RE: Truly great British track cars | Six of the Best
RE: Truly great British track cars | Six of the Best
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Truly great British track cars | Six of the Best

Worried about the UK's place in the world? Here are six reasons to feel warm and fuzzy about Blighty...


Lotus 2-Eleven, 2008, 25k, £44,500

The British car industry ebbs and flows much like the nation around it. Sometimes it surges with imagination and enthusiasm and expertise; other times it eddies into self-doubt and stagnancy. Mass producing and marketing a mid-tier hatchback is apparently beyond us. But two things we do better than anyone: very high-end luxury and very lightweight track cars. Lotus, bless it, is the only firm that’s attempted to go from one to the other - but that strategic fudge aside, let’s salute the period it turned out wonderful cars like they were no more difficult to do than 2H pencils. Virtually all of them worked on track by default - but the 2-Eleven was it actually focusing on the job exclusively. And boy did it show. Its successor seriously upped the power (and price) yet the supercharged original already supplied fun and speed and rawness in prodigious quantity. This one is road-legal, too. Bingo. 

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Ariel Atom 4, 2020, 5k, £64,995

While it would be wrong to regard Lotus as some sort of cautionary tale, it is hard not to think of Hethel’s travails whenever the subject of Ariel’s growth rate comes up. ‘We don’t want to get too big’ is the refrain often heard in Crewkerne. But its reluctance to take on too many staff or customer orders has never equated to a lack of ambition or innovation: Ariel has both coming out of its ears. Consider the evolution of the Atom, which, in its current format, is arguably, pound-for-pound, the quickest and most exciting car in the world. Granted, that does not make the 4 cheap to buy, but with 350hp from its uprated Honda Civic Type R engine, you’ll put cars three times as expensive to shame on a circuit. Or the road, too, for that matter. This one, from 2020 and with less than 5k on the clock, has it all going on. 

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Caterham Seven F225, 2016, 9k, £36,995

Between the Lotus’s China crisis heft and Ariel’s self-imposed agility there sits Caterham, as ageless and showily spry as Dorian Gray. But it too has not sat still: the Seven itself might be as old as time, but its maker has moved to a shiny new factory and - thanks to its Japanese owners - there is a new electric car in the offing. Still, for the British public at large, Caterham means only one thing, and that’s not a bad way to corner a market. People have been building and racing and loving the Seven for half a century, and show no sign of stopping. You could buy virtually any of the 147 currently for sale on PH and you’d be onto a winner, but we’ve gone with a rarity - a modified F225 from Premium Power. As the same suggests, this buys you more output from the 2.0-litre Duratec, and given the lack of screen, we’ll assume it’s no stranger to the track. ‘Visceral’ says the vendor. No kidding.

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Noble M12 GTO, 2002, 45k, £35,995

Can it really be almost a quarter of a century since the Noble M12 arrived? Incredible. While not Lee Noble’s first sports car (that honour falling to the M10 of the late '90s), it was the one that best typified everything he was trying to achieve. The M10 drove nicely but looked weird; the M12 was even better from behind the wheel, and looked like a proper shrunken supercar. Everyone was captivated by its presence, turbo V6 performance and sublime handling - the M12 really was the mid-engined British lightweight at its very best. Through the early and mid-'00s it got better and better, the 2.5-litre V6 swapped for a 3.0-litre and the M12 evolving into the epic M400. This early 2.5 actually has seats from the ‘400, which is cool, plus it’s going to be sold with a fresh service and full tank of fuel. From a dealer right next to Brands Hatch, no less…

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BAC Mono, 2020, 3k, £139,950

In 2026 it’ll be 15 years since the world first saw the BAC Mono, and there really hasn’t been anything like it since. Its combination of unashamed driver focus with exquisite detailing and finish was - and remains - unique. Cars designed so explicitly for track use don’t tend to be so beautifully put together; those with such lavish options lists aren’t usually 550hp-per-tonne single-seaters. Yet the Mountune-engined Mono has beguiled everyone who’s driven it over the past decade and a half, over which time the BAC has become faster and more focused still. While the company has gone from strength to strength, expanding into America and recruiting former McLaren man Mike Flewitt to Chairman, This Mono, by BAC standards, is almost touring spec, with its wide body, electronic handbrake and improved sequential software. But it also boasts an Inconel exhaust, a spare set of slicks and carbon wheels, in case the intentions were ever in doubt. ‘Intense’ probably won’t even come close to describing it.  

