RE: Caterham 21: Unsung Hero

RE: Caterham 21: Unsung Hero

Thursday 23rd October 2014

Caterham 21: Unsung Hero

Does the largely forgotten Caterham 21 deserve another look? Chris Rees admits a vested interest



So PH has finally driven the Zenos E10 this week. The fact that it's very much a product of ex-Caterham people (namely Ansar Ali, Mark Edwards and Chris Weston) immediately got me thinking of another spin-off from the Caterham fold - the ill-fated Caterham 21 that first saw the light of day 20 years ago.

Right. I'm going to declare more than a little interest up front, because I actually own a Caterham 21. I swapped my faithful BDA-engined Caterham Seven for a primrose yellow 21. In retrospect, a large part of me thinks this was madness. But a larger part of me recognises that I've come out of the deal with something quite special.

220hp and 655kg. More interested now?
220hp and 655kg. More interested now?
Grown-up and plush
First, a bit of background about the 21. Very much the brainchild of Jez Coates, Caterham Cars' Technical Director back in 1995, he conceived it as a grown-up Seven. The chassis was basically the same as a Seven but it added a few niceties such as opening doors, glass windows, a hinging bonnet and even a boot big enough to swallow, yes, the ultimate cliche of two sets of golf clubs.

For me, what makes it most special is its sensational prettiness, courtesy of the genius penwork of Iain Robertson. Its interior still looks great today, and totally unique. The 21 realised its potential in at least one sense: Caterham made a cracking race car out of it, the 21 GTO, which was quicker than a Seven Superlight racer and out-performed race Elises in its day.

But Caterham customers never really 'got' the 21, which ignored Colin Chapman's fundamental call always to "add lightness", dulling performance and steering precision compared to a Seven. Plenty of grip and a surprisingly good ride didn't make up for the added understeer and less controllable tail-out action. And Caterham never fully got to grips with the technology of opening panels.

Well there's no mistaking it for anything else
Well there's no mistaking it for anything else
Norfolk Nemesis
What really scuppered the 21, though, was the nemesis that was the Lotus Elise, launched at pretty much the same time as the 21. While the 21 was lighter (665kg versus 723kg), it felt a bit 'old' tech with its steel-tubed frame versus Hethel's exotic extruded aluminium chassis. It was also more cramped, noisier and had even worse weather gear. And the killer: the Elise launched at £18,950 fully-built, whereas Caterham charged £18,750 for the 21 in kit form. Small wonder that the Elise S1 sold over 10,000 examples, while the 21 petered out at just 50 - yes, 50 - examples between 1995 and 2000.

So finding one for sale these days is very difficult. In fact, there's just one up in the classifieds but it's a cracker. Unusually it has Vauxhall power (most had Rover K-Series), and not just any Vauxhall lump: a Caterham 'red-top' tuned unit with 220hp. My 21 has a 140hp 1.6 Rover engine and feels fast, so this must be ballistic. In fact, the seller - Sevens & Classics of Brands Hatch (run by another ex-Caterham man, Andy Noble) quotes a 0-60 time of five seconds, which to me feels like an underestimate.

Priced at £17,250, it doesn't seem unreasonable value for a car of such rarity. Elises are 10 a penny in comparison. And even that other super-rare contemporary - Renault's alien-looking Sport Spider - has far more presence in the classifieds.

If you're in the market for a Caterham, all sense tells you that you should buy a Seven. But perhaps, like me, the 21 will sing its siren song from quiet side streets. Speaking from personal experience it proved an irresistible allure.





Author
Discussion

j_s14a

Original Poster:

863 posts

178 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
I wonder what utterly mundane car those rear lights fell off? biggrin

k-ink

9,070 posts

179 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
I always loved the looks of these. Really lovely lines.

However I must admit I always wanted a mk1 Elise more. So I eventually bought a new Lotus years later.

GTEYE

2,094 posts

210 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
Biggest issue for me is it looks too much like one of those crap 1980's kit cars.

Some rare cars are rare for a reason. Sorry.

cookie1600

2,109 posts

161 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
j_s14a said:
I wonder what utterly mundane car those rear lights fell off? biggrin
Mk1 Mondeo hatchback

GTEYE

2,094 posts

210 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
cookie1600 said:
j_s14a said:
I wonder what utterly mundane car those rear lights fell off? biggrin
Mk1 Mondeo hatchback
Red the OP's quote again...

365daytonafan

283 posts

185 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
On my previous commute from Chiswick to Slough I often used to see a yellow Caterham 21 going the other way on the M4 (in all weathers too). Looked quite a cool little car. Think it's the only one I've seen on the road though.

scubadude

2,618 posts

197 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
I always thought it looked like a slightly shrunk Viper and as such brilliant but recent events suggest I have no taste :-)

bakker110

27 posts

143 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
I like it but it needs lowering. Far too high

T4NG0

1,670 posts

181 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
Always reminded me of Marcos's or the Ginetta G27


With a neater rear end btw



For that money though I would rather consider a V8 G33 wink


kambites

67,552 posts

221 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
I always thought it was a shame that the 21's launch coincided so closely with the Elise's. If they'd released it five years earlier, it might have sold reasonably well.

NGK210

2,912 posts

145 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
Spent quite a lot of time in a 21. Very confortable seating position (I'm 6' 2"), steering wheel and gear stick perfectly placed and it had a decent sized boot. Also had sweet handling/balance/grip and steering cloud9

BUT, it was a mega PITA to get in and out of - limbo dancing through a letter box would've been easier - and the fixed windows were just plain stoopid and very annoying irked

Turbobanana

6,258 posts

201 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
Those tail lights don't look all that big on a Mondeo, do they? On here they look enormous!

For me it looks too much like a Z3, and the peaks in the front wings (presumably to accommodate the front uprights) are out of proportion.

Fascinating little car, though.

soad

32,882 posts

176 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
Slightly off topic, and the price difference is huge...
Who remembers Caterham Levante with its 2398cc supercharged V8 engine? Lightweight, high revving, and it also has 550bhp!



I wonder how many were sold?

kambites

67,552 posts

221 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
NGK210 said:
and the fixed windows were just plain stoopid and very annoying irked
That was the one biggest thing that put me off buying one.

Baryonyx

17,995 posts

159 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
kambites said:
I always thought it was a shame that the 21's launch coincided so closely with the Elise's. If they'd released it five years earlier, it might have sold reasonably well.
Indeed, no wonder it tanked. You can have a brand new, built up car from Lotus released to considerable acclaim, or you can have this dodgy kit car effort that isn't as fun as the Seven - I'm surprised they bothered at all.

I do love that interior design though, very smart.

Podie

46,630 posts

275 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
Drove a yellow one years ago and it was a hoot. I quite like 'em.

Seem to recall the 21 GTO was a purposeful looking thing.

soad

32,882 posts

176 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
Podie said:
Seem to recall the 21 GTO was a purposeful looking thing.

SpudLink

5,749 posts

192 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
I saw this at a motorshow shortly after it was 1st announced, but have only ever seen one on the road. It was a good idea, but it never looked 'quite right' to me. as someone has already stated, like a cheap kit car.
I bought an Elise new for £19k in 1998, and the Caterham 21 would have had to be several thousand cheaper to have attracted customers from the Lotus.

daytona365

1,773 posts

164 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
Lightweight cars are great, but surely they should be a tad more substantial than a folded up f a g paper ?

anonymous-user

54 months

Thursday 23rd October 2014
quotequote all
The 21 was great, until the Elise arrived.