RE: Caterham Seven 420 Cup | PH Review

RE: Caterham Seven 420 Cup | PH Review

Wednesday 25th May 2022

Caterham Seven 420 Cup | PH Review

Welcome proof that less can definitely be more


What’s better than a Caterham? Three Caterhams, of course. Plus, in this case, a racetrack packed with other Caterhams to play with.

Much as I love the Seven, I’ve always found a little goes a long way. I’ve had great drives on quiet roads when the weather is temperate and dry. But I’ve also had some completely miserable experiences, none more so than a hungover slog back from Le Mans in pouring rain piloting a roofless Superlight. Which is why I’ve always preferred them on circuits, where even a moderately rapid Caterham feels truly special, and 15-minute stints spare me from the sort of aches and pains that come from longer road trips. If I did ever buy one, I’d likely be one of the people with a trailer and a plush tow car who the braver owners regard as being a total wuss at the end of a track day.

Which is why, despite its number plates, I’m not sad to have only experienced the Seven 420 Cup on circuit at Snetterton. This is definitely one of those cars that is better thought of as being road legal than road sensible, explicitly aimed at the top-tier track day market rather than long trips in the real world. While the idea of a car with its engine in mid-ranking ‘420’ tune having a higher base price than the regular Seven 620 might invert the natural order, it comes with a six-speed sequential gearbox, fully adjustable dampers and track-biased Avon ZZR tyres as standard. Even the seriousness of a £54,990 kick-off for the standard chassis still makes it a bang-per-buck bargain, thanks to 350hp-per-tonne and pace to humble even top-end supercars.

The media drive at Snetterton takes place during an all-Caterham track day, with everything from modestly powered roadgoing Sevens to full-spec racers running around. I get to drive three cars in ascending order of performance: starting with the XL Seven 420 Cup SV, moving to the smaller, lighter, regular chassis version, and then - taking things to a different level - some laps in a slick-shod racer from the Caterham Seven Championship.

Large and slow are definitely relative terms here. Even in full ‘fat boy’ spec the 420 Cup is tailored rather than loose fit, with the optional full cage making the process of climbing in a minor gymnastic feat. Once strapped in the view is appropriately serious: a nice carbonfibre dashboard with classic-style toggle switches in the middle – Caterham has been using them so long they’ve become fashionable again. Fuel, temperature and oil pressure dials are offset to the left, rev counter and speedo tucked behind the dinky steering wheel. Trim is unsurprisingly minimal: red fabric around the gear selector and on the seat pads is the limit of the party. But the press car came with the luxury of £1,600 heated carbon seats.

The fitment of the Sadev six-speed sequential gearbox hasn’t liberated any extra room in the footwell, because the 420 Cup still has a clutch pedal. This is used for setting off and manoeuvring, but also I’m told when changing down – upshifts can be taken flat. It doesn’t have steering wheel paddles, instead using a nice, weighty push-pull lever strongly reminiscent of an early WRC-era rally car. Yet while the engine is predictably keen to rev at the slightest throttle pressure, I don’t have any problem getting it rolling with reasonable smoothness before rumbling through the pitlane and heading out into the fray.

The first lap is spent getting everything up to temperature, trying to keep out of the way of everybody else and reacclimatising to the strange, parallel dimension of Caterham physics. It’s several years since I last drove one, and I’d forgotten just how kart-like they feel on track. This might sound like the sort of hyperbole commonly employed by marketing departments, but in the case of the Cup it really isn’t. The slack-free reactions and abundance of lateral grip really do make almost any conventional car seem big and rubbery by comparison.

With my right foot pretty much denting the bulkhead and upshifting at the behest of the change-up lights the 420 Cup feels impressively quick, but not outrageously so. A sharp-end modern sports car has comparable thrust, and there are plenty of ludicrously fast SUVs that could show the Caterham a clean pair of heels in a straight drag race. But not a contest involving corners: slowing and turning in the Seven are from a different universe thanks to the combination of minimal mass and grippy rubber. A point that is made by some comically early braking points and timid corner entry speeds at the start of my stint.

But although the 420 Cup’s limits are higher, it shares the friendly dynamics of every other Caterham. Within a few laps we’re close personal friends and – reacquainted with Snetterton’s layout – I’m happy pushing to the edge of adhesion and enjoying the ability to play with the balance at each end. There’s so much grip that the limited slip differential doesn’t need to play bouncer; serious oversteer only happens when provoked. Yet the diff’s effect is obvious in the way the Cup tightens its line tidily and progressively under power.