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GBS Zero, 2024, 4k, £24,900

Oh, to have £140,000 to spend on a car like the Mono just for track. Not really viable for a lot of us. Whereas £25k, which this nearly new Great British Sportscars Zero costs, feels considerably more attainable. Especially as depreciation won’t really be comparable to a conventional new car. This 2024, 4,000-miler sounds a lot like the Zero we drove earlier in the summer, with the 2.5 Duratec meaning some useful extra torque over the engines usually found in cars like this. It also benefits from a cage, semi-slick Nankangs plus a pretty serious seat and harness combo. The carbon goodies such as the front arches contrast nicely with the yellow, too.  If our recent experience is anything to go by, a well-sorted Zero is going to be a riot: fast, agile, nicely balanced and exhilaratingly raw. As well as being more affordable than the other Great British sports car it closely resembles…

See the original advert

Author
Discussion

cerb4.5lee

Original Poster:

40,104 posts

200 months

That is a great list, and I especially like the Noble.

AddyT.

332 posts

113 months

+1

fflump

2,757 posts

58 months

Cracking list. I’ll take the Atom over the Mono just to enjoy scaring the wife on the way to the garden centre.

chirurgus

404 posts

236 months

The manufacturers conspicuously absent from this list are Radical and Ultima, but overall it’s a great collection, can I have one of each?!
I would chose the average Westfield over the average Caterham because they offer far more bang for the buck, but a Caterham 620R would have a place in my garage if I had the space.

cerb4.5lee said:
That is a great list, and I especially like the Noble.
I’ve always liked Nobles but these days I’d probably spend a bit more to buy an Exige 380 or 430 Cup. Recently, I’ve been keeping half an eye on the prices of secondhand Porsche GT3 Cup cars as a less expensive way into a GT3 for track use than buying a road-registrable GT3.

Corkys

291 posts

221 months

Love them all.

I have an Atom 4 and it is insane, every drive is an event.

The one for sale needs the wings though.

stavr0ss

260 posts

148 months

We (lightweight, stripped back car enthusiasts) have it so good in this country - there are so many options based here that we’re spoiled for choice. Mk sports cars were at the festival of speed with a ground up seven clone- onboard pushrod suspension at the front (which caterham only ever used on the CSR) and a box fresh duratec up front which looked really compelling.

Then there’s numerous race car chassis builders like oms and the like if you want to compete…


macky17

2,236 posts

209 months

I own a Noble M400. Marvelous thing and road useable to a greater extent than some of these which might be less comfortable to drive to the track and which probably spend the winter SORNed and under a cover in the garage. Provided there's no standing water or salt on the roads it's an all year road useable car. I plan to get it out today in fact...


hammo19

6,803 posts

216 months

First time I have agreed with every car on a PH list. These are all super track day weapons. The Noble looks great in blue.

edoverheels

528 posts

125 months

Nice list for a Saturday morning. They would all be great but If money were no object it would be hard to look past the Mono, very different to anything else but a bit selfish of course. I would love to have a go in an Atom and they are always properly quick at track days. But if I was going to get another track day car I would get a GD T70, has the looks and a V8, still under a ton and very few about.

cerb4.5lee

Original Poster:

40,104 posts

200 months

macky17 said:
I own a Noble M400. Marvelous thing and road useable to a greater extent than some of these which might be less comfortable to drive to the track and which probably spend the winter SORNed and under a cover in the garage. Provided there's no standing water or salt on the roads it's an all year road useable car. I plan to get it out today in fact...

That is a stunner, and I love the colour too. smokin

thumbup

sideways man

1,603 posts

157 months

A fantastic list. I have a Caterham and love it, but would give my right testicle for a good Ultima.

sam.rog

1,282 posts

98 months

Noble for me.
Love the looks. Also looks to be the only one you could contemplate driving year round.

REperformance video on YT is a bit eye opening though. Plenty of TVResc issues with rotten tubular frames.

