RE: Lotus announces Exige and Elise Final Editions

RE: Lotus announces Exige and Elise Final Editions

Monday 8th February 2021

Lotus announces Exige and Elise Final Editions

The end is in sight for Hethel's heroes - here's how two of them will sign off



So, this is it then: a new era really is coming at Lotus. With so much still to learn about the Type 131, perhaps nothing indicates how drastic a change is imminent than the demise of the existing models. With just this Exige and Elise Final Edition pair - an equivalent Evora is set to follow - Lotus is bringing to an end a combined 46 years of production. Goodness knows we’ve seen plenty of special editions over that time, too, though perhaps none will be as significant as these.  

As such, Lotus isn’t holding back, and has created a range of Final Editions cars - five in total. From £45,000 to £100,000, there are two Elises - a Sport 240 and a Cup 250 - alongside a trio of Exiges - the Sport 390, the Sport 420 and the Cup 430 - pitched by Lotus as “the ultimate versions” of both, which “mark the pinnacle of technical development to showcase more than two decades of engineering excellence”.


With this year also marking 25 years since production began, attention is inevitably drawn to the Elise. Both the Final Edition models receive a new TFT dash - presumably closely related to the option introduced last year - as well as a new flat-bottomed wheel to make getting in and out that bit easier. Better late than never at all, right? New seat trims and a Final Edition plaque will mark out both interiors.  

Appropriately, adding lightness is a central theme throughout all these valedictory specials; the Elise Sport 240 - which succeeds the old Sport 220 for this last year - can actually be optioned down to 898kg. As standard, buyers will get new forged wheels that are lighter than those used on the 220, with extras including a lithium-ion battery, polycarbonate rear window and carbon fibre add ons. Lotus claims the 240bhp (243hp) model will reach 60mph in 4.1 seconds.  


The Cup 250 is broadly as we’ve known the car since launch, with additional aerodynamic focus, Bilstein dampers and Yokohama A052 tyres. But it’s not quite the same, as a range of heritage paint options have been introduced for the Final Edition: these include Azure Blue, as that was the colour of the Elise used in the first media pics, Racing Green like the ’95 Frankfurt show car and, er, black. Because that’s the Lotus Motorsport colour. The Sport 240 FE costs £45,500, the Cup 250 £50,900.  

Similarly to the Elise, the less expensive Exige Final Editions are perhaps most interesting. A Cup 430 remains at the top, a £100k supercar scarer that gets Nitron three-way dampers, Cup 2 tyres, AP Racing brakes and everything else needed to make the Exige go as fast as it possibly can. Which, from experience, is faster than pretty much anything else. Again, colours will mark it out as a 2021 Exige, the Final Editions offered in - but not limited to - Metallic White, as per the 2011 Frankfurt show car where the V6 S3 was launched, and Metallic Orange, like the first press car in 2000. 


For this year, the Sport 390 Exige replaces the Sport 350, packing another 47bhp for 397bhp in total - or 402hp in new money. Powering a car weighing just 1,138kg, Lotus reckons the Sport 390 can reach 60mph in just 3.7 seconds and a top speed of 172mph. Forged wheels are standard, with Michelin Pilot Sport 4 tyres wrapped around them.  

Similarly, the Sport 420 replaces an old model - in this case the Sport 410. With an extra 10bhp (and 426 metric horsepower in total) and less aggressive aero than the Cup 430 flagship, it’s actually the fastest of the 2021 range, with a top speed of 180mph. In fact, the Sport 420 borrows a lot from the Cup, with the Nitron dampers, Cup 2 tyres, J-hook brake discs with AP calipers and Eibach adjustable anti-roll bars. It even weighs the same 1,110kg, so if last slivers of aero enhanced grip aren’t a priority (and you can live without the titanium exhaust), the Sport 420 looks like more than enough Exige for most. All three get the TFT dash, too. 

The Final Edition Exige range starts at £64,000 for the Sport 390, rising to £79,900 for the Sport 420 and £100,600 for the Cup. The cars are all on sale now, Lotus suggesting nothing more for the moment than that all will be “built in limited numbers”. Still, given the specs of all five and their status as the very last ones ever, best move fast - they surely won’t hang around for long.







Author
Discussion

Aftershox

Original Poster:

397 posts

159 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
Actually end of the era here. Really interested to see the new Elise.

