RE: 2020 Lotus Evora GT410 | PH Review

RE: 2020 Lotus Evora GT410 | PH Review

Sunday 12th July 2020

2020 Lotus Evora GT410 | PH Review

The Evora designed for the United States... is an absolute dream in Britain, too



When the Lotus electric era arrives, the story up to that point will be a long and fascinating one. And while swathes of its history will be focused on Elises, Elans and Exiges, spare a thought for the Evora as well - it's going to need a chunky chapter all to itself.

It's been more than a decade now, after all. There was the British motor show debut in 2008, a 280hp original in 2+2 or 2+0 spec in 2009, the supercharged S, the introduction of the IPS automatic, the Sport Racer cars, the move to a 400hp V6, the Sport models, the Cup models, the GTE project... and now this, the Lotus Evora GT410. Not to be confused with the GT410 Sport, the only other new Evora currently available. Which we did, and requested at the Lotus drive event. Which meant lots of waiting for the new car. Insert eye-rolling emoji here. Still, nothing like a direct comparison for a thorough evaluation...

As a reminder, the GT410 is essentially the Evora GT that's sold in the USA. Slightly softer in approach and set up, it was tried by CEO Phil Popham over here - and enjoyed very much. So, as tends to happen when the man in charge likes it, it was decided to sell the car in the UK as a more accommodating alternative to the Sport. It'll costs buyers £82,900, or £3,000 less than the Sport, and is on sale now - there's one just like the test car available at Lotus Silverstone, in fact.


Now, in case the name and the look and the remit didn't make it clear, this GT410 is very much a mild update to the Evora range and not a more transformative overhaul. That should come in time, though for now much is as it was when Barack Obama was embarking on the first year of his presidency. And it would be remiss of us not to mention the downsides, because an Evora is not a cheap sports car. Quite frankly, a 992 interior makes this Lotus look like it was launched in 1988 and not 2008; the Alpine head unit wouldn't look great in a 17-year-old's Corsa; and even with US-spec accoutrements, it feels pretty spartan.

But, good grief, the positives still provide a formidable counterpoint to the dated bits, perhaps more so than ever in this new GT410 specification. By combining the road focus that characterised the early Evoras with the power and performance which has been delivered in recent years, Lotus might have stumbled upon a classic. Because it's superb.

It's easy to forget nowadays, but back in the late 2000s the naturally aspirated Evora was competing with the 987 Porsche Cayman as an equal. As such, today it feels small, nimble and compact on the road in a way that very few sports cars do. The width is manageable, the car is easily placed (assisted by the view of both front wings) and there's space to exploit on a road that some contemporary rivals have to do without. There's no thumping over cats eyes on one side and brushing hedgerows the other here...


Moreover, we've probably become a little blasé about the Evora's ability, because it has endured for so long. But lasting brilliance is a telling commodity - and the car has it in spades. The GT410 Sport - introduced in 2018 to combine some of the GT430's intent with the usability of a regular Sport 410 - is everything most modern sports cars aren't: vivid, engaging, exciting and joyous fun. At realistic speeds, too, because the rotten weather wouldn't permit much more; feel and feedback exist in abundance to detail exactly how the car is behaving (complemented by great traction), with expertly judged assists should you take any liberties. The steering is so richly detailed that it makes the best EPAS feel like driving with two pairs of marigolds on. And the howl of that V6 really knows no equal - it's an absorbing experience.

But here's the rub: the 'standard' GT410 might be more enjoyable again. Conditions favoured it, of course; on a dry track with its Cup 2 Michelins, the Sport would probably prove the more exhilarating drive. But with the heavens opened a lot wider than any throttle was on the Fosse Way, having a slightly softer remit and more accommodating Pilot Sport 4S tyres worked a treat. Traction was further improved, the balance nudged a little further in favour of understeer and responses perhaps a tad less immediate; the GT410 feels like a Lotus for the road, the first in a long time in fact - and none the worse for it.