It’s not all smooth sailing. I get caught out by the lack of ABS a couple of times and experience the strange sense of a car accelerating as the front wheels lock. (It’s not gaining speed, of course; just not losing it at the same rate.) It’s operator error, but something that must be pretty common for those jumping into Caterhams after spending time exclusively in the world of anti-lock. There are also a couple of chirps from the rear tyres as I mis-synchronize sequential downshifting and clutch inputs - most of these while slowing for the awkward, tight right-hander called Nelson that comes before the famous Bomb Hole. Yet by the time I return to the pits I’m wearing an appropriately Caterham-sized grin.

Switching to the regular body car makes the accommodation tighter, by enough to make me glad I’m not trying to squeeze in next to a passenger. But it doesn’t feel too cramped for a 15-minute track session and saves £2,500 on the build price. The 105mm reduction in track width, 250mm trim in length and 25kg cut in mass doesn’t dramatically transform the 420 Cup’s driving experience. But they do make the car feel noticeably more wieldy and willing to turn in tighter stuff, and obviously able to take slightly shallower lines.

Caterham was also keen for me to experience how easy it is to tweak chassis settings. My first stint in the narrow-bodied 420 Cup was done with the suspension wound close to full stiffness, with a brief pit stop seeing the dampers clicked back to what was, by the standards of track-going Caterhams, pillowy softness. The difference was an impressive indication of just how important shocks are to defining the way a car drives, with the Cup losing a noticeable amount of front-end bite but gaining amusing, progressive rear-end breakway. Given the huge pace of the car in any state of suspension tune, there is actually lots to be said for the rollier, slidier setting even in dry conditions.

Leaving just the Caterham Seven Championship racer. Which I’m not here to review, but there was zero chance of me saying no to a turn.

The first problem with writing it up is that I’ve already referenced levels, dimensions and even universes. So let’s just say the slick-shod Challenge car is on a different plane of existence, the subjective gap between it and the Cup at least as big as the one between the Cup and a road-spec Seven. While the racer has less power than the 420, just 180hp according to Caterham, it can use much more of this much more often, and pretty much every other car on track suddenly seems to have run into treacle. Small wonder the Championship is so spectacular with the prospect of a pack of these fighting for space.

While not wanting to finish on a downer, there are some storm clouds gathering on the horizon for Caterham and Britain’s other low-volume makers, all dependent on bigger companies to provide them with powerplants. There are few engines suited to lightweight sports cars left, and that number is going to steadily diminish as the world heads towards its fully electrified destiny. Given the weight and space required for EV battery packs, that’s a future that is never going to be as much fun as this present.

Caterham admits the 420 Cup is aimed at a fairly narrow niche; those who want a Seven for regular track use, but not outright competition. It is certainly not cheap, especially considering the value further down the range, but it is also clearly benefiting from its motorsport grade tech. Broaden the comparison to the world outside the Caterham range and it suddenly makes far more sense when you consider the sort of exotica this humble-looking Seven is going to be quicker than.


SPECIFICATION | CATERHAM SEVEN 420 CUP

Engine: 1,998cc four-cyl
Transmission: 6-speed sequential, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 210@7,600rpm
Torque (lb ft): 150@6,300rpm
0-60mph: 3.6secs
Top speed: 136mph
Weight: 560kg
MPG: TBC
CO2: TBC
Price: £54,990 (Price as tested £61,280 comprised of carbon aeroscreen for £450, race roll cage for £900, lowered floors for £500, heater for £450, heated carbon seats for £1,600, high-intensity LED lights for £800, painted roll bar for £500 and two-tone wheels for £1,000.)

Author
Discussion

sege

Original Poster:

558 posts

222 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
That's the first time I've read an article or review of a Caterham with more than 140bhp where it's straight line performance is not regarded as something like "crazily quick". Interesting. Maybe modern cars performance is even starting to eclipse that of the 7 after all this time?

But who cares about that!
What do we think of how it looks?
Does the colour suit?
I'm not sure about the shape of the headlights myself.... looks a bit too much like Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.
Can you get these in silver or grey, with a German badge, rock solid residuals (check!) and a favourable lease plan? Also a roof, four doors, and a commanding driving position?

Gecko1978

9,684 posts

157 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
It sort of feels like a pick a mix car in that you can have any engine chassis and gear box to suite tastes an budget

ddom

6,657 posts

48 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
That is one of the worst colour combinations I’ve ever seen on a se7en. To me, the 420 felt quite blunt, the engine is a bit boring and the chassis seems lack something? For this sort of money I’d be looking at an earlier R400 and lots of change for track days. Whilst I applaud Caterham for continuing there’s really not much new here to get excited about.

Kawasicki

13,078 posts

235 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
I bloody love driving Caterhams.

Yes please.

Chubbyross

4,545 posts

85 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
The fact that Caterham is still producing and selling cars makes me very happy. I’ve yet to drive one but it’s on my list of cars to own. Very high up on the list.

