Emira arriving in April, coming from a Mac 720s

Econ

New member
Joined
Mar 13, 2025
Messages
3
Reaction score
14
Hey everyone,

Checkin in from Manhattan. I recently placed a deposit on a 2025 Emira, scheduled to arrive stateside in mid-April. I'm looking forward to getting back into a Lotus. Previous fun cars, which I have since sold, include a McLaren 720s, McLaren 570s, Audi R8 V10, and a Lotus Evora 400.

The Macs, while insanely fun, were becoming too expensive to track (I do about 20 days / year), so I'm looking forward to the Emira.

Not my car, but this is essentially the spec that is coming
f854cee1b2c4e9cb5f53badbe7b1567b.jpg
 
Welcome @Econ! Which track(s) do you go to?

I'm interested in hearing your comparison and feedback once you take delivery and get some seat time (great spec btw!). I was extremely close to buying a 570S while waiting for my Emira (2+ years waiting and ended up getting an Evora GT instead). No regrets here, but those McLaren drives were certainly fun! Not sure I'd want to own one though. 💰🔥 🙃
 
I (and many others I'm sure) will be interested to know how it compares to the McLaren 720S. My guess is the drop in performance will be significant, but hopefully the driver enjoyment will not be such a drop. I'm not sure what the McLaren rev range was like? But coming from a higher reving car I was initially annoyed by constantly hitting the rev limit. But you adapt and reprogram your brain and it's fine. (Edit: this is a V6 issue, which variant are you getting?).

Servicing I find very reasonable. It's cheap compared to my Porsche, and I suspect doubly so coming from McLaren. One of the perks of using mass produced 'off the shelf' components rather than all bespoke parts.
 
Yes, I am happy to share comparisons once I get it on track. I had an evora 400 years ago, so I vaguely recall what to expect. That said, the 720s was in another league, and won't really make for a fair comparison. As for tracks, I am mainly at NYST but do Monticello, NJMP, and LR on occasion. Here is some eye candy from previous track cars. My insta is MKM.NYC for more.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_1254.webp
    IMG_1254.webp
    101.4 KB · Views: 9
  • IMG_1255.webp
    IMG_1255.webp
    504.9 KB · Views: 9
  • IMG_1257.webp
    IMG_1257.webp
    57.2 KB · Views: 10
  • IMG_1253.webp
    IMG_1253.webp
    135.4 KB · Views: 10
  • IMG_1252.webp
    IMG_1252.webp
    139.6 KB · Views: 10
I (and many others I'm sure) will be interested to know how it compares to the McLaren 720S. My guess is the drop in performance will be significant, but hopefully the driver enjoyment will not be such a drop. I'm not sure what the McLaren rev range was like? But coming from a higher reving car I was initially annoyed by constantly hitting the rev limit. But you adapt and reprogram your brain and it's fine. (Edit: this is a V6 issue, which variant are you getting?).

Servicing I find very reasonable. It's cheap compared to my Porsche, and I suspect doubly so coming from McLaren. One of the perks of using mass produced 'off the shelf' components rather than all bespoke parts.

720s revved to 8,500, so the 6,800 is going to take some time to adjust to. My Emira is a v6 manual. I'm assuming being in a more analog car again will be fun.

Mainly, it will be fun not worrying about $3K fluid changes, $1,500 in labor to change tires/alignment, and $12K brake jobs. I would have kept the 720s if I wasn't tracking it regularly.

To put 720s costs in perspective, I had 1 wheel go off-road (about a 5 inch drop) on a pretty tight turn. Ended up cracking the subframe (though it was just cosmetic damage at the time and drove it to the mclaren shop). Parts and labor was $130,000. Details here for the curious:
 
720s revved to 8,500, so the 6,800 is going to take some time to adjust to. My Emira is a v6 manual. I'm assuming being in a more analog car again will be fun.

Mainly, it will be fun not worrying about $3K fluid changes, $1,500 in labor to change tires/alignment, and $12K brake jobs. I would have kept the 720s if I wasn't tracking it regularly.

To put 720s costs in perspective, I had 1 wheel go off-road (about a 5 inch drop) on a pretty tight turn. Ended up cracking the subframe (though it was just cosmetic damage at the time and drove it to the mclaren shop). Parts and labor was $130,000. Details here for the curious:

It’s all about fun—you can still tune the Emira to 7,200 RPM. I know it’s not the 720S revs, but it’s still a bit higher than the stock 6,800 RPM. Since you’ve had an Evora 400, you know what to expect in terms of performance and maintenance. The Emira’s running costs will be 10 times cheaper than a McLaren if you’re hitting the track often—and on top of that, it’s an absolute beauty.

Congratulations
 

Create an account or login to comment

Join now to leave a comment enjoy browsing the site ad-free!

Create account

Create an account on our community. It's easy!

Log in

Already have an account? Log in here.

Back
Top