How long till the £20k Evora?
Discussion
Gravel said:
Just as an annecodatal - I was offered a new 'old 350BHP' car at an unspecified discount while looking for a used one, and I can see both a manual and an IPS Evora S Sports Racer for £64K new via a quick web-search. So, I don't think that Lotus or their dealers believe that the public would rather have a current shape over a 400...
And if the new one is 72K and available on the 50:50 deal, it'd be an even easier choice between a 350BHP car at £32k * 2 or a 400BHP one at £36K * 2...
Surely that's gotta put pressure on the prices of 3/4/5 year old Evoras?
You're not comparing like with like. From what i understand, the new car starts at £72k.And if the new one is 72K and available on the 50:50 deal, it'd be an even easier choice between a 350BHP car at £32k * 2 or a 400BHP one at £36K * 2...
Surely that's gotta put pressure on the prices of 3/4/5 year old Evoras?
If you look here;
http://www.lotuscars.com/lotus-evora-400
You'll see the black pack is optional (black sills, roof etc), you can have optional leather etc etc etc. The 400 will be more expensive than the 350 and people will pay the extra.
So yes you can get a discount of a pre-built SR, but that's always been the way of the world - you get a discount of a car sitting ready to go over one you spec yourself.
End of the day if there was a car at the spec and price you wanted you'd have bought it.....but as you've said yourself you don't want a basic S now you've seen an SR and as such i'm guessing you'd pay a premium for that! You probably aren't alone in that, hence prices of SRs staying high
Edited by Lazydonkey on Tuesday 3rd March 17:33
Edited by Lazydonkey on Tuesday 3rd March 17:34
Lazydonkey said:
You're not comparing like with like. From what i understand, the new car starts at £72k.
If you look here;
http://www.lotuscars.com/lotus-evora-400
You'll see the black pack is optional (black sills, roof etc), you can have optional leather etc etc etc. The 400 will be more expensive than the 350 and people will pay the extra.
So yes you can get a discount of a pre-built SR, but that's always been the way of the world - you get a discount of a car sitting ready to go over one you spec yourself.
I would imagine that the new price rather depends on how much demand there is, and how keen your dealer is to shift units and make their quarterly sales targets...If you look here;
http://www.lotuscars.com/lotus-evora-400
You'll see the black pack is optional (black sills, roof etc), you can have optional leather etc etc etc. The 400 will be more expensive than the 350 and people will pay the extra.
So yes you can get a discount of a pre-built SR, but that's always been the way of the world - you get a discount of a car sitting ready to go over one you spec yourself.
[quote]
End of the day if there was a car at the spec and price you wanted you'd have bought it.....but as you've said yourself you don't want a basic S now you've seen an SR and as such i'm guessing you'd pay a premium for that! You probably aren't alone in that, hence prices of SRs staying high
Edited by Lazydonkey on Tuesday 3rd March 17:33
Edited by Lazydonkey on Tuesday 3rd March 17:34
This mid-life crisis lark is far more complicated than I'd anticipated!
alex_gray255 said:
Then why not buy something, decide what you want to change and then slowly start to mod to that spec?
You can do the bits you can afford to when you can.
Because I already have one highly modified car that has cost me an arm and a leg, and still isn't 'done' yet, and despite having a lot less power (for now), costs more to insure than an Evora S would! Once bitten, twice shy... You can do the bits you can afford to when you can.
That said, I'd love a huge GTE wing, and at least 1 bar of boost on an S
Maybe I'm just lucky Gravel but my mid-life crisis is going swimmingly well and I don't even need any drugs from the doctor.
My hot flushes will be perfectly well controlled by opening the window on the beautiful ardent red n/a Evora I just managed to buy. A 2010 car, with 15k miles in superb condition - so enough miles the niggles will have been ironed out.
Sport pack, decat, lotus titanium tipped sports exhaust, close ratio box and not a premium or tech pack in sight - just 100% pure driving pleasure for a very respectable price too.
The advantage of the n/a for me are really around practicality of ownership (oh, did I say it was a 2+0 too) compared to the S - 50% car tax, 50% rear tyre cost and at 25% longer wear, lower insurance cost etc - and yet on real roads only a very small loss in usable performance over the S.
