RE: Best British Car ever?

RE: Best British Car ever?

Thursday 29th October 2015

Best British Car ever?

10 contenders line up with a chance of this accolade; Caterham fan boy Matt gets to drive one close to his heart



Last year I had the privilege of racing a Caterham, as well as using the car for seven months and 8,000 miles on the road. It was a joy, quite simply. Despite the rain, the wind, the fear of being squashed, the annoying harnesses, the noise...

Inane grin tells you a lot
Inane grin tells you a lot
So when the opportunity arose for a drive in an original Lotus Seven ahead of this weekend's Classic & Sports Car show, at which it could be voted 'Best British Car ever', nothing was going to stand in the way. Not even late October.

The yellow Seven you see here is owned by Terry Tumber, huge Lotus enthusiast and keeper of this car since 2004. It is in fact the very Seven that will be on display at the Classic & Sports Car show this weekend as part of the 'best British car ever' competition. "I'd better get home and clean it," Terry says once or twice during our shoot. Of course it would be a huge surprise to see it win, but the chance to spend some time in such a special little car wasn't going to be passed up. We'll get the McLaren F1 another time...

Terry's car is an S2 Super Seven 1500, made in 1963 and one of 1,310 Sevens made between 1960 and 1968. Interestingly it's one of just six cars made with Lotus's own inlet manifold. After being purchased by a farmer in 1967 and driven for a couple of years, it was left to rot between two barns before being rescued and totally restored in the early 90s. With a higher compression ratio than standard and a few other tweaks, it now makes 75hp and only has to power 504kg.

Yes, it really is that small!
Yes, it really is that small!
This may well sound predictable, but it's impossible not to raise a smile when the little yellow Lotus scoots into view on a bleak October morning. It's vibrant, diminutive and quite cute actually. Even compared to a Caterham it looks modest, the lack of doors, miniscule wheels and dinky numberplate only heightening that impression.

Then you need to get in. Oh dear. Not having a cage makes a big difference but the pedal box seems even more cramped than a Caterham, the wheel seems too big and the seat too far forward. Terry says I might be too big for it and I'm inclined to agree; like a kid who's too big for the Noddy toy, if you were feeling cruel. However, with a bit of bum shuffling and familiarisation, it's just about workable.

Then it needs to be started. Oh dear again. Twisting a key even I can cope with but the starter button is buried under the dash, feeling like it's somewhere on the bulkhead. At this point Terry must wonder what on earth he's done, lending his £35,000 Lotus to a chump who can't even start it. But once fumbled for and found it starts quite literally on the button and settles to a busy, eager idle.

Search for the starter button begins...
Search for the starter button begins...
The delicate wooden gearknob slots almost straight up into first gear, feeling almost like third initially. The throttle responds to the slightest of inputs, seeing my lead-footed first attempt to move bringing up 3,000rpm almost immediately. But then it's away, wind rushing by and engine parping merrily.

With limited time in the car I can't tell you a great deal about the gloriously predictable and immersive dynamics these cars are famed for. What I can tell you is it feels even more visceral than a Caterham straight away; to someone raised predominantly on fuel injection, the sensation of a carb-fed engine is really exciting, the relationship between pedal and performance incredible. The angry rasp beyond 4,000rpm is a real thrill too. The steering is less hyperactive than a 21st-century Seven, calmer in its behaviour but still so instinctive and perfectly weighted.

The gearbox feels awkward initially, simply because second feels like it's coming towards you from first. Third then feels miles away to the right and almost beneath the dash. The movement never quite feels natural in our time with the car but the shift itself is mechanical, precise and lovely actually; yet another element to master in a richly rewarding car.

For fun there's still nothing to match it
For fun there's still nothing to match it
Put simply, all the ingredients that make Sevens so captivating in 2015 are easy to identify in this little ray of sunshine from 1963. I was worried it might feel a little antiquated and - dare I say it - slow, but the immediacy, rawness and excitement is most definitely here. It even brakes quite well.