The ride, notably, must be experienced to be believed. In a world obsessed with suspending cars adaptively, on air chambers or with diagonally linked dampers, it's heartening to know that such a sweetly struck compromise can be reached with conventional hardware. Because while the GT410 is noticeably more supple than the Sport, less easily deflected or disturbed, it appears to lose precious little in terms of outright control. Again, the differences would surely become more stark on track - but then again it would be bizarre to buy an Evora as a regular track Lotus when the Exige is also available. For something to enjoy Britain's roads with, one that ebbs and flows with every surface, as well as take on the odd track day, the GT410 is hard to find fault with.


Little things help, too. There's an armrest that doesn't feature in the Sport, which makes the world of difference (no, really) when not at maximum attack. The seats are less punishing, too, making the prospect of serious miles something to relish. In case the drive hadn't done enough convincing already.

A note should go to the powertrain in this missive, too. Because while the supercharged Toyota V6 is now far from the last word in efficiency or modernity (was it ever?) it remains an enthralling accompaniment to the dynamic masterclass. While there's some inertia to the way it accrues and loses revs that's probably now surpassed by the best downsized turbos, the response of a supercharged engine remains unmatched, and feeling the power build and build to 7,000rpm is a real treat against so many engines that dump their best effort in your lap at 2,000rpm. That noise as the valves open at 4,500rpm is addictive, too: guttural, authentic, raw and thrilling. If only the ratios were a tad shorter to make the most of it - get the V6 howling in third gear and the Evora is already at 70mph...

You hesitate to be overly evangelical about a Lotus in 2020, with the firm's future ethos very much in the balance - but if the role of a sports car is to raise a smile, to make every journey as entertaining as it can be and to feel as immersive on road as it will on track, then the GT410 has emphatically nailed the brief. So much so, in fact, that even an occasionally snaggy gearshift, a brake pedal that isn't the firmest and displays from a Casio watch can't spoil it. It's sports car wizardry: precise yet progressive, responsive but still relaxing, accommodating of many and still rewarding for those who seek it out. There's nothing else like it.


So the dexterity of a great Lotus sports car hasn't changed; if anything, the GT410 is the best exponent of the Evora virtues for a long time. But the fact remains (you knew this bit was coming) that the market for £80k+ sports cars is extremely competitive, and its prospective buyers very demanding. They want excellence across the board, not just in one or two key areas. And, if they are going to sacrifice, it's probably going to be on the finer points of driver satisfaction that lose out to interior ambience, badge appeal or on-demand performance.

Which is a pity, because the Lotus way of doing sports car feels more relevant than ever in a world saturated with synthetic, contrived performance cars. But the very best on offer at this money or a bit less - think Cayman GTS and GT4, Alpine A110 S, BMW M2 CS and so on - are more broadly talented packages, whatever their deficiencies against the Lotus in the minutiae of driver feedback. If superlative ride and handling is number one priority, then we commend you, because that's laudable - and an Evora is still - still - the class of the field. And you'll love it. But there are more complete sports cars out there, which makes the GT410's task tricky given that it's supposed to be a more complete iteration of Evora.

There's cause for considerable optimism, though; there are clearly some very talented engineers that work at Lotus, a fact proven unequivocally by a car that has been hastily tweaked rather than comprehensively overhauled. Imagine what they will be capable of when every waking minute of their expertise has been dedicated to new, Geely-funded platform, one fit for the 21st century and with no qualitative short cuts taken. There won't be any stopping Lotus. Will there?


SPECIFICATION | LOTUS EVORA GT410

Engine: 3,456cc supercharged V6
Transmission: Six-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 416@7,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 295@3,500rpm
0-62mph: 4.2 seconds
Top speed: 186mph
Weight: 1,361kg (unladen)
MPG: 26.7 (WLTP)
CO2: 239g/km
Price: £82,900








Author
Discussion

macky17

Original Poster:

2,212 posts

189 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
I'd like to read a comparison between this and the 400 (because I can afford one and not the other). This sounds terrific, especially if you're after a weekend road car and not an all-rounder. Seems strange to criticise the gear ratios though when a certain mainstream competitor would have you in 3 digits if the engine were howling in 3rd...

On another note:
"it would be bizarre to buy an Evora as a regular track Lotus when the Exige is also available" - you forget that some of us are over 6-2...


TyrannosauRoss Lex

35,050 posts

212 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Totally random....but am I the only one who thinks that gear gaiter looks like something out of a cheap Vauxhall from 20 years ago?