I think the n/a Evora will turn out to be a "practical classic" and as such I expect the residuals to remain strong as the engine / gearbox are hardly stressed in the Evora and the general running costs are just so much cheaper with about a 25% improvement in fuel usage too - something a lot of people would look at and a lot of people (myself included by the way) would not.
I expect the price premium for the S to reduce to be honest, not to be eradicated, but reduced to take account of the higher running costs.
As for the SR and tech/premium packs, well, the Tech Pack brings some useful goodies but almost universal disdain for the ICE units hardly makes them a must have. I'm putting a new ICE in my car, had the cruise fitted for £275 by Lotus and bought the Mondeo mirror switch for £10 to get the folding mirrors - almost a tech pack there then as already have the rear parking sensors fitted and the new ICE will take a rear parking camera if desired (I'd prefer to use the camera though to see the front of the boxster/cayman behind me as I drive off .
The premium pack / SR interior looks good, but then a really good re-trim shop could achieve just as good a look (and some owners on here have an aftermarket SR like re-trim already done that looks great). I've got my scheme all drawn up and just waiting for a couple of quotes for that and then a really nice leather and alcantara interior through out.
So to get back on topic - I think the £20k Evora is a few years away yet, largely because so few used Evoras will come to market a s their current owners genuinely love owning and driving them.
My hot flushes will be perfectly well controlled by opening the window on the beautiful ardent red n/a Evora I just managed to buy. A 2010 car, with 15k miles in superb condition - so enough miles the niggles will have been ironed out.
Sport pack, decat, lotus titanium tipped sports exhaust, close ratio box and not a premium or tech pack in sight - just 100% pure driving pleasure for a very respectable price too.
The advantage of the n/a for me are really around practicality of ownership (oh, did I say it was a 2+0 too) compared to the S - 50% car tax, 50% rear tyre cost and at 25% longer wear, lower insurance cost etc - and yet on real roads only a very small loss in usable performance over the S.
I think the n/a Evora will turn out to be a "practical classic" and as such I expect the residuals to remain strong as the engine / gearbox are hardly stressed in the Evora and the general running costs are just so much cheaper with about a 25% improvement in fuel usage too - something a lot of people would look at and a lot of people (myself included by the way) would not.
I expect the price premium for the S to reduce to be honest, not to be eradicated, but reduced to take account of the higher running costs.
As for the SR and tech/premium packs, well, the Tech Pack brings some useful goodies but almost universal disdain for the ICE units hardly makes them a must have. I'm putting a new ICE in my car, had the cruise fitted for £275 by Lotus and bought the Mondeo mirror switch for £10 to get the folding mirrors - almost a tech pack there then as already have the rear parking sensors fitted and the new ICE will take a rear parking camera if desired (I'd prefer to use the camera though to see the front of the boxster/cayman behind me as I drive off .
The premium pack / SR interior looks good, but then a really good re-trim shop could achieve just as good a look (and some owners on here have an aftermarket SR like re-trim already done that looks great). I've got my scheme all drawn up and just waiting for a couple of quotes for that and then a really nice leather and alcantara interior through out.
So to get back on topic - I think the £20k Evora is a few years away yet, largely because so few used Evoras will come to market a s their current owners genuinely love owning and driving them.
wannaDB9 said:
Maybe I'm just lucky Gravel but my mid-life crisis is going swimmingly well and I don't even need any drugs from the doctor.
My hot flushes will be perfectly well controlled by opening the window on the beautiful ardent red n/a Evora I just managed to buy. A 2010 car, with 15k miles in superb condition - so enough miles the niggles will have been ironed out.
Sport pack, decat, lotus titanium tipped sports exhaust, close ratio box and not a premium or tech pack in sight - just 100% pure driving pleasure for a very respectable price too.
The advantage of the n/a for me are really around practicality of ownership (oh, did I say it was a 2+0 too) compared to the S - 50% car tax, 50% rear tyre cost and at 25% longer wear, lower insurance cost etc - and yet on real roads only a very small loss in usable performance over the S.
