RE: Zenos E10 S: Driven

RE: Zenos E10 S: Driven

Wednesday 18th March 2015

Zenos E10 S: Review [Updated]

Fast and fun already, does the turbo light the blue touch paper on the Zenos E10 S? [New pics added!]



It was just the other day I was saying what a shame it was modern turbo engines seem to have lost the self-confidence to act like turbos. And already we've got the answer! The great schloops of air inhaled by the Zenos E10 S's turbo that seem suck you against the back of the seat, the violent exhalations from the dump valve that punctuate every gearshift, the way 250hp scoops up the featherweight Zenos from anywhere in the rev range and flings it down the track ... it's like having a turbocharger inside your head. This, it should be noted, is a good thing.

The Zenos architecture laid bare
The Zenos architecture laid bare
OK. The noise is probably a bit extreme. Drive the Zenos without a helmet - a viable option for the road with the new windscreen option - and the dump valve will leave your ears ringing. And, if you're a bit of an overgrown kid like me, a big fat grin on your face. En route to a suitable corner for some on-road snaps photographer Tom is punching the air in excitement at the noise, I'm grinning the guilty grin of a man having possibly too much fun and the Zenos is proving just how dramatic the leap from normally aspirated E10 to turbocharged S really is.

Driven in isolation the E10 is fast, fun and predictable. The integrity of Zenos's backbone chassis, the stiff platform it provides for the pushrod suspension to show off the pliant springing and expertly judged damping, the looks ... it's all there.

Optional windscreen makes road use viable
Optional windscreen makes road use viable
But this turbo version is something else. If the E10 was a conservative opening gambit the S is the making of the car and the moment Zenos bursts out of its shell.

Up-selling
"You'd find the extra five grand for the S if you could, right?" I say to Zenos co-founder Mark Edwards as the car is refuelled. Again. Seems I've been spending quite a lot of time out on track... "Eight out of 10 cats can't be wrong!" he grins, confirming the proportion of Zenos customers opting for this full-fat turbo car. It's not that the regular E10 is disappointing. More that the S is the one that realises the full potential of the package.

The numbers speak for themselves. Well, one does in particular and it's not the increase in horsepower from 200 to 250 - same as the Focus ST with which it shares its Ecoboost engine. No, the really dramatic increase is in the torque, which near-as doubles from 155lb ft in the E10 to 295lb ft in the S. This lops some time off the acceleration figures and adds another 10mph to the top speed but these numbers are less meaningful than the transformation from behind the wheel. And the mid-range punch this S has is now sufficient to give the E10's chassis a proper workout.

Functional simplicty extends to the cabin
Functional simplicty extends to the cabin
On first acquaintance the gear lever feels a little high-set, the gate can be a little vague and its throw is quite long too. Which, unsurprisingly, is pretty much as it feels in the Focus. If that's road-car familiar the solid feel to the unservoed brake pedal probably won't be. Zenos's Chris Weston accepts it might take some acclimatisation but when you realise the braking power is equal to the force you put in you relish the uncorrupted feel. Think of it as the difference between power- and non-assisted steering, the Zenos's rack likewise unadorned and pure in feel and feedback. Chuck in that predictable, balanced throttle response and you have a pretty convincing array of primary interactions with the car, the better to enjoy the sheer exuberance of that additional turbocharged power.

Mapped out
Credit to the team - they've done a superb job of mapping the Ecoboost engine to suit a lightweight track toy like the Zenos. In the Focus it's geared up for low-end torque and muscular response, as is the modern style. But in the Zenos it's got half a tonne less car to shift. And if it came on that strong you'd quickly overwhelm the available traction and have a real handful, even on a dry track.

Looks a lot more expensive than it is
Looks a lot more expensive than it is
Zenos installs its own map, that 295lb ft of torque coming in at 2,500rpm rather than the 6,100rpm of the normally aspirated car. Fuelling, valve timing, boost - all have been tweaked and adjusted to suit the car. The throttle doesn't quite have the razor-like response of a supercharged Ariel, or the top end ferocity of the high-revving Toyota 1.8s fitted to the Lotus 2-Eleven, but it is predictable and the boost doesn't upset the balance of the car.

