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2017 Lotus Evora 400: If You Don’t Know What It is #itsnotforyou

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The Evora 400—the 400 is for the horsepower produced by its Toyota-sourced supercharged and intercooled 3.5-litre V-6—is a genuinely refreshing machine. Wispy, strikingly well-made, and communicative, it’s a car for people who want to be engaged deeply by what they drive—and that’s not something we say about all British sports cars.

2017 Lotus Evora 400

The Evora 400 builds on the brand’s signature attribute: efficiency. And by that, we don’t mean a good fuel economy. We suggest the same thing Tony Rudd, former Lotus engineering director, meant when he wrote his infamous 1975 memo that founder Colin Chapman glowingly approved.

To paraphrase Rudd: The most elegantly effective solution is the one with the least number of parts, effectively deployed. They’re words that still bear fruit at Lotus today.

Lotus, the smallest company selling cars in this country, manages to squeeze masterful machines for discerning drivers from a tiny factory in Hethel, England, where each is assembled by hand. Its Lotus Cars arm employs a team of 10 people in the U.S.

While the entire company, including the Lotus Engineering consultancy, is about 850 strong worldwide. Lotus is to sports cars what Libertarian Gary Johnson is to presidential candidates: an offbeat alternative to the choices made by the masses. That the new Evora is here at all is a testament to the raw fortitude of a few. That it works as well as it does is almost alarming.

2017 Lotus Evora 400-07

What Matters?

What matters about the Evora is not Lotus’s financial stability, cash flow, or even its lighter-is-better ethos. What matters is the same thing about any sports car: how it drives. If it’s the personality you want, Evora will indulge. Built without the economies of scale, it offers the obstinacy of raw ingenuity and resourcefulness instead.

Relatively light steering effort delivers immediate response. The Evora understeers and won’t spin without manipulating the throttle and steering in search of such behaviour. It offers ample warning about its next move if you don’t operate it with impunity.

It rotates about the centre of the cabin in a way that makes the sensation of turning less evident than in, say, a Corvette, where you sit farther from the midpoint. That’s not a bad thing.

2017 Lotus Evora 400-01

Like many mid-engine cars, pitch changes are evident in the Evora. Its nose jumps with every jab at the throttle and dives slightly under heavy braking—personality traits contributing to its Lotusness. It’s alive like all other mid-engine Lotus road cars returning to the 1966 Europa, but it lacks the hyper-chipmunk nervousness of an Exige or Elise. It’s as honest about its intentions as it is quick. Even 400 horsepower is not enough to overwhelm the balanced demeanour of the chassis.

But its acceleration doesn’t feel as strong as a 400-hp, 3200-pound sports car should. And until we’re able to test one, we’ll stick with saying it’s only as quick as the last Evora S we tested, which hit 60 mph in 4.3 seconds and crossed the quarter-mile in 12.8 seconds at 110 mph.

Stunning Specs

Braking is remarkable. Four-piston callipers all around and larger two-piece rotors on the Evora S seem utterly indifferent to abuse. They work as if they were sized for a car 1000 pounds heavier. The car we drove endured more than 100 laps of a challenging road course without a pad change or significant reduction in performance. Carbon-ceramic brakes aren’t available or considered for several reasons: They’re costly, unnecessary, and customers don’t demand them.

There’s also a lot of grip here. Lotus uses Michelin Pilot Super Sport tires developed originally for BMW. The 235-section-width front rubber is wider than the front tires on the far more powerful McLaren 570S.

Three drive modes—Drive, Sport, and Race—adjust throttle response and loosen the stability control reins. Stability control also can be fully disabled but will, frustratingly, re-engage with the slightest overlap of throttle and brake pedals while left-foot braking.

Damping is fixed-rate, a product of limited resources and Lotus’s firm belief that a single, well-tuned calibration suffices. It’s an assertion that holds water only in the absence of several less-costly competitors with fantastic adaptive damping systems. The Evora’s ride is quite bearable given its intentions and on-track ability.

2017 Lotus Evora 400-02

This is easily the quickest Evora Lotus has ever built, and, indeed, it’s seven seconds (that’s a lifetime, folks) quicker than the Evora S around the company’s 2.2-mile test track. Helping the cause is a new front splitter and a three-element rear wing yield 71 pounds of downforce at 150 mph together.

This Evora 400 gains 55 horsepower over the S model sold in 2014. The power gains are a product of air-to-water intercooling and nine pounds of supercharged boost from an Edelbrock blower (the S was supercharged but not intercooled).

Internally, the Toyota 3.5-liter 2GR-FE V-6 remains unchanged. Six-Speed manual transmission and a Torsen limited-slip differential are standard equipment. A $2700 six-speed paddle-shifted automatic is optional, but those who choose two-pedal driving will do without the Torsen diff.

2017 Lotus Evora 400-03

Although it uses the same extruded and bonded aluminium construction as the previous Evora, the revised chassis shaves a claimed 6.6 pounds, offers the same torsional stiffness, and has smaller rocker sills, which ease the chore of getting in and out of it. The Evora 400 adds side airbags and significantly leaps in quality over the car it replaces.

Two $3400 interior trim options are offered—either leather or microsuede—and both look fantastic. Deal-breakers are also absent in the cabin, with touchpoints that feel solid. The only real ergonomic flaw is a somewhat awkward offset pedal location, an inconvenience that faded to insignificance on our drive.

But this isn’t a supercar. It’s a Lotus. And that makes it the eccentric cousin of mainstream sports cars. Even the little things are different at Lotus. So keen is the focus on maximising resources that the seatback adjustment knob shares its repurposed shape with the fuel cap on early Esprits.

Jean-Marc Gales, Lotus CEO, is sensitive enough to the company’s financial needs that he’s not afraid to admit that Evora’s switchgear is shared with Ford and GM products. He’s also a pure pragmatist, admitting honestly that Lotus won’t offer a carbon-fibre chassis in the next ten years.

Doing so would add cost and compromise ingress and egress, according to Gales. All the same, the Evora’s plus-two rear seating is smaller, harder to access, and less useful than a Porsche 911’s.

2017 Lotus Evora 400-04

To Sum It Up

How, then, does this Lotus measure against standard-bearers such as Porsche’s 718 Cayman S or a Corvette Grand Sport, which will cost less than the $93,785 Evora 400? But it’s a tough sell. Lotus makes a compelling case for its do-a-lot-with-a-little strategy, but it’s only occasionally better when measured against the best (think brakes).

The competitive set surely includes the Jaguar F-type and the Alfa Romeo 4C, which also stand apart from the mainstream but have more marketing might and a larger dealer base at their backs.

And that’s the rub for Lotus. The car will always come with certain compromises, Independent of the apparent effort expended on making the Evora 400 a genuinely viable choice. But, hey, Lotuses always have. And for some buyers, that’s where the magic lies.

They focus not on the sacrifices in such trade-offs but on the benefits that come in return. No Evora 400 driver will likely suffer the indignity of parking next to another. And there’s value in exclusivity, especially when it drives like this.

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