I think the n/a Evora will turn out to be a "practical classic" and as such I expect the residuals to remain strong as the engine / gearbox are hardly stressed in the Evora and the general running costs are just so much cheaper with about a 25% improvement in fuel usage too - something a lot of people would look at and a lot of people (myself included by the way) would not.
I expect the price premium for the S to reduce to be honest, not to be eradicated, but reduced to take account of the higher running costs.
As for the SR and tech/premium packs, well, the Tech Pack brings some useful goodies but almost universal disdain for the ICE units hardly makes them a must have. I'm putting a new ICE in my car, had the cruise fitted for £275 by Lotus and bought the Mondeo mirror switch for £10 to get the folding mirrors - almost a tech pack there then as already have the rear parking sensors fitted and the new ICE will take a rear parking camera if desired (I'd prefer to use the camera though to see the front of the boxster/cayman behind me as I drive off .
The premium pack / SR interior looks good, but then a really good re-trim shop could achieve just as good a look (and some owners on here have an aftermarket SR like re-trim already done that looks great). I've got my scheme all drawn up and just waiting for a couple of quotes for that and then a really nice leather and alcantara interior through out.
Many congratulations - sounds like a cracking car!My hot flushes will be perfectly well controlled by opening the window on the beautiful ardent red n/a Evora I just managed to buy. A 2010 car, with 15k miles in superb condition - so enough miles the niggles will have been ironed out.
Sport pack, decat, lotus titanium tipped sports exhaust, close ratio box and not a premium or tech pack in sight - just 100% pure driving pleasure for a very respectable price too.
The advantage of the n/a for me are really around practicality of ownership (oh, did I say it was a 2+0 too) compared to the S - 50% car tax, 50% rear tyre cost and at 25% longer wear, lower insurance cost etc - and yet on real roads only a very small loss in usable performance over the S.
I think the n/a Evora will turn out to be a "practical classic" and as such I expect the residuals to remain strong as the engine / gearbox are hardly stressed in the Evora and the general running costs are just so much cheaper with about a 25% improvement in fuel usage too - something a lot of people would look at and a lot of people (myself included by the way) would not.
I expect the price premium for the S to reduce to be honest, not to be eradicated, but reduced to take account of the higher running costs.
As for the SR and tech/premium packs, well, the Tech Pack brings some useful goodies but almost universal disdain for the ICE units hardly makes them a must have. I'm putting a new ICE in my car, had the cruise fitted for £275 by Lotus and bought the Mondeo mirror switch for £10 to get the folding mirrors - almost a tech pack there then as already have the rear parking sensors fitted and the new ICE will take a rear parking camera if desired (I'd prefer to use the camera though to see the front of the boxster/cayman behind me as I drive off .
The premium pack / SR interior looks good, but then a really good re-trim shop could achieve just as good a look (and some owners on here have an aftermarket SR like re-trim already done that looks great). I've got my scheme all drawn up and just waiting for a couple of quotes for that and then a really nice leather and alcantara interior through out.
[quote]
So to get back on topic - I think the £20k Evora is a few years away yet, largely because so few used Evoras will come to market a s their current owners genuinely love owning and driving them.
Just checked on Autotrader today and some 39 Evora's for sale but only one under £30k at £29,950 - this one and it looks like a cracker:
http://www.autotrader.co.uk/classified/advert/2015...
I guess the price could be "time of year" sensitive too, a bit like convertibles. Obviously with spring well under way and summer coming the prices may hold up better.
I still believe that these cars are "future classics" and due to the low numbers out there, and just how good they are, the £20k Evora is still some way off and may well be driven more by a very high mileage for the year. Obviously as an Evora owner I am biased, but at the end of the day, Toyota mechanicals should prove very reliable and so the car's reputation as an "affordable" mini-supercar should help the prices hold firm. If you look at Porsche Slopsters and Caymens thn of course their prices are lower, but that is due to the number of hair dressers who have bought them and traded them in so a plentiful supply !!!!
http://www.autotrader.co.uk/classified/advert/2015...