It's not so much lag as an initial softness to the power delivery compared with those supercharged cars that is typical of the Zenos's unthreatening nature. This is most definitely a turbo car - that soundtrack will never let you forget it - but it manages to feel both boosty and predictably linear at the same time. And dramatically rapid. One thing to bear in mind - if you're telling your mates that corner is definitely flat but you in fact need a little confidence lift the dump valve will loudly betray your lack of commitment.

Softer set-up allows you to take chunks of kerb
Softer set-up allows you to take chunks of kerb
Although there's not a huge amount of weight over the front wheels, and the mid-rear engine configuration dominates the driving style, turn-in is impressively dependable. And if you want to dial out that light front end the Zenos responds neatly and predictably to a lift or trailed brake. There are no sharp edges to the handling, even at the extremes.

The optional Track Pack - an additional £4,000 - includes a limited-slip differential to bring the throttle more aggressively into the equation, should you so desire. Not actually fitted to our test car, Edwards promises "it does what a diff does" and there's enough adjustment in the chassis to make the car softer or pointier as required. But in this default setting the Zenos is neutral without being inert, confidence inspiring without being dumbed down and feels it can more than handle the additional power without forgetting to make it feel exciting.

Fancier dampers included in Track Pack
Fancier dampers included in Track Pack
Man maths
The lack of weight overall and, more pertinently still, of the unsprung variety means Zenos can run a seemingly soft set-up that permits weight-shifts and communicates how the car is reacting to inputs. It also means you can take big bites of kerb on the unweighted side of the car without fear of unsettling it and chuck it around in a manner more 'serious' track cars like a Radical simply wouldn't tolerate.

And it means it is usable and unintimidating to drive home from the track, the suspension compliant enough to devour your typical B-road without kicking back through the wheel or feeling like it's going to be bounced off into the bushes.

Contrast panels cheap to replace after shunts
Contrast panels cheap to replace after shunts
If that first normally aspirated car was a polite, almost deferential entry into the market this turbocharged S is Zenos really unleashing its potential. Fast enough to get your pulse racing, but predictable enough to make sure that's for the right reasons, this is a properly exciting car. Thanks to the heritage and looks a Caterham remains the more emotive choice and the Ariels and KTMs of this world offer more performance and a higher standard of finish and pose factor.

But the Zenos can carry off the more workmanlike aspects of its construction by virtue of its sheer exuberance and, relatively speaking, value for money. It's not hard to price a track-focused Seven up to or beyond the E10 S's £29,995 starting price and it's a good £20K cheaper than the more exotic Atom and XBow options. And it's hard to see how Lotus (as rumoured) can revive the 2-Eleven with the Exige's supercharged V6 without a pricetag significantly beyond that of the Zenos.

Fast, fun and forgiving is the Zenos way
Fast, fun and forgiving is the Zenos way
It looks fabulous too, people on first encounter often overestimating the price by as much as 20 grand. That alone should give Zenos confidence the business plan is a sound one and there is considerable headroom beyond this for blingier, faster and more expensive variants down the line. Given the relatively conservative tune of this first turbocharged car there's clearly potential for more too.

All this can come though. For now the E10 S is the moment Zenos really sets out its stall and defines its position in the marketplace. And with some considerable style, confidence and character. A few rough edges remain but as far as the grin factor goes the car delivers in buckets, both on the road and the track.

Onboard lap here


ZENOS E10 S
Engine:
 1,999cc 4-cyl turbocharged
Transmission: 5-speed manual (6-speed manual optional), rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 250@7,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 295@2,500rpm
0-60mph: <4.0sec (claimed)
Top speed: 145mph (claimed)
Weight: c.725kg (dry)
MPG: N/A (NEDC combined)
CO2: N/A g/km
Price: £29,995 (Before options, including VAT and IVA but not including registration - see here for further details; £33,995 with Track Pack comprising six-speed gearbox, limited-slip differential*, four-point harnesses, Zenos composite seats, adjustable dampers and removable steering wheel; £35,535 as tested including above and heated windscreen)
*Not fitted to car driven











   

Photos: Tom Begley

Author
Discussion

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

54 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
Looks a bit like the slightly mad cousin of the new MX5.

SpudLink

5,775 posts

192 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
I had placed an order for the E10 S, but then downgraded to the non-turbocharged car. I was worried that the enormous lowdown torque of the eco-boost engine would actually overwhelm the rear tyres and chassis balance.
This is the first review I've read of the eco-boost car and it's making me think I may have made the wrong choice.

scubadude

2,618 posts

197 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
I got totally flamed last time and I've tried to look hard at it and the windscreen does change the profile considerably but... to state absolutely that it looks Fabulous is very much in the eye of the beholder IMO. I think a Zenos all in one colour might look better/less bad.