Iamnotkloot

1,423 posts

147 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Always liked these, even if I think they look better from some angles than others.
The bonus would be you’re buying exclusivity - I’m still yet to see one on the road!

bcr5784

7,109 posts

145 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
macky17 said:
I'd like to read a comparison between this and the 400 (because I can afford one and not the other). This sounds terrific, especially if you're after a weekend road car and not an all-rounder. Seems strange to criticise the gear ratios though when a certain mainstream competitor would have you in 3 digits if the engine were howling in 3rd...

On another note:
"it would be bizarre to buy an Evora as a regular track Lotus when the Exige is also available" - you forget that some of us are over 6-2...
When I drove the 410 - when it was a slightly more hardcore version of the 400 - I concluded that I would prefer the 400. The 410 I drcw was just a bit more nervous than I wanted, a tad stiffer - but still a great car. I didn't like the slatted rear window either. So the GT410 seems spot on to me. Doubtless the interior will put some off - it's certainly no better than my Alpine, probably worse - but frankly, I don't give a damn.

anonymous-user

54 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
bcr5784 said:
...it's certainly no better than my Alpine, probably worse...
Here we go again.

Porsche911R

21,146 posts

265 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
“the balance nudged a little further in favour of understeer”


No thanks, I cannot think any lotus owner will choose this over a sport.

Do they still not know their own market ?

They offers an auto, they sold about 3 cars , same on the Exige , then took it off the market.

Ffs , can I come and work for you guys and help you build a car people want :-)


SidewaysSi

10,742 posts

234 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Porsche911R said:
“the balance nudged a little further in favour of understeer”


No thanks, I cannot think any lotus owner will choose this over a sport.

Do they still not know their own market ?

They offers an auto, they sold about 3 cars , same on the Exige , then took it off the market.

Ffs , can I come and work for you guys and help you build a car people want :-)
Go on then, what's your idea of what Lotus should be doing?

Edited by SidewaysSi on Saturday 11th July 10:19

CABC

5,568 posts

101 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Porsche911R said:
“the balance nudged a little further in favour of understeer”


No thanks, I cannot think any lotus owner will choose this over a sport.

Do they still not know their own market ?

They offers an auto, they sold about 3 cars , same on the Exige , then took it off the market.

Ffs , can I come and work for you guys and help you build a car people want :-)
David, you know full well that there is no understeer on any car if you drive it correctly.
ok, so some cars default to understeer way too early, but that's not what we're talking about here. this car is geared at the Phil's of this world - something a little softer than a normal 4xx but still holding the essential Evora attributes. a road car basically.
i like the idea of it as i don't think this size of car (and yes it's smaller than competition) is suited to uk track work. maybe the Ring. i think it will sell a lot, by Evora standards...

giveitfish

4,031 posts

214 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Please, just ignore him before he ruins another thread.

Venisonpie

3,258 posts

82 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
I think this might be my ideal car, sounds fabulous. I really couldn't care less about interior stitching and soft plastics etc. How does it make you feel when you drive it?!

GingerMunky

1,166 posts

257 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
"the Lotus way of doing sports car feels more relevant than ever in a world saturated with synthetic, contrived performance cars"

Completely agree, there are few drivers cars left and they are pretty much all made my Lotus; Elise, Exige and Evora.

GingerMunky

1,166 posts

257 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
TyrannosauRoss Lex said:
Totally random....but am I the only one who thinks that gear gaiter looks like something out of a cheap Vauxhall from 20 years ago?
Check out the gaitor in the Exige!!!
https://www.instagram.com/p/CCQOnPblxf8/?utm_sourc...

twinturban

241 posts

122 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Surely anyone who's ever wanted (and been able to afford) an Evora has had one by now?

bcr5784

7,109 posts

145 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
GingerMunky said:
Check out the gaitor in the Exige!!!
https://www.instagram.com/p/CCQOnPblxf8/?utm_sourc...
The exposed linkage does look rather good - but how long before you drop a coin/pen/key down there.

macky17

Original Poster:

2,212 posts

189 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Venisonpie said:
I think this might be my ideal car, sounds fabulous. I really couldn't care less about interior stitching and soft plastics etc. How does it make you feel when you drive it?!
Hallelujah beer

Mannginger

9,055 posts

257 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
I love the idea of getting an Evora. I really love it. I've been window shopping for the last few months idly day-dreaming about what to buy on my return to Blighty. Trouble is that price point really puts it into some serious competition and whilst I like the idea of exclusivity I keep thinking of the Cayman GTS or GT4 and that's one hell of a counter-argument!

