Help - what's the engine diff between 218/240/260 S2

Help - what's the engine diff between 218/240/260 S2

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Discussion

heelntoe

Original Poster:

380 posts

214 months

Monday 24th November 2014
quotequote all
Hi

As per the title - what are the main differences between the 3 exige 2 variants I see advertised. I previously had a chance to hire a 240 exige back in spring for a coupe week for s euro hoon and really loved it.

I'm just wondering if I picked up the lesser hp version whether I could upgrade to say 260hp and what sort of £££ it would cost.

Looking at models between 2008 and 2010 - thanks in advance.



lee111s

377 posts

188 months

Tuesday 25th November 2014
quotequote all
They all have the same engine and supercharger as far as I know. I think the difference is in the map, injectors, intercooler and air intake, possibly exhaust.

A 220 can have the power upgrade to 260 or beyond if you wish. Take a look on the hangar111 site if you're considering buying a standard 220 and paying for the upgrades yourself. It'll give you an idea of what's involved.

400SE Dave

1,296 posts

171 months

Tuesday 25th November 2014
quotequote all
Lotus do a factory upgrade for the 220 (or 240) to get to 260. Different injectors, high flow fuel pump and re-map. Add a new intercooler and induction then you are looking around 280 I beleive.

Last time I check cost was around £2k, less if it is a 240 (not inc Intercooler and induction)

simpo555

560 posts

164 months

Tuesday 25th November 2014
quotequote all
Better off going straight for the power output you want from the beginning. If you think you want 260, find a car thats been upgraded. Buying a 220, and upgrading to a 260 will cost an arm and a leg. You'll get the performance, but the car will always be seen as an upgraded 220. I'm bias, but for me the best route is a 240 with Performance Pack, having the upgraded brakes, longer roof scoop etc etc etc. Then perhaps have the Lotus 260 upgrage, which involves a re-map, change of injectors.

F.C.

3,897 posts

208 months

Tuesday 25th November 2014
quotequote all
simpo555 said:
Better off going straight for the power output you want from the beginning. If you think you want 260, find a car thats been upgraded. Buying a 220, and upgrading to a 260 will cost an arm and a leg. You'll get the performance, but the car will always be seen as an upgraded 220. I'm bias, but for me the best route is a 240 with Performance Pack, having the upgraded brakes, longer roof scoop etc etc etc. Then perhaps have the Lotus 260 upgrage, which involves a re-map, change of injectors.
+1 what he said

ad260S

978 posts

202 months

Tuesday 25th November 2014
quotequote all
F.C. said:
simpo555 said:
Better off going straight for the power output you want from the beginning. If you think you want 260, find a car thats been upgraded. Buying a 220, and upgrading to a 260 will cost an arm and a leg. You'll get the performance, but the car will always be seen as an upgraded 220. I'm bias, but for me the best route is a 240 with Performance Pack, having the upgraded brakes, longer roof scoop etc etc etc. Then perhaps have the Lotus 260 upgrage, which involves a re-map, change of injectors.
+1 what he said
+2

TO upgrade a 220 to 260 you would be looking at £2.5k wheres a 240 to 260 should have larger injectors so just high flow fuel pump, ecu and remap so about £1.5k but its a worthy upgrade and very noticable even from a 240. Final figures vary between 260 and 280 depending on the configuration of certain parts like a sports exhausts, sports CAT / decat and trd.

simpo555

560 posts

164 months

Tuesday 25th November 2014
quotequote all
ad260S said:
+2

TO upgrade a 220 to 260 you would be looking at £2.5k wheres a 240 to 260 should have larger injectors so just high flow fuel pump, ecu and remap so about £1.5k but its a worthy upgrade and very noticable even from a 240. Final figures vary between 260 and 280 depending on the configuration of certain parts like a sports exhausts, sports CAT / decat and trd.
Think that's just the mechanical side. Doesn't include brakes and all the other bits that you have on a 240 as standard. Takes the real cost to more than £5/6K, and you get very little or any of it back on resale.

jock mcsporran

5,004 posts

273 months

Tuesday 25th November 2014
quotequote all
As above, essentially a map, injectors and fuel pump. I think they actually swap the ECU rather than just flash a new map onto it.

The 240 Performance pack also had the items below as per the brochure at the time although some items (scoop) were included on later version of the standard 220 car.

308 mm front cross-drilled and vented discs with AP Racing four piston calipers
Uprated front and rear brake pads
Full length upsized roof scoop
Variable slip traction control
Uprated clutch plate and cover
Launch control

heelntoe

Original Poster:

380 posts

214 months

Tuesday 25th November 2014
quotequote all
A Thanks for the feed back - looks like going straight to 260 of atleast 240 is the answer. I'll bear this in mind, going for the 260 seems the most sensible option but clearly the most expensive option.

One more thing - the s2 changed engines in 2006 right. I was looking at a post 2008 model but not sure if I can go earlier say 2006/7 and what if any difference there would be?

Right the hunting begins...

Edited by heelntoe on Tuesday 25th November 23:29

ad260S

978 posts

202 months

Wednesday 26th November 2014
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simpo555 said:
ad260S said:
+2

TO upgrade a 220 to 260 you would be looking at £2.5k wheres a 240 to 260 should have larger injectors so just high flow fuel pump, ecu and remap so about £1.5k but its a worthy upgrade and very noticable even from a 240. Final figures vary between 260 and 280 depending on the configuration of certain parts like a sports exhausts, sports CAT / decat and trd.
Think that's just the mechanical side. Doesn't include brakes and all the other bits that you have on a 240 as standard. Takes the real cost to more than £5/6K, and you get very little or any of it back on resale.
Yes that's just the cost of the power side of things, if you wanting to go to a full spec yes your probably about right with the £5/6k for the big brakes, long roof scoop etc. etc.



heelntoe said:
A Thanks for the feed back - looks like going straight to 260 of atleast 240 is the answer. I'll bear this in mind, going for the 260 seems the most sensible option but clearly the most expensive option.

One more thing - the s2 changed engines in 2006 right. I was looking at a post 2008 model but not sure if I can go earlier say 2006/7 and what if any difference there would be?

Right the hunting begins...

Edited by heelntoe on Tuesday 25th November 23:29
If you have a bit of time on your hands there is a very long but informative history of the elise / exige

http://wiki.seloc.org/a/Elise_model_history

The elise changed engines in 2005 from a rover k series to a toyota, the S2 exiges always had toyota engines

Edited by ad260S on Wednesday 26th November 16:49

Exige77

6,518 posts

191 months

Friday 28th November 2014
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Rover engined Exige S1 stopped production in 2000.

Exige77

6,518 posts

191 months

Friday 28th November 2014
quotequote all
Rover engined Exige S1 stopped production in 2000.