I guess the price could be "time of year" sensitive too, a bit like convertibles. Obviously with spring well under way and summer coming the prices may hold up better.
I still believe that these cars are "future classics" and due to the low numbers out there, and just how good they are, the £20k Evora is still some way off and may well be driven more by a very high mileage for the year. Obviously as an Evora owner I am biased, but at the end of the day, Toyota mechanicals should prove very reliable and so the car's reputation as an "affordable" mini-supercar should help the prices hold firm. If you look at Porsche Slopsters and Caymens thn of course their prices are lower, but that is due to the number of hair dressers who have bought them and traded them in so a plentiful supply !!!!
wannaDB9 said:
......had the cruise fitted for £275 by Lotus and bought the Mondeo mirror switch for £10 to get the folding mirrors
Hi Wanna (or anybodyelse) - has the retro fitting cruise been seamless? With so many average speed cameras around, it's an option I would like. Do you know the Mondeo mirror switch part number? Thanks for any help.Edited to add - I should have googled, the Ford mirror switch part number is Finis 1782894 or old part number is 1S7T-17B676-AA.
Edited by TVRinBFG on Tuesday 12th May 12:23
TVRinBFG said:
Hi Wanna (or anybodyelse) - has the retro fitting cruise been seamless? With so many average speed cameras around, it's an option I would like. Do you know the Mondeo mirror switch part number? Thanks for any help.Edited to add - I should have googled, the Ford mirror switch part number is Finis 1782894 or old part number is 1S7T-17B676-AA.
Cruise control is a nice retrofit http://www.lotustalk.com/forums/f417/adding-cruise... along with the folding mirror switchEdited by TVRinBFG on Tuesday 12th May 12:23
c8rks said:
Just checked on Autotrader today and some 39 Evora's for sale but only one under £30k at £29,950 - this one and it looks like a cracker:
http://www.autotrader.co.uk/classified/advert/2015...
I guess the price could be "time of year" sensitive too, a bit like convertibles. Obviously with spring well under way and summer coming the prices may hold up better.
I still believe that these cars are "future classics" and due to the low numbers out there, and just how good they are, the £20k Evora is still some way off and may well be driven more by a very high mileage for the year. Obviously as an Evora owner I am biased, but at the end of the day, Toyota mechanicals should prove very reliable and so the car's reputation as an "affordable" mini-supercar should help the prices hold firm. If you look at Porsche Slopsters and Caymens thn of course their prices are lower, but that is due to the number of hair dressers who have bought them and traded them in so a plentiful supply !!!!
2 or 3 weeks ago there were 8 between 29k and 31k. I agree they have all that is required to become classics and the shape for me is timeless. http://www.autotrader.co.uk/classified/advert/2015...
I guess the price could be "time of year" sensitive too, a bit like convertibles. Obviously with spring well under way and summer coming the prices may hold up better.
I still believe that these cars are "future classics" and due to the low numbers out there, and just how good they are, the £20k Evora is still some way off and may well be driven more by a very high mileage for the year. Obviously as an Evora owner I am biased, but at the end of the day, Toyota mechanicals should prove very reliable and so the car's reputation as an "affordable" mini-supercar should help the prices hold firm. If you look at Porsche Slopsters and Caymens thn of course their prices are lower, but that is due to the number of hair dressers who have bought them and traded them in so a plentiful supply !!!!
Lazydonkey said:
You're not comparing like with like. From what i understand, the new car starts at £72k.
If you look here;
http://www.lotuscars.com/lotus-evora-400
What an ugly looking interior. Think I'll remain with my existing Evora. Doesn't look quite so chavIf you look here;
http://www.lotuscars.com/lotus-evora-400
Edited by Lazydonkey on Tuesday 3rd March 17:34
Lazydonkey said:
They aren't necessarily cheaper but they appear a slightly harder sell for the dealers so maybe more of a deal available.
isn't that the same thing I guess a 2+2 offers more flexibility than a 2+0, its why I went for a 2+2. I would have bought a 911 if the Evora was not available as a 2+2, I guess that makes the price of a 2+0 irrelevant in my case
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