cars used the factory bonded aluminum tubs–Lanzante Motorsport followed Newey’s design specs to create a GT3-level monster for endurance racing. Using a supercharged and dry-sumped 2ZZ engine, the team boosted it all the way up to around 345 horsepower–that’s actually a tad less than the World Challenge racer’s power figure. Unlike the World Challenge car, however, the powerplant in the Red Bull car is far more tractable, so the power and torque are far more manageable.
Although the tub is stock, most of the suspension bits that are bolted to it are bespoke pieces. Thanks to an extensive use of spherical bearing connections rather than pliable bushings, the Red Bull car imparts a sense of directness even beyond the laser-focused precision exhibited by the rest of our test group.
Shifting is done via a sequential Hewland gearbox with the driver’s left hand, since the car is in proper English right-hand-drive. Once you hop in it takes a few laps to acclimate to the GT3 car, but familiar patterns quickly emerge.
One of the more amazing revelations from the day was how easy it was to move from car to car, especially in the progression we followed. If the Elise was sweet, sweet music, the Exige S was stereo, the Cup car was surround sound, and the World Challenge car was the PA at a Slayer concert. They were all playing the same song, though. The Red Bull car continued the trend, complete with belching flames and a laser light show–things you’d expect at any proper Slayer performance.
The extensive and aggressive aero package was remarkably effective at even autocross speeds. In the faster corners it gave the car an additional sharpness on turn-in with the trademark additional stability of solidly developed aero.
Aside from that, it was very much in the spirit of the other four cars: Grip was exceptional, and transitional behavior was intuitive and decisive, but didn’t require that extra tiny pause you usually have to make in mid-engined cars while the mass behind you catches up to the wheels out front. These were all mid-engined cars that one could practically drive with the reckless abandon of a front-wheel-drive car.
This particular example may go down in history as one of the more significant Elise/Exige builds ever. “It’s probably the ultimate example of a car that is bound to be a classic anyway,” Harris says. “Even though it’s not a factory race car and didn’t really even have that extensive of a race career, the fact of the names that were attached to it–and that they chose this chassis as their medium–make it a rather impressive piece of history if you’re into that sort of thing.”
Yeah, we’re into it.
Elises and Exiges are steadily transitioning from “interesting modern sports cars” to “legitimate milestones and near-future classics.” Harris has seen the market climb slowly but steadily, and it appears that any depreciation bottom that these cars might have had has passed.
“As these cars get into their second- and third-generation ownership, you’re seeing people buying them not because they’re new and the latest and greatest thing, but because they specifically want one of these,” he explains. “That tends to be the signal that values are on the way up, because those folks tend to hold onto the cars, so there’s just not as many in the marketplace.”
If that’s the case, and you want one of these things (which you totally should), you might want to escalate your shopping schedule. And if you’re looking to take your future Elise or Exige purchase to the next level, as we found out on track, there are a lot of ways to make an already great car even better: Just add more to less.