TriShield
05-13-2008, 02:58 PM
The Ultimate Weekend Stress-Relief Program
http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.act.f34.1.500.jpg http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.act.r34.2.500.jpg
Handling and steering are just as remarkable as ever. Here is where the difference is most apparent — the 2008 Elise SC jumps out of corners like a standard Elise can't.
By Dan Edmunds, Director of Vehicle Testing
Date posted: 05-12-2008
Supercharged 1.8-liter inline-4 - 218 horsepower at 7,800 rpm - 2,028 pounds - 6-speed manual transmission
South Grade Road and East Grade Road aren't the sort of evocative names you'd expect from the best driving roads to be found anywhere. But these smooth, flowing ribbons of asphalt, known locally in San Diego County as S6 and S7, are as good as anything we see on press junkets to Spain or Italy or Germany. No, really.
Best of all, they're part of a nearby network of roads in the mountains above San Diego that make this region a weekend stomping ground for the car clubs, enthusiasts of high-strung Italian motorcycles (who have about six months to live, we figure) and the kind of drivers who can appreciate the supercharged 2008 Lotus Elise SC.
Under Pressure
http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.eng.500.jpg http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.rwindow.500.jpg
A Lotus-designed Magnuson-built Roots-type supercharger has been wedged between the 1.8-liter Toyota 2ZZ engine and the rear bulkhead. There's no intercooler, so the view out the back window is unobstructed.
So obviously we would be remiss if we didn't stomp on the loud pedal as we unwind the steering out of the next tight uphill hairpin on the way up S6 toward Mount Palomar. Squeeze the pedal is more accurate, actually, as the 2008 Lotus Elise SC's new supercharged 1.8-liter engine finally balances the equation posed by the diminutive Elise by bringing the horsepower and torque up to the level of the already-impressive chassis. Now we're talking.
Unlike the fixed-roof Lotus Exige, the Elise is defined by its open-air targa-style top and sports a functional rear window. As a result, the bulky intercooler and overhead roof scoop of the supercharged Exige couldn't be adapted here, and instead the Elise offers a non-intercooled supercharger setup built to Lotus specifications by Magnuson.
The new blower's Roots-type rotors are slightly smaller than those found in the Exige S, and the unit is wedged between the engine and the firewall in a single casting that is integral with the intake plenum. We hope you like supercharger noise, because the blower's proximity to your ear makes the flutter of the meshing rotors easy to pick out above the general din of the 16-valve DOHC 1.8-liter Toyota inline-4.
The Payoff
http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.whl.500.jpg http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.bdg.1.500.jpg
The $2,600 Sport Pack gives you lightweight forged wheels, sport-tuned Bilstein dampers and slightly livelier handling. In case you hadn't figured it out already, "SC" stands for supercharged.
What this means to the bottom line is 218 horsepower at 7,800 rpm, an increase of 15 percent over the normally aspirated engine's 190 hp. Just as important, there's 153 pound-feet of torque at just 5,500 rpm instead of 133 lb-ft at 6,800 rpm, an increase of 15 percent as well. By far the meatiest difference comes in the midrange, where about an additional 40 lb-ft of torque is available. Partial credit goes to new engine control software with intelligent variable valve timing that can switch to a more aggressive cam anywhere between 4,000 and 6,200 rpm instead of blindly making the change at 6,200 revs every time.
What this means at the test track's finish line is a 0-60 mph time of 4.9 seconds (4.6 seconds with 1 foot of rollout like on a drag strip) and a quarter-mile that comes and goes in 13.3 seconds at 103.2 mph, a few tenths quicker than the normally aspirated Elise. The Elise SC can't be had with the track-dedicated launch control system found in the Exige S240, but it does have the same trio of shift-indicator lights in the instrument binnacle that come on in sequence as you approach the redline of 8,000 rpm.
Back on the road to Mount Palomar, the extra grunt afforded by the new supercharger gives the 2008 Lotus Elise SC a power band that's so much more flexible in real-world driving that the car feels absolutely long-legged, something no Elise has ever achieved before. We don't need to row the six-speed manual gearbox quite so frantically, as the supercharged engine now has the beans to pull a taller gear out of many corners.
Fuel economy for the supercharged Elise comes in at 20 mpg in the new EPA city test and 26 mpg on the highway, 1 mpg less than a regular Elise on both cycles.
Roof, There It Isn't
http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.act.r34.1.500.jpg http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.act.prf.500.jpg
An additional rear spoiler provides the Elise SC with an additional shot of downforce for fast bends. As ever, the Elise's removable roof totally changes the Lotus experience compared to the enclosed Exige S.
All of this newfound motivation turns the Elise equation on its head. It used to be that you had to consider an Exige S to find the place in the Lotus lineup where the engine and suspension were in equilibrium. But the fixed-roof Exige S with its useless rear window and graceless ingress and egress procedure always makes us think of this car as simply a stonking good track car that possesses just a few too many compromises for use in the real world.
