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Evo Magazine (August 04 Issue) - 'Trackday Car of the Year 2004'
Fourteen of the most uncompromising
performance cars available, brought together in the definitve test
of the year's best trackday machines
We're living in an age where track time has never been easier
or cheaper to come by. There are at least a dozen companies offering
anything from track time on airfields to the best circuits the UK
and Europe have to offer, while the increasing popularity of high-octane
corporate entertainment epitomised by events held at the Bedford
Autodrome, means more of us are getting turned on to the thrills
of trackdays.
And there's never been a better choice of machinery either. With
specialist low-volume car builders and mainstream manufacturers
alike slaking our thirst for speed, the chances are there's a car
to suit your pocket and your needs, whether you fancy doing one
or two trackdays a year or a couple every month.
For this year's TCOTY we've endeavoured to gather the freshest,
fastest and most diverse selection of trackday cars together in
one pitlane. From an everyday hot hatch, similarly street-friendly
sports and supercars to more specialised road-legal trackday favourites
and thinly-veiled racing cars, we've got the lot.
As ever, our aim isn't simply to find the car with the quickest
lap time, although we have put every car against the clock. With
Evo's racer Phil Bennett behind the wheel and Racelogic's fantastic
V-BOX data-logging equipment hooked up, we can deliver an unrivalled
organic and electronic picture of each car's best-on-the-limit lap.
However, because the rigours of extracting the absolute maximum
from yourself and the car have more to do with qualifying laps than
the true spirits of trackday driving, we're continuing to put a
heavy emphasis on entertainment: how the car appeals to owners and
the fun it provides when you're lapping the track.
Finally, because we know you're likely to encounter bad weather
at some point during the UK trackday season, we've driven the cars
in conditions ranging from sweltering 90 degree heat to rainstorms
of Biblical intensity, racking up more than 400 laps of Bedford
Autodrome's fiendish 1.7-mile West Circuit in the process; and all
so that we can decide on one thing: Evo's Trackday Car of the Year
2004.
Road Legal Racers
R500 vs Grinnall vs Radical SR4
A fascinating trio this: the old school represented by Caterham's
fire-breathing 2-litre K-series-engined R500 Evolution, the new-school
by Radical's bike-engined SR4 and the leftfield by Grinnall's starling
and massively powerful Scorpion IV.
Let's start with the old. If you've never driven a Caterham before,
the immediacy is a little unnerving, but the beauty of a Seven,
whether it's a Classic or an R500, is that once you get dialled-in
it's a totally natural, instinctive car to drive.
The highly-tuned K-series starts with a percussive cough then leaps
at every prod of the throttle. Slot first with the stubby gearlever,
stare down the long louvered bonnet, aim at the horizon and let
your right foot work with the trigger.
Bang! This is a Seven like no other. Big grunt fused with a crazy
top-end, pops and bangs punctuating every upshift, acceleration
gently rearranging the position of your internal organs, brain struggling
to keep pace. Who cares if the weather's turned the West Circuit
into a scene from The Perfect Storm? No matter that the R500 Evo
has such a surfeit of grunt over grip you can get the tail dancing
through fifth-gear corners. Just pull on a dry-suit and get stuck
in.
Unfortunately, when the weather improves and we have to set a time,
the R500 Evo becomes a victim of it's own success. Having broken
the 0-100mph-0 world record just a few days earlier, and with little
or no time to tailor the Evo for Bedford, the specialised set-up
blights the car with tragic understeer on warm, dry tarmac.
What a contrast driving the SR4. Low-slung like a mini Le Mans prototype,
the anticipation of driving any Radical is always a huge buzz. Climb
in, recline into the moulded seat, strain to see over the screen
and fire it up. Push the sequential lever forward for first, stoke
up a few thousand revs, hold the throttle for-steady, feed in the
clutch and feel the whole car zizz with impatience.
In typical Radical fashion, the car is immaculately prepared and
in optimum spec, complete with a 250bhp, 1500cc Suzuki-derived Powertec
motor. Squeeze the power in first, lift fractionally and give the
gearlever a firm tug back to find second, then punch hard on the
throttle and hold tight. Your head snaps back, spindly neck muscles
powerless against the forces of g.
Despite the aggressive shape, the SR4 generates little downforce,
(not what we found in the MIRA wind tunnel - Mick) but running on
Avon ACB 10 tyres it still absolutely murders the corners. Braking
can be left absurdly late and you can pitch it into fast and slow
corners with equal commitment. But what's more impressive is its
friendliness; it encourages rather than intimidates so you can feel
more and more comfortable with its performance. Even when you overstep
the mark it slides smoothly and progressively. A rare combination
indeed, especially in a mid-engined car.