Edited to correct my pre-coffee mistake - Evora not Exige!

Edited by Mannginger on Saturday 11th July 14:00

CABC

5,568 posts

101 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Mannginger said:
I love the idea of getting an Exige. I really love it. I've been window shopping for the last few months idly day-dreaming about what to buy on my return to Blighty. Trouble is that price point really puts it into some serious competition and whilst I like the idea of exclusivity I keep thinking of the Cayman GTS or GT4 and that's one hell of a counter-argument!
suggest you drive them. exige and gt4 are rather different cars and do different things.

jerrytlr

418 posts

213 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
I have driven the 400, Sport 410 and the later GT410 Sport.

I now own the Sport 410.

They are all excellent cars. 400 - I didn't like the higher seating position so much, and it didn't feel quite raw enough to me.

Sport 410 feels more urgent (power) and slightly sharper steering - and I have the lightweight carbon seats which are lower, and amazing.

GT 410 Sport very similar to Sport 410 but had the Sparco seats, so still prefer he Sport 410. GT 410 with the carbon seats could be the sweet spot... but hard to find.

The noise they make is intoxicating.

I actually like the Evora interior - it's basic in terms of tech but nicely made and a bit different, it feels like an event just to sit in it. My 410 has the latest Alpine head unit and it is superb. I was even able to colour coordinate the lighting to match the yellow highlights in the car :-)

400 or any 410 - can't go wrong IMO

Cheers

Jerry








macky17 said:
I'd like to read a comparison between this and the 400 (because I can afford one and not the other). This sounds terrific, especially if you're after a weekend road car and not an all-rounder. Seems strange to criticise the gear ratios though when a certain mainstream competitor would have you in 3 digits if the engine were howling in 3rd...

On another note:
"it would be bizarre to buy an Evora as a regular track Lotus when the Exige is also available" - you forget that some of us are over 6-2...

blueg33

35,781 posts

224 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Two weeks ago I was the first customer to drive Silverstone's demonstrator that is identical to the one in the article by Matt. I had literally just stepped out of my Sports Racer S which is a 2014 Series 1 car.

Here are my thoughts:

Engine is lovely, noticeably quicker than my car with a wider torque band
Gearbox is precise
Steering has all the Lotus brilliance as does the suspension, ists not quite as good as my series 1 n/a car was, its a tad softer than my Sports Racer and body roll was slightly more pronounced but its very marginal. The 410 sport feels stiffer.
HVAC way better than S1 cars
Interior well screwed together, no squeaks or rattles

Downsides for me:
I find the plastic sill trims in all the 400 series cars horribly tacky compared to the leather trimmed sills in mine.
Seats less comfy that the S1 recaros by some margin but more comfy than the sports carbon buckets
Seats set too high for me at 6ft, my eyeline is inline with the sun visors, you sit lower in the s1 car

Summary - this car with the s1 seats and better quality switch gear would be almost ideal for me, although truth be told I lean towards the more hardcore more spartan 410 sport because my Evora is now less of a daily and more of a toy with most of the miles coming from my annual road trip (thats where the carbon buckets are a problem)

In reality, the perfect Evora for me is my current car with the 410bhp engine and brakes to match, mine is not bad but an extra 50 odd bhp is not to be sniffed at.

I am in the market to buy, but cant afford a new one so for me its

Stick with my Sports Racer - stunning car in a rare colour
Go for a 410 sport and suffer the seats on a long trip
Go for a 400 and have seats that annoy me because they are set too high

Its a real quandary and maybe the solution is to buy something thats not an Evora




Helicopter123

8,831 posts

156 months

Saturday 11th July 2020
quotequote all
Fantastic, just fantastic.

Great to see Lotus striving onwards where some others have given up.