Since the Elise SC retains its removable top and full-view rear window, it seems so much more like the mythical four-wheel Ducati motorcycle we'd like to have on standby in the garage, the kind of device you can take out on a whim to enjoy the pure sensation of speed. Once you dispense with the roof, entry and exit is eased considerably, plus you can enjoy the open air even when you're putzing around and admiring the scenery. Unlike an Exige, the SC doesn't make you feel like you need to be on the gas all the time, so this Lotus is a whole new proposition.
Same as It Ever Was
http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.fint.500.jpg http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.seats.500.jpg
The Touring Pack is $1,600 well spent as it introduces a bit of leather, extra sound insulation, carpet and other upgrades that make the interior more livable. Part of what you get with the Sport Pack is a pair of lightweight ProBax seats already configured for a track-style seatbelt harness.
That said, the benefits of the ultra-lightweight, fine-handling chassis wrought by the folks from Hethel are still in play here. Despite being pretty much loaded with all of the major options offered by Lotus except the blasphemous hardtop, our test car registered just 2,028 pounds on our scales.
Part of the reason is the $2,600 Sport Pack option, which actually reduces the car's weight. Forged-aluminum wheels and anatomically contoured ProBax sport seats together shave about 20 pounds from the total. Meanwhile, traction control and sport-tuned Bilstein monotube dampers (non-adjustable here) don't save weight but are a significant part of this option.
The SC's double-wishbone suspension and unassisted rack-and-pinion steering are unchanged from Elise specification, so the car's handling and steering are as epic as ever pretty much every place. Even with a slightly dusty surface, our Elise SC pulled a stout 0.96g on the skid pad and bombed through our slalom cones at 72.4 mph. Stops from 60 mph used up just 110 feet. Pretty remarkable stuff, dynamically speaking.
It's no secret that ride comfort and the suppression of noise and vibration have never been this car's forte, especially if your commute includes segmented concrete freeways. That's why it's best to think of the Elise SC as the second (or third) car in your stable.
We sampled an SC without the Sport Pack, and the only significant difference we found was a slight tendency for the tail of the Sport Pack car to step out a bit if you trail-brake enthusiastically into certain bends. Once we became accustomed to it, we were able to use it to our advantage, but the standard suspension seemed a bit more forgiving without giving up much cornering ability you'd notice on a public road.
http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.act.f34.1.500.jpg http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.act.r34.2.500.jpg
Handling and steering are just as remarkable as ever. Here is where the difference is most apparent — the 2008 Elise SC jumps out of corners like a standard Elise can't.
By Dan Edmunds, Director of Vehicle Testing
Date posted: 05-12-2008
Supercharged 1.8-liter inline-4 - 218 horsepower at 7,800 rpm - 2,028 pounds - 6-speed manual transmission
South Grade Road and East Grade Road aren't the sort of evocative names you'd expect from the best driving roads to be found anywhere. But these smooth, flowing ribbons of asphalt, known locally in San Diego County as S6 and S7, are as good as anything we see on press junkets to Spain or Italy or Germany. No, really.
Best of all, they're part of a nearby network of roads in the mountains above San Diego that make this region a weekend stomping ground for the car clubs, enthusiasts of high-strung Italian motorcycles (who have about six months to live, we figure) and the kind of drivers who can appreciate the supercharged 2008 Lotus Elise SC.
Under Pressure
http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.eng.500.jpg http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.rwindow.500.jpg
A Lotus-designed Magnuson-built Roots-type supercharger has been wedged between the 1.8-liter Toyota 2ZZ engine and the rear bulkhead. There's no intercooler, so the view out the back window is unobstructed.
So obviously we would be remiss if we didn't stomp on the loud pedal as we unwind the steering out of the next tight uphill hairpin on the way up S6 toward Mount Palomar. Squeeze the pedal is more accurate, actually, as the 2008 Lotus Elise SC's new supercharged 1.8-liter engine finally balances the equation posed by the diminutive Elise by bringing the horsepower and torque up to the level of the already-impressive chassis. Now we're talking.
Unlike the fixed-roof Lotus Exige, the Elise is defined by its open-air targa-style top and sports a functional rear window. As a result, the bulky intercooler and overhead roof scoop of the supercharged Exige couldn't be adapted here, and instead the Elise offers a non-intercooled supercharger setup built to Lotus specifications by Magnuson.
The new blower's Roots-type rotors are slightly smaller than those found in the Exige S, and the unit is wedged between the engine and the firewall in a single casting that is integral with the intake plenum. We hope you like supercharger noise, because the blower's proximity to your ear makes the flutter of the meshing rotors easy to pick out above the general din of the 16-valve DOHC 1.8-liter Toyota inline-4.