The one thing which will always stop me buying a current gen Elise/Exige is the safety. In a world where SUV's are the new norm you'll get into very dangerous situations very quickly.

smilo996

2,795 posts

171 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
Never in the field (turnips in this case) of automotive development has such a small company managed to extract so many versions from such a small range of cars. Good for them, these two and three cars have been wringed until completely dry of possible versions and what superb cars they are too.

Holgate86

464 posts

41 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
Hopefully the new 131 will live up to the finest points of the old cars, and Lotus stay true to their roots.

Enjoyed every mile in my Elise S3 220 Sport, only issue I had was getting in and out of the car.

Cheap to run and service, and I lost very little money over two years when I came to sell it.

Type R Tom

3,888 posts

150 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
smilo996 said:
Never in the field (turnips in this case) of automotive development has such a small company managed to extract so many versions from such a small range of cars. Good for them, these two and three cars have been wringed until completely dry of possible versions and what superb cars they are too.
I think Pagani had a good go at it too with the Zonda

GrJa

146 posts

44 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
Feels like there’s a little bit of number manipulation there. Sport 390 has almost the same performance stats as outgoing 350, but produces over 45bhp more and barely any weight difference.

Edited by GrJa on Monday 8th February 10:37

Crazy4557

674 posts

195 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
I wonder how many of these variants will get tucked away unused as 'investments'?

GrJa

146 posts

44 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
I know of one that won’t be...

cypriot

475 posts

100 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
interesting that the evora isnt getting a final edition.... does that mean the evora will live on in some form? will the new car set to be released later in the year be based off the evora then? Either way, exciting times. I would love an exige. It would be one of those cars that you come back to drive in 30 years when everything is electric and numb!

CABC

5,588 posts

102 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
in 20 years time we'll look back at the cars we owned and drove during days of ice. For me i'm certain memories of the Elise will be up there, along with banzai experiences in supercars costing 5x more for the thrills it gave.
i hope the Elise is still in the garage.

kambites

67,580 posts

222 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
cypriot said:
will the new car set to be released later in the year be based off the evora then?
I strongly suspect the new car will be VVA based but that doesn't mean a great deal - VVA is more of a methology for constructing the platform than a platform as such.

Baldchap

7,664 posts

93 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
The new Elise will meet USA crash and pedestrian safety requirements. That presumably means it'll be taller and heavier.

Get one while you can. End of an era right here.

kambites

67,580 posts

222 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
Baldchap said:
The new Elise will meet USA crash and pedestrian safety requirements. That presumably means it'll be taller and heavier.
I'd be astonished if the new car comes in under 1100kg.

wildatheart

160 posts

180 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
cypriot said:
interesting that the evora isnt getting a final edition
Article states there's one coming

Vee12V

1,334 posts

161 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
cypriot said:
interesting that the evora isnt getting a final edition.... does that mean the evora will live on in some form? will the new car set to be released later in the year be based off the evora then? Either way, exciting times. I would love an exige. It would be one of those cars that you come back to drive in 30 years when everything is electric and numb!
From the press release:

"As revealed last month, the Lotus Evora has also entered its final year of production. Further announcements about plans to celebrate this model will be announced in due course."

esuuv

1,323 posts

206 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
cypriot said:
interesting that the evora isnt getting a final edition....
First paragraph says to follow later in the year…..

pycraft

781 posts

185 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
Baldchap said:
The new Elise will meet USA crash and pedestrian safety requirements. That presumably means it'll be taller and heavier.

Get one while you can. End of an era right here.
I thought I'd read an interview with a Lotus higherup saying they weren't replacing the Elise (presumably, as in "selling a new car at that price point")

TinyTiny

171 posts

39 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
The Elise in particular looks almost perfectly spec'd. Henry Catchpole just squeezed out a video for Carfection about it.

suffolk009

5,418 posts

166 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
I trotted off to the Lotus website, to play with their configurator. Unsurprisingly, Lotus haven't caught up with themselves (quick screeshot at 10.50am 08/02).


kambites

67,580 posts

222 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
pycraft said:
I thought I'd read an interview with a Lotus higherup saying they weren't replacing the Elise (presumably, as in "selling a new car at that price point")
A matter of semantics I guess. The three current cars are being discontinued and the new car is going to span roughly the same price range as all of them; some would argue that makes it a replacement for all three, although it clealry has to be very different than at least one of the cars it's replacing.

I suspect it'll get a new name (or the resurrection of an old one) to differentiate it from the current cars.

Maccmike8

1,035 posts

55 months

Monday 8th February 2021
quotequote all
The red one in picture 5 looks epic.