The timeless charm of the Seven, back beyond even this car, has always been in its driver focus and performance. Drive it well and the car feels superb; drive it badly and there's nowhere to hide. As the world moves inexorably towards autonomous mobility and detaching the driver from what's going on, that appeal will only strengthen as we strive to remind ourselves what real driving thrills are. Nearly 60 years later, there's still nothing quite like a Seven for doing that.


As mentioned, this very car will be on display at the Classic & Sports Car show this weekend. It will be exhibited alongside nine other British icons in a display that promises to be a real highlight. Tickets are available here. And if you're on the list for our oversubscribed Sunday Service at the show, we look forward to seeing you there!









Pics: Ben Lowden

 

Author
Discussion

Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,031 posts

265 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
You can't beat'em.

Ozzie Osmond

21,189 posts

246 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
I am not a number, I am a free man.


W00DY

15,492 posts

226 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
What a little beauty.

50 years on and the recipe is still the perfect way to motoring enjoyment.

RobM77

35,349 posts

234 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
You can't beat'em.
yes Ever since I was a kid, Caterhams have been winning every group test going for fun sports cars or track day cars. Even though they no longer dominate on lap times (as the HPC, SLR, R500 etc once did), they're still the most fun to drive, and I suspect that'll be the case for decades to come. Long may it continue! smile

SEE YA

3,522 posts

245 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
Mini the test of time still people love them.

soad

32,895 posts

176 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
SEE YA said:
Mini the test of time still people love them.
Doesn't apply to the modern ones...

SEE YA

3,522 posts

245 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
soad said:
SEE YA said:
Mini the test of time still people love them.
Doesn't apply to the modern ones...
Why not over the years, shape has not changed that much or the idea?

Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,031 posts

265 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
You must be joking. The modern Mini is purely a style exercise. I'm not saying it's a bad car (it's not), but it doesn't really try to emulate the actual clever design philosophy of the original.

SEE YA

3,522 posts

245 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
You must be joking. The modern Mini is purely a style exercise. I'm not saying it's a bad car (it's not), but it doesn't really try to emulate the actual clever design philosophy of the original.
Its the style from the start, of the mini over the years its the look.

Not many designs are still around now?

Even if there has been a few changes over the years.



Edited by SEE YA on Thursday 29th October 17:55

sideways man

1,316 posts

137 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
Much as I'd love to own a genuine lotus seven,give me a mclaren f1 and I could die happy lick

Gandahar

9,600 posts

128 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
Better than original Lotus Elan?

Buff Mchugelarge

3,316 posts

150 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
What a happy little car! biggrin

soad

32,895 posts

176 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
sideways man said:
Much as I'd love to own a genuine lotus seven,give me a mclaren f1 and I could die happy lick
Servicing (and parts) cost is scary, at least on the racing version.

Toaster

2,939 posts

193 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
W00DY said:
What a little beauty. 50 years on and the recipe is still the perfect way to motoring enjoyment.
Thats 58 years on, can't quite believe its almost 60 years in 2017 !

lee_erm

1,091 posts

193 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
Nissan Note has to be the British car.

Edmundo2

1,345 posts

210 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
McLaren F1.

Edmundo2

1,345 posts

210 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
McLaren F1.

castex

4,936 posts

273 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
McLaren F1.

Orangecurry

7,426 posts

206 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
So is this a question, or a Lotus-only thing?

Best British car for me has to be one attainable by the common man. Sure there are Jensens and Lotii and Keebles and a hundred other low-volume marques, but...

Mini - brilliant execution of a brilliant concept

MGB - not a great car, but a realistic owning proposition convertible that can be tinkered with - it actually predates the MX-5! Really!

Escort mk1 1600 or Mexico - take ordinary car and make it faster than it needs to be.

Boosted LS1

21,187 posts

260 months

Thursday 29th October 2015
quotequote all
SEE YA said:
Why not over the years, shape has not changed that much or the idea?
Either you're blind or mega blind. The new mini is utter shyte, a great big pile of the stuff. I keep looking at the great big fat lardy things and thinking how much more could 'they' have got it wrong. They're so darned ugly I've come to appreciate how well fiat have done with the 500 reincarnation.