New Lotus Exige Sport 350
Lotus
just keeps the new Exige variants coming, with the latest being the Sport 350,
the successor of the Exige S.
Lotus now
offers the Exige Sport 350 to replace the old S version. The new model is 51 kg
lighter that the already light car it replaces, now tipping the scales at
1125 kg.
The
weight reduction came after the company’s engineers weighed every component in
the Exige S model in order to find where they could save weight. The result is
a new louvered tailgate panel, a lighter battery, lightweight engine mounts, a
new centre console with the shift mechanism exposed, “optimized” sound
insulation and even lighter pipework in the heating, ventilating and
air-conditioning systems.
The
supercharged 3.5-litre V6 engine continues to make 345 hp and 295 lb-ft of
torque, enabling the Exige Sport 350 to accelerate to 0-100 km/h in 3.9 seconds and on to a top speed of 274 km/h.
Other
changes include a heavily revised manual gearbox which now offers a more
precise and quicker shifting by using lighter cast aluminum machined components
which are now exposed thanks to the new design feature of the center console.
Customers
can opt for a six-speed automatic gearbox with forged aluminum paddles behind
the steering wheel, offering slightly quicker acceleration from 0-100 km/h in 3.8 seconds.
The
new louvered tailgate helps the engine bay to stay cool while the aero agenda
of the new Exige Sport 350 offers 42 kg of real downforce at 160 km/h. A
set of firmer dampers and a revised geometry are taking advantage of the
lighter car, helping the Lotus Exige Sport 350 to lap Hethel test track 2.5
seconds quicker than the Exige S model it replaces, scoring 1 min 29.8 seconds.
This makes it the first production Lotus to go under the 1 min 30 sec mark around
the company’s test track.
The
cabin now features revised switchgear for the Dynamic Performance Management
system, the engine’s start button and lights switch while there are new trim
packs on offer, including red or yellow Tartan, a heritage scheme first
introduced in the 1976 Esprit S1. Lotus
also offers as an option a set of lightweight forged alloy wheels which drop
the kerb weight a further 5 kg, crossed drilled and vented two-piece brake
discs (another 5 kg off the weight scales), black or yellow four-piston brake
calipers, air-conditioning and an in-car entertainment system among others.
The new Lotus Exige Sport 350 will go on sale in Europe in February 2016 while it will reach the North American market by March 2016.