RE: Road-registered Lotus 2-Eleven for sale

RE: Road-registered Lotus 2-Eleven for sale

Sunday 18th May

Road-registered Lotus 2-Eleven for sale

All 2-Elevens are rare, and street-legal ones especially so - your Sunday mornings will never be the same again


By now, you’ve probably seen the new Lotus Emira special edition inspired by Jim Clark. A very nice thing it is, too, with green paint and a red seat, but it isn’t hard when presented with a mild Lotus limited-run sports car to wonder what a spicier one might be like. Just imagine a GT4 tribute Emira, with a racy bodykit, loud exhaust, light wheels, and bucket seats. It feels like an open goal for a Lotus sports car that drives as well as it does - doubly so with the 718 GT4 no longer in production. 

Hopefully, that’s a story for another day. For now, it’s time to remember the 2-Eleven, the most extreme Lotus limited edition of the past 20 years. Perhaps of this century. This is what happens when you take the idea of a stripped-out special edition and really, really run with it. As far back as 2005, there was a Lotus Circuit Car concept; by 2007, the 2-Eleven was a real thing at the Geneva show, and it didn’t look very much different: as little Elise architecture as could be got away with, ample supercharged power, and unashamed track focus. 

Officially, the 2-Eleven picked up, many decades later, where the original Eleven had left off, another little Lotus celebrated for huge achievements with very little weight. It also looked like something of a spiritual successor to the 340R, a proper little cage fighter of an Elise. The press reviews were predictably rave for the new £40k Lotus, and seemingly enough went right with the project as it was followed up a few years later by the V6-engined 3-Eleven. 

The cheapest way into a 2-Eleven was to buy the standard Track Pack, complete with one seat, no front lights, a fire extinguisher, and a very serious aerokit. It isn’t clear how many of the 356 examples of 2-Eleven Lotus made were dedicated circuit cars, but this one - build number 071, from 2008 - isn’t one. Those who wanted to could pay another £1,100 back then for a UK SVA kit, which homologated the 2-Eleven for road use with less aggressive aero, a catalytic converter, and just four points for the harnesses rather than six. Plus a passenger seat, for those mad enough to come with you. 

Lavish, it was not. The SVA upgrade really only fitted the very bare minimum of parts to qualify for number plates. It may have added a few kilos to the 670kg claimed for the track car, but a 2-Eleven like this is still going to be unforgettably exhilarating to drive. Perhaps even better than it once would have been, too, thanks to the fitment of three-way adjustable Ohlins dampers. 

This one has covered just 4,000 miles in 18 years, which must make it one of the lowest mileage examples out there. If ever there was a car for just one more lap or booking some time off for a mid-week track day, the 2-Eleven is it. But usage has been sparing and seemingly considerate: there aren’t the blemishes you might expect from something so unashamedly focused on hard driving. The PPF, including up where driver and passenger clamber in, has been doing its work there.    

For £45k, it’s hard to think of much else that’s going to thrill to the level of a 2-Eleven. Maybe wearing a helmet for every single drive might get tiresome, but it certainly feels like the highs of the driving experience are going to massively outweigh any pitfalls. After all, this is the ultimate evolution of the car voted by PHers as the best sports car since 1998 - it’s going to be awesome. And not likely to be worth any less in the near future, either. Because, as you may have noticed, this isn’t the kind of sports car Lotus makes right now. 


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

SpudLink

6,908 posts

205 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
I nearly bought a road legal 211 in 2014. It was £26k, and I know it sold for much more a couple of years later. I really should have bought that one.

wistec1

Original Poster:

601 posts

54 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
This has to be peak Lotus or at least one of the very high moments in its history. It follows the Chapman ethos virtually to the word. Apart from the lotus badge I'm struggling to find any comparison with the current offerings. Oh how Lotus has change and whilst some will say it had to do it's far worse off for it. Sorry to say but the Lotus we have today is a badge stuck on an EV that will never be worthy to wear it.

86wasagoodyear

696 posts

109 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
One warm sunny Saturday morning in August about 10 years ago, I was on my way up the southern side of the San Bernardino pass in Switzerland (still perhaps the best driving road I've ever found) in my then-911 3.2.
At one of the hairpins, a bright yellow 2-Eleven was on its way down, driver in sunglasses, no helmet. Neither of us had a spare hand available to wave as we passed each other, but the knowing grins we exchanged were the best ever drivingcool

CanAm

10,933 posts

285 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
I’d ditch those ‘Petty struts’; far too close to the side of your head for comfort.

There were a few copies for sale for a very short while back in the day, using Vauxhall VX220s as the base; whether they were a scam/joke advert, or Lotus stopped it, I don’t know.

pycraft

1,052 posts

197 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
wistec1 said:
This has to be peak Lotus or at least one of the very high moments in its history. It follows the Chapman ethos virtually to the word. Apart from the lotus badge I'm struggling to find any comparison with the current offerings. Oh how Lotus has change and whilst some will say it had to do it's far worse off for it. Sorry to say but the Lotus we have today is a badge stuck on an EV that will never be worthy to wear it.
It is peak Lotus, or the problem with the idea of peak Lotus - a super lightweight hardcore speed machine that VIRTUALLY NOBODY BOUGHT. A niche product for single-minded enthusiasts rather than a volume-seller that might have rescued the company. Were Porsche casting admiring glances, or laughing at the ridiculousness of it all? Probably both.

