It looks great, for starters. The basic body and chassis remain the same for the Exige’s transformation from 350 to 380, but the body has been dressed with lashings of carbonfibre. Lip spoiler, front splitter, front access panel, removable hard-top (an option worth having over the standard soft-top), diffuser and its airblades are all made of the stuff, and there’s a stonking great fixed rear wing, too.
All of those parts help to reduce the weight; the car comes in at 25kg less than the Exige Sport 350 (which is still on sale), at just 1066kg dry with all the lightweight options ticked, including the titanium exhaust (a 9.2kg saving) and you’re going to want that for the noise it makes alone. Few cars have as characterful a tone as this, certainly not anything from a certain German maker of small mid-engined sports cars.
That new aero package also helps to create lots of downforce – perfect for taking high-speed corners on track at speeds that feel barely plausible. You will most likely be doing so if you’re an Exige owner, because most head to the track with their car, and those who do are able to spec the optional Track Pack and its adjustable Nitron two-way dampers and Eibach anti-roll bars.
Even without them, you have a car that is as fast, fun and involving as they come. No one would have stepped out of an Exige Sport 350 and been crying out for more performance, but the Exige Sport 380 has an extra 30bhp and 7lb ft of torque. You really feel it, too, the revised delivery of the torque, in particular, allowing the Exige to punch harder and for longer up the rev range, yet still in a linear and controlled manner. This is a car that involves you in the ride, not one that merely brings you along for one.
The Exige’s compact dimensions help. This remains such an intimate car to drive, with a directness of steering that no rival can match. The same goes for the suppleness of its ride. That was true of the Exige Sport 350, and so it is here, too. It may be a hardcore sports car, but you won’t be swerving to avoid drain covers or worrying about holes in the road for fear of a trip to the chiropractor, and it’s perfectly usable around town, with well-judged control weights.
Even the lightweight carbonfibre-backed sports seats are comfortable enough for longer journeys and, at the start and end of the journey, you’ll find it easier to get in and out of the car thanks to the lower sills. It’s easier getting in than out, but both are better than before. Lotus will make you some bespoke luggage so you can tackle a few nights away on your journey, too.
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Light-headed
Tremendous.
If you need earplugs to drive it on the road