The Payoff
http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.whl.500.jpg http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.bdg.1.500.jpg
The $2,600 Sport Pack gives you lightweight forged wheels, sport-tuned Bilstein dampers and slightly livelier handling. In case you hadn't figured it out already, "SC" stands for supercharged.
What this means to the bottom line is 218 horsepower at 7,800 rpm, an increase of 15 percent over the normally aspirated engine's 190 hp. Just as important, there's 153 pound-feet of torque at just 5,500 rpm instead of 133 lb-ft at 6,800 rpm, an increase of 15 percent as well. By far the meatiest difference comes in the midrange, where about an additional 40 lb-ft of torque is available. Partial credit goes to new engine control software with intelligent variable valve timing that can switch to a more aggressive cam anywhere between 4,000 and 6,200 rpm instead of blindly making the change at 6,200 revs every time.
What this means at the test track's finish line is a 0-60 mph time of 4.9 seconds (4.6 seconds with 1 foot of rollout like on a drag strip) and a quarter-mile that comes and goes in 13.3 seconds at 103.2 mph, a few tenths quicker than the normally aspirated Elise. The Elise SC can't be had with the track-dedicated launch control system found in the Exige S240, but it does have the same trio of shift-indicator lights in the instrument binnacle that come on in sequence as you approach the redline of 8,000 rpm.
Back on the road to Mount Palomar, the extra grunt afforded by the new supercharger gives the 2008 Lotus Elise SC a power band that's so much more flexible in real-world driving that the car feels absolutely long-legged, something no Elise has ever achieved before. We don't need to row the six-speed manual gearbox quite so frantically, as the supercharged engine now has the beans to pull a taller gear out of many corners.
Fuel economy for the supercharged Elise comes in at 20 mpg in the new EPA city test and 26 mpg on the highway, 1 mpg less than a regular Elise on both cycles.
Roof, There It Isn't
http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.act.r34.1.500.jpg http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.act.prf.500.jpg
An additional rear spoiler provides the Elise SC with an additional shot of downforce for fast bends. As ever, the Elise's removable roof totally changes the Lotus experience compared to the enclosed Exige S.
All of this newfound motivation turns the Elise equation on its head. It used to be that you had to consider an Exige S to find the place in the Lotus lineup where the engine and suspension were in equilibrium. But the fixed-roof Exige S with its useless rear window and graceless ingress and egress procedure always makes us think of this car as simply a stonking good track car that possesses just a few too many compromises for use in the real world.
Since the Elise SC retains its removable top and full-view rear window, it seems so much more like the mythical four-wheel Ducati motorcycle we'd like to have on standby in the garage, the kind of device you can take out on a whim to enjoy the pure sensation of speed. Once you dispense with the roof, entry and exit is eased considerably, plus you can enjoy the open air even when you're putzing around and admiring the scenery. Unlike an Exige, the SC doesn't make you feel like you need to be on the gas all the time, so this Lotus is a whole new proposition.
Same as It Ever Was
http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.fint.500.jpg http://a332.g.akamai.net/f/332/936/12h/www.edmunds.com//media/roadtests/roadtest/08.lotus.elise.sc/08.lotus.elise.sc.seats.500.jpg
The Touring Pack is $1,600 well spent as it introduces a bit of leather, extra sound insulation, carpet and other upgrades that make the interior more livable. Part of what you get with the Sport Pack is a pair of lightweight ProBax seats already configured for a track-style seatbelt harness.
That said, the benefits of the ultra-lightweight, fine-handling chassis wrought by the folks from Hethel are still in play here. Despite being pretty much loaded with all of the major options offered by Lotus except the blasphemous hardtop, our test car registered just 2,028 pounds on our scales.
Part of the reason is the $2,600 Sport Pack option, which actually reduces the car's weight. Forged-aluminum wheels and anatomically contoured ProBax sport seats together shave about 20 pounds from the total. Meanwhile, traction control and sport-tuned Bilstein monotube dampers (non-adjustable here) don't save weight but are a significant part of this option.
The SC's double-wishbone suspension and unassisted rack-and-pinion steering are unchanged from Elise specification, so the car's handling and steering are as epic as ever pretty much every place. Even with a slightly dusty surface, our Elise SC pulled a stout 0.96g on the skid pad and bombed through our slalom cones at 72.4 mph. Stops from 60 mph used up just 110 feet. Pretty remarkable stuff, dynamically speaking.
It's no secret that ride comfort and the suppression of noise and vibration have never been this car's forte, especially if your commute includes segmented concrete freeways. That's why it's best to think of the Elise SC as the second (or third) car in your stable.
We sampled an SC without the Sport Pack, and the only significant difference we found was a slight tendency for the tail of the Sport Pack car to step out a bit if you trail-brake enthusiastically into certain bends. Once we became accustomed to it, we were able to use it to our advantage, but the standard suspension seemed a bit more forgiving without giving up much cornering ability you'd notice on a public road.