I agree that the current EV offerings aren't particularly Lotus, just like the tarted-up and rebadged Touaregs Porsche have been flogging for two decades aren't to my mind particularly Porsche. If it allows their sportscar divisions to keep going that's 100% fine with me.

Feirny

2,737 posts

160 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
You need to seek out Fonzeys build in his, it’s incredible!

Always loved these, and I’ve got some pictures of either this one or an identical one on track at Cadwell about 15 years ago.

Maccmike8

1,295 posts

67 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
Wow wow wow. Utterly stunning.

Evil.soup

3,840 posts

218 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
I recall many years ago heading out on a Pistonheads meet up and run through the brecon mountains. It was a great day and a great turn out of really interesting stuff, but one of these was the most crazy looking thing there. It was great to get out on the road next to it, very much like watching a go-kart escape a track and hit the road!

Chris_i8

2,137 posts

206 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
Fantastic cars, def peak Lotus, such a shame they didn't sell many when new.

Definitely has a spot in my hypothetical Lotto win garage!

Inspire

330 posts

192 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
SpudLink said:
I nearly bought a road legal 211 in 2014. It was £26k, and I know it sold for much more a couple of years later. I really should have bought that one.
Bell & Colvill have one for sale at the moment for 87k! My son and I were looking at it yesterday (through the window!)

jdleeso

74 posts

297 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
I bought a Zenos E10R, slight less hardcore but similar pace.


biggbn

26,762 posts

233 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
I saw a white one of these on the road yesterday.

CDP

7,765 posts

267 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
I remember one of these upside down across the Armco just after Barn at Cadwell Park. Not sure how they did it but fortunately the driver was fine because it looked potentially horrific. Those triangulations on the roll hoop almost certainly saved him from very nasty injuries or worse.

Personally I’d pick one of these over a lot of the supercar track editions for track days. Our best circuits are pretty narrow and this appears perfectly suited for the experience. The change would buy a decent 7.5 tonne transporter or one of those Brian James covered trailers with a decent tow car.

There isn’t a lottery tonight is there?

Cotty

41,115 posts

297 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
I always liked this one


Maccmike8

1,295 posts

67 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
jdleeso said:
I bought a Zenos E10R, slight less hardcore but similar pace.
Yes a better road car Id imagine. Lucky you.

Robertb

2,650 posts

251 months

Sunday 18th May
quotequote all
This or an Ariel Atom? Interesting conundrum to have…

SpudLink

6,908 posts

205 months

Monday 19th May
quotequote all
Inspire said:
SpudLink said:
I nearly bought a road legal 211 in 2014. It was £26k, and I know it sold for much more a couple of years later. I really should have bought that one.
Bell & Colvill have one for sale at the moment for 87k! My son and I were looking at it yesterday (through the window!)
Can’t see it on their website. Besides, I’ve missed the chance to “buy low, sell high”.

I’m pretty happy with my Zenos, which isn’t a Lotus, but serves a similar purposes to the 211.

sege

599 posts

235 months

Monday 19th May
quotequote all
I would love one, so so much. It would be possible too, but I'd need to sell the Exige for it and that just isn't happening.
It would require a crash helmet in NZ, otherwise you're on borrowed time, which would look a little daft and try hard going down to the shops...
Also fair weather only I guess, or at least it would be for me, I'd be scared of filling it up with water!
But potentially (I'll probably never know for sure) one of the greatest drives ever....

I have seen one on the road locally a couple of times back when they were new and obviously it looked (and sounded, strangely enough) fantastic.

I think a Caterham is probably marginally more practical, which is pretty silly.

If I could one as a third car I wouldn't hesitate. Or maybe I'd get distracted by a Caterham 420R instead who knows....

CanAm

10,933 posts

285 months

Monday 19th May
quotequote all
sege said:
I would love one, so so much. It would be possible too, but I'd need to sell the Exige for it and that just isn't happening.
It would require a crash helmet in NZ, otherwise you're on borrowed time, which would look a little daft and try hard going down to the shops...
Also fair weather only I guess, or at least it would be for me, I'd be scared of filling it up with water!
But potentially (I'll probably never know for sure) one of the greatest drives ever....

I have seen one on the road locally a couple of times back when they were new and obviously it looked (and sounded, strangely enough) fantastic.

I think a Caterham is probably marginally more practical, which is pretty silly.

If I could one as a third car I wouldn't hesitate. Or maybe I'd get distracted by a Caterham 420R instead who knows....
Well they do have what are loosely described as doors, and a boot. Though I did drive the similar Xenos and didn't find sliding in over the doorless sides a problem.

I did sometimes drive my Caterham with an aeroscreen, and without a crash helmet (but not on dual carriageways!) you get a lovely sense of freedom....and a pebble-dashed face. Ballistic goggles are a must.

alicrozier

562 posts

250 months

Monday 19th May
quotequote all
Maccmike8 said:
jdleeso said:
I bought a Zenos E10R, slight less hardcore but similar pace.
Yes a better road car Id imagine. Lucky you.
Having driven both and done over 30K miles in my 2-11 I the Zenos was a joke in comparison. Not even as good as basic Elise on track and extremely questionable reliability. Maybe if you just wanted to waft around the backroads on a sunny Sunday...but there are better options for that.

2-Eleven was an epic track car in it's time, so much more than the sum of it's parts. Possibly a little out gunned these days...
It was pretty frantic on the road, stiff and you needed to rev it but every drive had you buzzing.

3-Eleven in comparison works so much better as a road car, all the torque and a superb ride quality. On track it moved the game on with the extra mechanical grip, power and aero.