Howard1650

313 posts

191 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
£61,280 - that's a lot money. Is this where the market is at for a track toy ?
I love Caterhams, but remember the days when you built them at home with a hammer and a few old sockets.

nigelpugh7

6,025 posts

190 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
I’m not sure I have missed a memo somewhere?

£61K for a 420! Seriously that’s more than my 620R cost me and that had a 310bhp supercharged duratec and the same Sadev sequential gearbox.

It also looks like the weight is almost identical to my 620R at 530 kilos too.

I suspect that the 420R engine with just 210 bhp might feel a bit lacking in a track car of that weight.

And yep that colour is not good too!

greygoose

8,255 posts

195 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
I’m not a fan of those two tone wheels at all, seems too pricey but I am sure they will find buyers.

E30KB

245 posts

64 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
Must be getting old. Caterhams all look the same to me.

Fetchez la vache

5,572 posts

214 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
Must be getting old. Having loved them since a teenager, I need to own one before I pop my clogs.

Chubbyross

4,545 posts

85 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
E30KB said:
Must be getting old. Caterhams all look the same to me.
It’s not just you. Caterhams DO all look the same.

Stevie_Wonder

1,055 posts

202 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
sege said:
That's the first time I've read an article or review of a Caterham with more than 140bhp where it's straight line performance is not regarded as something like "crazily quick". Interesting. Maybe modern cars performance is even starting to eclipse that of the 7 after all this time?

But who cares about that!
What do we think of how it looks?
Does the colour suit?
I'm not sure about the shape of the headlights myself.... looks a bit too much like Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.
Can you get these in silver or grey, with a German badge, rock solid residuals (check!) and a favourable lease plan? Also a roof, four doors, and a commanding driving position?
Ahhh, Sir, you will be looking for the Caterham SUV smile

Derek182

114 posts

80 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
I just can't see it at that price, I love Caterhams and Westfields and have owned 1 of the former and 2 of the latter.
But if I want to go very quickly at trackdays I could buy a decent Radical for £25000, a nice comfy tow car and trailer and still have lots of change!

Smitters

4,002 posts

157 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
The good - the new dash layout looks much better - thank God they don't have those awful plastic rocker switches that fade. Ummm. That's it.

The bad - price. I shan't bother listing all the alternatives. Red is the most dangerous colour for a Caterham - following cars cannot see the brakelights. The price. That fabric tunnel top will be nice when wet. The price. There's almost nothing new here. It's literally less for more. And then charging you for adding the more back - like a heater. I absolutely fail to see where the money goes for this. Though obvioulsy savings are to be made by not speccing the gopping wheel colour.

And, just in case you think I'm a miserable Caterham hater, I'm not. I've had two. They cost me £21,490. Not each. Combined. And they were both absolutely flawed and brilliant, just like this. Except you'd still have £40k in your pocket.

sidesauce

2,472 posts

218 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
For that price, that's a hard pass from me. As someone else said, you're getting less for more.

Nope.

Rudeboy350Z

122 posts

195 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
Wow. Comes complete with shopping list.....not seen that in a long while - especially a factory fit....at least you'll never forget what tyres to fit, what oil to buy and what coilovers to replace should you trash them. Like it's been said previously....no step change here...a bit like Morgan.

PTF

4,308 posts

224 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
I paid £6.5k for one of my caterham race cars back in 2007. Ok, it only had 100bhp, but still.

More recently an ex-race caterham could be had for £10k-£12k for a k-series engined car (or even less for an ex-roadsport-A car).

Performance wouldn't be the same as a 420R, but given a decent driver i don't think the gap would be enormous. Lots of caterhams driven on trackdays seem to be driven at about 60% of the car's ability anyway. At least with this spec those drivers with more money than talent might be able to stay in touch smile

kambites

67,552 posts

221 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
I'm not sure I really understand the complaints about the price. Caterham have always made very expensive variants of their cars; if you want a cheap one you can still get a Seven new for £25k which is about the same as a typical C-segment family hatchback.

Zumbruk

7,848 posts

260 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
"I’d likely be one of the people with a trailer and a plush tow car who the braver owners regard as being a total wuss at the end of a track day."

Call me a total wuss if you like, but one of the highlights of a track day for me was climbing, sweaty and exhausted, full of adrenaline, into the plush, quiet, comfy, air-conditioned cocoon of the Rangie to trundle home, savouring the highlights of the day, rather than sitting at exhaust height in a traffic jam or cringing from the lorries on the motorway in the track car.

Olivera

7,122 posts

239 months

Wednesday 25th May 2022
quotequote all
kambites said:
if you want a cheap one you can still get a Seven new for 25k which is about the same as a typical C-segment family hatchback.
That would be for an absolutely sloth-like 170 with that asthmatic 3 pot. A basic 4 pot of old and you're spending more like 35k+.