It does look Fast as hell though and nice to see some controllable body movement.

What's with the gear stick though, I'd have thought shortening it was easy enough?

HorneyMX5

5,309 posts

150 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
Looks soooooo good with the screen fitted.

MrTappets

881 posts

191 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
God that looks and sounds brilliant! £35,000 with options is to be applauded too

rs4al

928 posts

165 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
Looks great, don't know about the huge knob though....

jamespink

1,218 posts

204 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
What a great car! Still want that Lotus?

JTRacelogic

101 posts

255 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
I was lucky enough to drive the Turbo version at Silverstone last week, and it is a great little car to drive, almost as fun as a Caterham, but more spacious and refined. A serious contender for a trackday toy you could easily drive to the circuit (as long as it wasn't raining).

QBee

20,975 posts

144 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
That car, the one Dan tested, was at Snetterton on Friday, and came past me several times. I was in my 1060 kg TVR Chimaera 5 litre. I was putting out 300 bhp and 330 ft lbs, but the superior power to weight ratio of the Zenos, plus probably the driver's skill as well, made it much the faster car

dlockhart

434 posts

172 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
will it have adjustable suspension so its still drivable on wet/greasy track days ? Overly firm mid-engined cars can be a bh when the grip starts to go.

mgbond

6,749 posts

232 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
dlockhart said:
will it have adjustable suspension so its still drivable on wet/greasy track days ? Overly firm mid-engined cars can be a bh when the grip starts to go.
As stated above, the track pack adds adjustability.

In the video was that full throttle shifts? I.e. Not removing foot from accelerator when dumping the clutch.

suffolk009

5,387 posts

165 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
Maybe I'm misreading this, but you suggest that Zenos have re-mapped the car to avoid too much low-end torque being problematic in such a lightweight car. The very next line states that 295ft/lb of torque is available from 2500rpm.

Are you suggesting that the eco-boost in a fiesta delivers max torque at (say) 1200rpm?

Sorry if I'm being daft on this.

Dan Trent

1,866 posts

168 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
MGbond - Those were normal shifts; what you're hearing is the dump valve as I lifted the throttle and dropped the clutch pedal. The mic for the GoPro was wired into the engine bay which is why you're hearing that so prominently. Though, to be fair, it's pretty damned prominent from the driving seat too!

suffolk009 - In the Focus the engine delivers its 250lb ft peak torque at 1,750rpm but as Mark Edwards pointed out when we chatted you can fiddle with everything from spark, valve timing, boost and the rest when mapping the engine so you can really make it feel any way you want. Despite what the number suggests torque does indeed come in a lot more progressively than it does with the Focus's installation and - IMO - they've done a very good job of mitigating that sudden destabilising 'spike' you get in a lot of modern turbo engines. Take a drive in one if you can and hopefully you'll agree!

Thanks,

Dan

Edited by Dan Trent on Tuesday 17th March 13:30

aww999

2,068 posts

261 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
This looks better every time I read about it, and to my eyes the windscreen is a big improvement. Does it come with any sort of weather gear?

I also like the idea that the dumpvalve is cool again biggrin (Ex ricer here, have always loved them!)

suffolk009

5,387 posts

165 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
Thank you Dan.

Gorbyrev

1,160 posts

154 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
There is something fundamentally right about this car - great to read a review of the S. I have a suspicion it might prove to be almost as depreciation proof as a Caterham or an Atom.

braddo

10,464 posts

188 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
These look great.

How much room is there between the seats and outer tubular frame? Just curious how much room there is for soaking up a side impact (as opposed to a Caterham, where your hip is pretty much resting against the side frame).

B10

1,238 posts

267 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
rs4al said:
Looks great, don't know about the huge knob though....
Clarkson is not in the photo.

macky17

2,212 posts

189 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
Does it cater for taller drivers - as in 6-4+?

redroadster

1,738 posts

232 months

Tuesday 17th March 2015
quotequote all
Gorbyrev said:
There is something fundamentally right about this car - great to read a review of the S. I have a suspicion it might prove to be almost as depreciation proof as a Caterham or an Atom.
Totally agree it sounds like they have plenty of orders too, I think its value compared to other cars of this type and wish the company well.