PH Fleet: Lotus Elise Sport 135
Rain stops play and instead inspires musings on how much trust we place in reviews and reviewers
Yet try as I might, I just couldn't track down the article itself. It seems that this particular issue has become pretty rare over the years - copies are fetching £25 on eBay - and I drew a blank finding any kind reference to it online. So the opportunity to actually getting to read said review only arrived a few weeks ago, thanks to a friend with a copy in the loft.
Tell me I'm right
With any purchase, particularly those as significant as a car, it's human nature to seek vindication. No one wants to feels like they've bought a lemon. So it was comforting to read the praise that was heaped on this little car, so new that it only arrived from the factory on the second day of the test. Phrases such as 'immense fun' and 'a revelation' leapt from the page, but it wasn't until the final spread that I found out just how close to slaying a Goliath the Elise had come, missing out by just one point to the 996 Carrera 2.
Of course there were criticisms, but these will be familiar to any Elise owner and included a disconcerting vagueness to the front end in the wet, a stringy gear change and a roof of Rubik's cube complexity. Interestingly the article repeatedly talked about changes to the suspension on the Sport 135 over standard S1s, something I've not heard mentioned before.
As a relatively new Elise owner, I've been absorbing information like a sponge ever since I bought it. Even now, my curiosity for what's been written about it remains strong. But I can't help but wonder how the petrolhead of the future will find guidance in their quest for motoring thrills? Will there still be magazines offering extensive archives of knowledge? Will words, represented by characters rather than verbalised, still carry weight? Will journalists and writers find their opinions eclipsed by user reviews?
Rise of the armchair expert?
Personally, I think the medium might change, but I firmly believe there will always be people seeking the judgment of an expert. And by that I mean someone who has the experience to be able to contextualise any car among both its forerunners and its contemporaries, and craft an analysis of it in such a way as to entertain and inform. As much as video offers that instant gratification, I can't imagine returning to peruse old Youtube clips in the same way as I can a dusty box of back issues.
And my Elise? Well, I had hoped to be telling you about a little on-track comparison with Caterham's Supersport. And I got as far as Rockingham - the chosen venue - on a day of utterly biblical rain, only to find the circuit literally underwater and the event cancelled. If this rain ever ends, hopefully I'll get a chance to reschedule it in time for the next report.
In the mean time, feel free to mock my efforts to skid the Elise at Abbeville in the videobelow. Ridicule expected; constructive criticism welcomed.
Fact sheet
Car: 1998 Lotus Elise Sport 135
Run by: Danny Milner
Bought: October 2010
Purchase price: £9,500
This month at a glance: Aborted attempt to compare against a Caterham, sheltered indoors reading old road tests instead.
Previous Reports
Shiny new dampers and suspension, followed by a shakedown atAbbeville
A Lotus joins the PH Fleet - but will it prove lots of trouble?
I know exactly what you mean about those early days of Evo and the Elise. Great reviews. I have a big collection of old magazines (Evo from issue 1) and many more from the 60s - Motorsport mainly. It is far more interesting going back to look at contemporary reviews than looking at the new Classic Car writing. The contemporary reviews will always be rose tinted and very much reflecting the current ££s value of cars.
I read a recent side-by-side comparison review (written back when they were new) of a Reliant Scimitar and an E-type 2+2. No suprises, the Scimitar won.
I'll see if I can find some pics...
My S2 is a bit differently set-up to your S1, but I find that because it's generally so sticky, provoking it sharply makes it bite me. More progressive oversteer comes if you use the momentum a bit more - try going for a much sharper initial turn-in, which will bring the rear around in a slightly more predictable way than stabbing at the throttle violently mid-corner. But yeah, Elises aren't really set up for drifting...
You seek vindication for the car you just bought in EVO magazine, who are well known to sacrifice honesty for their own vindication of their opinion by choosing the car of the year that will vindicate their readers tastes. This is why so many people hail the MX5 and Porsche, not because they are actually any good but just to be seen as being 'right' by repeating the ever recycled vindication.
If EVO magazine/others vindications play a role in which car you buy, then you are just following Fashion?
Interesting stuff
But that said, there's not a huge amount of real info in these clips and for a proper review of anything, even in todays multimedia infused world, you still need written words and lots of them.
Nick
However, that is possibly a load of tosh - Walsh is your man at Carlimits, he has you going sideways (not always neatly) in 5 minutes......
You seek vindication for the car you just bought in EVO magazine, who are well known to sacrifice honesty for their own vindication of their opinion by choosing the car of the year that will vindicate their readers tastes. This is why so many people hail the MX5 and Porsche, not because they are actually any good but just to be seen as being 'right' by repeating the ever recycled vindication.
If EVO magazine/others vindications play a role in which car you buy, then you are just following Fashion?
You seek vindication for the car you just bought in EVO magazine, who are well known to sacrifice honesty for their own vindication of their opinion by choosing the car of the year that will vindicate their readers tastes. This is why so many people hail the MX5 and Porsche, not because they are actually any good but just to be seen as being 'right' by repeating the ever recycled vindication.
If EVO magazine/others vindications play a role in which car you buy, then you are just following Fashion?
I would never go out any buy any car based on one magazines 5 star review. In fact clio rs' dont hold much appeal to me for this reason, brilliant i am sure. But i am the kind of buyer who would prefer the to buy the oddball and more interesting/ less well known cars and to hell what an journo makes of it as long as i like the way it drives.
Not that i dont value journos opinions, just prefer to make my own mind up if seriously interested.
I appreciate it's hard though, it took me a whole year to be able to slide my exige with any finesse at all and even then they're a complete ar*e to drive fast in the wet. Have you tried one of the car limits days (link is on here- north wield) worth every penny for the tuition by the legend that is Andy Walsh. For track driving as well as road, i've never quite experienced anything quite as technicaly useful as what I learnt there.
Interesting stuff
They are all "semi-professional racing drivers" though, and they really did dab oppos on the way to the office this morning. Honest.
It was a comment on how people look for vindication in a magazine article and how magazine articles are often written with the existing opinion of their target audience in mind. If we are all seeking the vindication of approval of others then surely we are just following fashion trends.
I learnt the word Vindication prior to this topic and the word Ironic before that unfortunate song.
It was a comment on how people look for vindication in a magazine article and how magazine articles are often written with the existing opinion of their target audience in mind. If we are all seeking the vindication of approval of others then surely we are just following fashion trends.
I learnt the word Vindication prior to this topic and the word Ironic before that unfortunate song.
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