Finally the Grinnall. Well-known for building
the uniquely entertaining three-wheel motorbike-powered Scorpion,
Mark Grinnall's Scorpion IV is, as the numerical name suggests,
his first stab at a four-wheeled machine. Sharing the three-wheeler's
signature styling and exposed driving position, the Scorpion IV
is a startling-looking car. Powered by a mid-mounted Audi 1.8 turbo
engine, boosted to a knee-trembling 362bhp, the flyweight Scorpion
boasts a power-to-weight ratio of well over 500bhp per ton. Judging
by the look on Bennett's face after his laps, it appeals to his
masochistic side.
Having witnessed his type-smoking laps,
I'm a bit keyed-up at the prospect of following in his tracks. The
Scorpion's driving position does little to calm me down: the low-cut
sides and distoration-prone windscreen being the primary nerve-janglers.
And then you feel the full force of that monster motor and all thoughts
of falling out of the thing evaporate. Mother of God it's quick!
With enough grunt that it can break traction in fifth-gear corners,
you're forever caught in the crossfire between the warring factions
of tyres and torque. It's a wild ride for sure, but considering
the rawness of the set-up it's promising the sense the basics are
definitely in place.
Grip, response and balance are good. More feel will come with geometry
work, and with a limited-slip differential and a bit of engine mapping
work to tame the torque and power curves, the Scopion will be a
force to be reckoned with.
| |
R500 Evo
|
GRINNALL |
RADICAL SR4 |
| Engine |
In-line 4cyl, 1998cc |
In-line 4cyl, 1998cc Turbo |
In-line 4cyl, 1500cc |
| Max Power |
250bhp@ 8000rpm |
362bhp @ 6800rpm |
250bhp @ 9000rpm |
| Max Torque |
190lb ft @ 4000rpm |
296lb ft @ 6100rpm |
130lb ft @ 8000rpm |
| Power-to-Weight |
552bhp/ton |
543bhp/ton |
550bhp/ton |
| Top Speed |
148mph (claimed) |
155mph (restricted) |
160mph (est) |
| 0-60mph |
3.9sec (claimed) |
3.4sec (est) |
3.5sec (est) |
| Price |
£ 42,000 |
From £ 25,000 |
From £ 27,000 |
Trackprototypes
JP1 vs Radical SR3 Turbo
Titans of the trackday these two cars sit at the absolute pinnacle
of performance. The JP1 is an unusual machine. Having started life
as a pure-bred racing car (the Zeus Challenger), it then evolved
into a corporate entertainment tool, gaining Jaguar V6 power in
the process. Now, with the prestige of Jaguar power and Jonathan
Palmer's endorsement and its unrivalled Le Mans-like looks, the
JP1 has established itself as the most exclusive trackday car in
the paddock.
And, this is the most extreme example yet. Built to it's owners
exacting specification, this version is much lighter - thanks to
all-carbon bodywork and lighter wheels - and more powerful, thanks
to attention from Cosworth Engineering that lifts peak power and
torque from 277bhp and 230lb ft to 336bhp and 251lb ft. Bigger brakes
and wider track suspension completes the picture. Oh, and the price?
In excess of £70k, although a standard JP1 can be yours for
£48,527.
There's something about the JP1 that makes you pull on your harness
a little tighter. The looks, the noise, the substantial weight to
all the controls. This is no jump-in-and-have-a-laugh machine. Even
the normally jovial Bennett needs to focus on the job in hand as
he prepares to set the time.
Having posted a mighty impressive 67sec lap, he's perfectly placed
to make the distinction between this level of car and the rest.
'Unlike the more road-oriented stuff, the JP1 (and Radical) are
more about set-up changes than fundamental flaws. Maybe a camber
change or some aero tweaks would improve it through high-speed corners,
as this car has entry, mid-corner and exit understeer. Where this
car is absolutely stellar, though, is high-speed braking into low-speed
corners entries. It's so stable it extends your confidence to point
you never thought existed? Could this really be the car to burst
Radical's bubble?' There's only one way to find out.....
Having undergone almost a year of development since it set the Nordschleife
lap record, the SR3T is a very different animal to the original
car. A smoother build-up of boost works the chassis more progressively,
which helps through the Palmer Curves, while an increase in power
from 260bhp to a whopping 330 ensures it fires down the straights
with even more conviction. There have also been aerodynamics improvements.
The result is mind-blowing.
'This car simply grabs the track and kicks its head in', says a
buzzing Bennett after logging a spectacular 65sec lap. 'Hell, it
fast. Fast to the point when new things become apparent. You may
read about aerodynamic helmets and dismiss them as gimmicky, but
in cars like this they're essential.'
Where did the time come over the JP1? The data trace tells the detailed
story, but for Bennett it's in the Radical's more confidence-inspiring
set-up.
'The big ace the SR3T has is simply it's ability to dispatch high-speed
corners. In the JP1 your brain won't allow the throttle to be pressed
any harder until you feel happy that the front-end has hooked-up.
In the Radical you just know the front is nailed, and that you can
deal with the rear, so you think 'happy days' and send her in.'