Baregrills

2 posts

edoverheels said:
Nice list for a Saturday morning. They would all be great but If money were no object it would be hard to look past the Mono, very different to anything else but a bit selfish of course. I would love to have a go in an Atom and they are always properly quick at track days. But if I was going to get another track day car I would get a GD T70, has the looks and a V8, still under a ton and very few about.
I just bought a Mono, (I’ve had one before), for under £150k there’s not much that can compare, it’s practically an F3 car with number plates.

Second for me would be the Noble though, especially in that colour.

nismo48

5,920 posts

227 months

Good choice of cars there, the Noble for me smile

200Plus Club

12,550 posts

298 months

chirurgus said:
The manufacturers conspicuously absent from this list are Radical and Ultima, but overall it s a great collection, can I have one of each?!
I would chose the average Westfield over the average Caterham because they offer far more bang for the buck, but a Caterham 620R would have a place in my garage if I had the space.

cerb4.5lee said:
That is a great list, and I especially like the Noble.
I ve always liked Nobles but these days I d probably spend a bit more to buy an Exige 380 or 430 Cup. Recently, I ve been keeping half an eye on the prices of secondhand Porsche GT3 Cup cars as a less expensive way into a GT3 for track use than buying a road-registrable GT3.
You rarely if ever see an Ultima on a trackday, for whatever reason, they tend to be static at shows in my experience. Radicals on the other hand tend to only exist at trackdays and are generally seen romping away into the distance from pretty much anything. I had a GDT70 which is an absolute weapon on trackdays, but a quite rare car in the scheme of things.

If anyone wants a fun track /Road toy there's a lot of westy/caterham/lotus 7 copies about at £10-20k for a huge amount of cheaper fun.

chrisbailey

3 posts

87 months

A very impressive list and some interesting comments. I love the idea that someone would buy a second hand GT3 Cup car for track day use. That would make some of these things look almost affordable. Now without being accused of being a killjoy, my track day experiences over the year suggest the people having the most fun are driving modified hot hatches, MX5's and low-budget Lotus 7 style things. I have two cars that I use at track days for a bit of fun with my mates. One is a Citroen C1 Endurance Cup car. It's a race car (?) but could be driven to/from the circuit. It has only 68bhp, so you drive it flat out for @ 90% of the lap. It's on skinny little tyres that cost next to nothing, so every corner is an adventure. It also only cost @ £4000. I nearly drove into the back of a McLaren at Snetterton once, because the McLaren driver braked at the 200 yard marker, just having overtaken me. My plan was to brake (slightly) well after the 100 marker, so it caught me somewhat by surprise. He then held me up all the way round to the start-finish straight before hoofing it. My other car, which only comes to track days as a shakedown exercise, is a Sports 2000 Duratec Van Diemen. It goes around the Snetterton 300 circuit in under two minutes. It is my race car, but is entirely happy at a track day and will run all day long without cooking its brakes. It is rarely overtaken, even by the exotic stuff. The point I'm trying to make here is that you don't need to spend big money on a track day car. Most of us could never afford the majority of the cars you feature here, lottery win notwithstanding. I'd like to see you feature stuff that is actually a realistic prospect for the majority of your readers. I would also suggest you speak to Clive Hayes at MCR Racing Cars. His Sports 2000 cars dominate the category and are much cheaper than a Radical. Put an MCR up against anything on your list and they wouldn't keep up. Go no, I dare you! Happy Christmas everyone. wink

Its Just Adz

17,160 posts

229 months

Beat list in ages, well done PH.

Not a car there I'd say no to.

I've had a drive in an Atom 3 with the 300bhp supercharger engine, it absolutely was nuts.
Only ever driven a basic 120bhp Caterham and that was a lot of fun too!

The rest I've never been near, but greatly admire.
Having said that, I've never heard of that Lotus before today. Looks interesting though.

mooseracer

2,520 posts

190 months

Love them all, right up my street.

I think the Ariel would pip it for me, but the Lotus is a close second.

Cryssys

748 posts

58 months

Didn't realise that Nobles were that cheap. At £36K that looks very tempting.

I'm off to investigate running costs and reliability and then do some man maths

Black S2K

1,776 posts

269 months

cerb4.5lee said:
That is a great list, and I especially like the Noble.
Indeed - and I got a Proustian rush of the smell of glue and petrol as soon as I clicked on the interior pics. Dunno why I think it's the one I had a look at...

All of them would wake one up on a damp December morning.