Clip from Perfect DayThat was a funny movie!! "Road Hog", not the name of the Laurel n Hardy flick but one of 3 vignettes in the story. Worth looking up..![]()

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Clip from Perfect DayThat was a funny movie!! "Road Hog", not the name of the Laurel n Hardy flick but one of 3 vignettes in the story. Worth looking up..![]()
I’ve never owned a Lotus so the Emira will (maybe) be my first. I’ve heard driving a Lotus is a raw, visceral and wild experience. So maybe it’s only fitting that Lotus has taken this same route to deal with both it’s customer base and dealer network. If I get nothing more out of my Lotus journey than to experience the passion of this forum’s members then that will suffice. I solute you all on your dedication to the Lotus brand. I only hope Lotus will reciprocate and realize that it’s you people that are truly “the Lotus drivers”.To be fair (no offence Tom) at least they seem to be towing one line now.
I'd be slightly aggrieved if Lotus changed their mind yet again and let folk push their deposit back to other models after saying categorically they wouldn't.
There doesn’t appear to be a set point in the production process where they issue the checkout email. Some had it when car not in build, some when in build and some when built.I had understood that one doesn’t get a check out email until the car is rolling off the production line. The up to 30 days is then for sorting out PDI, finance etc and scheduling the delivery date. So if you don’t check out once you have received the email then Lotus have a car sat there not being paid for. I guess there comes a point when if you don’t check out after a period of time, Lotus have to move on as they have a car to sell.
I don’t suppose many people get to that point and dont proceed.
Having said that, Lotus do not appear to be meeting the 30 day period due to significant backlogs in PDI for reasons unknown.
They specifically said there would be flexibility, within some parameters and constraints.It feels like they thought they'd be able to offer some flexibility - might have felt immense market pressure in the UK to offer such flexibility considering the fact that the UK buyers are early production "test subjects". One of the perks would be the ability to drive the cars and adjust their specs without being diverted all the way back to the very end of the line. They are finding this very difficult to manage and are therefore giving pushback to those who are wanting to avail themselves of this promised flexibility.
To be fair (no offence Tom) at least they seem to be towing one line now.
I'd be slightly aggrieved if Lotus changed their mind yet again and let folk push their deposit back to other models after saying categorically they wouldn't.
That's my point it hasn't been test driven for years. The show car at Goodwood was powered by an electric motor and the running grey car was a handbuilt prototype. They didnt start having access to the VP cars until end of 2021 only 6 months before they said they were going to be delivering customer cars. I have always understood that major companies expect to do testing and final development over two years before production, not 6 months. Add in 'global' expansion, EV work and an new production line and paint shop and an almost impossible task.Did they rush it, it’s been out being test driven for years, you’d think the team driving the cars would have noticed these issues folks are getting.
After getting booted off the C8 forum for the second time in a month I concur about this placeI’ve never owned a Lotus so the Emira will (maybe) be my first. I’ve heard driving a Lotus is a raw, visceral and wild experience. So maybe it’s only fitting that Lotus has taken this same route to deal with both it’s customer base and dealer network. If I get nothing more out of my Lotus journey than to experience the passion of this forum’s members then that will suffice. I solute you all on your dedication to the Lotus brand. I only hope Lotus will reciprocate and realize that it’s you people that are truly “the Lotus drivers”.
After getting booted off the C8 forum for the second time in a month I concur about this place
To be fair, striped tube socks tend to chafe when your middle-aged cankles are that big. No amount of New Balance comfort can compensate.Lol the oldsters always (I mean every 3 weeks) start a z51 v no z51 pkg argument they get mad when I make fun
To manage your expectations the Emira is at best one of those three and realistically none.I’ve never owned a Lotus so the Emira will (maybe) be my first. I’ve heard driving a Lotus is a raw, visceral and wild experience.
Take the car then put a deposit in for the I4. When the I4 comes around you can have your pickSo I've had confirmation from Lotus - I had my checkout email before xmas and wanted to be put on the I4 FE queue.
They have told me its a case of take it or leave it. -id have to put a new deposit on an I4 and go to the back of the Q.
I have till tomorrow to decide on receiving my car or getting my deposit back.
what he saidTo manage your expectations the Emira is at best one of those three and realistically none.
The closest to rawness was in my view lack of refinement (wind, road and clutch noise).
Visceral? Not sure, for me driving the car was more instinctive, nothing bar clutch felt 'wrong' or needed conscious input.
As for being wild, that would only happen I was having to return to dealer for fixing issues that weren't there or using a laptop to start the car. It's a pussy cat (edit to note that being a pussy cat isn't a bad thing in a car used daily nor for touring, it's not even a bad thing if when you use it as a 'true' sports car I comes alive - with a crappy route and cold/wet test drive I couldn't explore that, but Harry certainly thinks so - not that I personally agree with his views of the car, not think he is being 100% transparent and honest in his reviews).
To manage your expectations the Emira is at best one of those three and realistically none.
The closest to rawness was in my view lack of refinement (wind, road and clutch noise).
Visceral? Not sure, for me driving the car was more instinctive, nothing bar clutch felt 'wrong' or needed conscious input.
As for being wild, that would only happen I was having to return to dealer for fixing issues that weren't there or using a laptop to start the car. It's a pussy cat (edit to note that being a pussy cat isn't a bad thing in a car used daily nor for touring, it's not even a bad thing if when you use it as a 'true' sports car I comes alive - with a crappy route and cold/wet test drive I couldn't explore that, but Harry certainly thinks so - not that I personally agree with his views of the car, not think he is being 100% transparent and honest in his reviews).
Clarifying: the Emira feels like your Hellcat or whatever your car is when revving out? Seems like a very, very different animal.Please speak for yourself. I would classify the Emira as raw and visceral based on the immense feedback through the chassis. Not as much as older Lotus but still profound compared to anything else currently on sale that's not an Ariel atom / KTM / Caterham. And at redline, I'd call it wild. In the same realm as the manic 6.4L V8 / 6-spd combo in my other vehicle, which genuinely shocked me.
Clarifying: the Emira feels like your Hellcat or whatever your car is when revving out? Seems like a very, very different animal.