Recent Updates

 

01/09/2025 12:00 AM

The best small electric cars - driven, rated and ranked

 

01/08/2025 12:00 PM

Xpeng to bring seven-seat X9 'starship' and G9 to UK in 2026

 

01/08/2025 12:00 PM

Rolls-Royce invests £300m at Goodwood ahead of second EV in 2025

 

01/08/2025 12:00 PM

My Week In Cars: New Steve Cropley/Matt Prior podcast (ep.122)

 

01/08/2025 12:00 PM

Honda to give each new EV a "distinct character" with unique design

 

01/08/2025 12:00 PM

New 2025 Skoda Enyaq brings design and interior refresh

 

01/08/2025 12:00 PM

Autocar magazine 8 January: on sale now

 

01/08/2025 12:00 AM

BMW reveals radical panoramic iDrive system for Neue Klasse cars

 

01/08/2025 12:00 AM

Futuristic Honda concept previews Tesla Model Y rival for 2026

 

01/07/2025 12:00 PM

Suzuki Vitara

<<    43   44   45   46   47   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 6254   Next >
Our favourite cars of 2024: Analogue Automotive Supersport
Tuesday, Dec 24, 2024 12:00 PM
opinion richard lane fave car 2024 We never thought the fabulous S1 Lotus Elise needed improvement, but this £100k restomod proved us wrong

I was worried I wasn’t going to like the Analogue Automotive Supersport, which is why I left it alone for as long as possible at this year’s big ‘Handling Day’ contest at Cadwell Park.

The S1 Lotus Elise in its original form is quite good, quirks and all, and Analogue’s £100,000 restomod seemed likely to be needlessly hard work and a bit tetchy, so I wasn’t in any rush to try it out.

It turns out my intuition was wrong. Not spectacularly wrong, because I still think an unfettled S1 Elise in good nick is an exceptional thing on the road and just as fun whether you want to mooch along or thrash the thing as hard as possible. But when you’re really in the mood or, even better, have a race track to hand, the Supersport is about as sweet as driving gets.

The car is astonishingly direct and raw but not remotely tiring to drive flat-out. It just flows as an extension of yourself, with lots of grip but without feeling locked down into the track surface.

And that overhauled K-series engine – putting out 210bhp at 7250rpm – is an utter monster.

Fair play to Analogue, because an S1 restmod isn’t the easiest sell on paper, but the reality of driving one really is something you'll never forget.

< Prev    of 6254   Next >
Leave a Comment
* Name
* Email (will not be published)
*
Click on me to change image  * Enter verification code (Click on the CAPTCHA to refresh the image!)
* - Reqiured fields