Despite the power claims, the JP1 never feels as vibrant as the
Radical, a sense reflected in its comparative lack of straight-line
speed. Whether this is down to an excess of downforce, and therefore
drag or optimistic claims we've not sure.
Pitting yourself against either car produces an intoxicating mix
of emotions. It's a fine line between exhilaration and fear, and
it's a line that these cars revel in blurring. Bennett hits the
nail on the head when he says: 'I've never tried hard drugs, but
I reckon these cars are the equivalent. You hear cocaine addicts
talking about that first mind-blowing rush, only for it to diminish
with every subsequent hit. Lapping these cars is a bit like that.
You're blown away at the first, then the speed and grip almost becomes
normal. It's not of course, but you still find yourself chasing
that first buzz in vain.'
If you've got the means to buy one of these monsters then you're
more likely to visit Spa than Snetterton, at which point a JP1 or
SR3T makes a lot more sense, but they inhabit an atmosphere too
rarefied for most of us. That said, whatever your ability level,
both expose you to a whole new kind of intensity. If Gordon Brown
knew the thrill these cars can deliver he'd put a tax on adrenalin.
| |
JP1 |
SR3 TURBO |
| Engine |
V6, 2967cc |
In-line 4cyl, 1500cc |
| Max Power |
336bhp @7500rpm
|
330bhp @ 9000rpm |
| Max Torque |
251lb ft @ 6500rpm |
220lb ft @ 7000rpm |
| Power-to-Weight |
525bhp/ton |
600bhp/ton |
| Top Speed |
170mph (est) |
170mph (est) |
| 0-60mph |
c.3sec (est) |
3.1sec (est) |
| Price |
c. £70,000 (see text) |
£54,050 inc VAT |
Conclusion
With each year that passes the gap between what are, in isolation
, extremely capable occasional trackday cars and the ever-intensifying
breed of dedicated trackday machines widens. This year it's not
so much a gap as the Grand Canyon.
Take a glance down the lap times and you'll see the fastest - Radical
SR3's SR3 Turbo - is 23sec per lap faster than the Renault Clio
182. Put in more graphic terms, on the West Circuit you could be
driving the plucky Clio absolutely flat-out and still the satanic
black Radical would be filling your mirrors every three laps.....
While that says a great deal for Radical's awesome pace, it also
illustrates perfectly how frustrating such an immense performance
advantage would prove on your average trackday. Conversely, you
could pound around all day in the Clio and not be baulked by slower
traffice once. As it happens, neither car has won the coveted TCOTY
title this year.
Despite being front-wheel drive, if you accept the Clio's inherent
traction limitations in slow corners there's fun to be had hustling
this prickly little hatchback through the high-speed stuff. Ultimately,
though, if you decide to get serious about trackdays you'd soon
outgrow the Clio.
You could level the same criticism at the Elise 111R. Obviously
it feels a more deft machine than the Renault, but its road-honed
dynamics are so polished that it lacks the drama you would surely
come to crave.
The clock says there's not much between the Elise and its cousin,
the VXR220, but nothing could be further from the truth. Had the
rip-snorting VXR not tripped Bedford's noise meters before hitting
its stride, we're confident it would have comfortably eclipsed the
Exige's time.
Judged thus it's impressively quick, but sacrifices much of its
road ability in the process. Positively evil in the wet, we reckon
it's gone a stage too far for its target audience.
We were pleased to welcome two newcomers to this year's TCOTY in
the unmistakable shapes of the Deronda and the Grinnall Scorpion
V.
Interestingly, both use Audi's blown four-cylinder 1.8-litre motor,
albeit in wildly different states of tune, and likewise both are
far from finished articles.
This is most apparent in the case of the Deronda, which needs some
fundamental handling issues addressing and much-improved detailing
if it's to be taken seriously in an increasingly competitive market.
That said, if the chassis set-up is improved it clearly has potential.
The Grinnall is a different animal altogether. With all the basics
in place, the Scorpion IV feels much more together, much closer
to being sorted, It;s nothing short of ballistic, but needs more
than a little taming. As Phil Bennett says: 'Lairy sums up the Grinnall,
but it was so much fun too. I think it will be fantastic with more
development.'
One car that should have done much better is the Caterham R500 Evo.
While it stood no chance of worrying the JP1 and SR3 Turbo for outright
pace, had the Seven been properly sorted it would have lapped considerably
faster, while experience tells us that a well set-up Seven rewards
like few other cars. Suffice to say we'll re-test it as soon as
we can.
All three exotic supercars prove that plenty of power, a charismatic
engine note and distinctive dynamics make for a meaty, memorable
trackday experience. All three demand good car control skills, but
as your confidence grows so too does your pace and enjoyment.
We knew the Ferrari's excessive noise would be a problem and it
was, hence the session at Oulton Park where it shone more brightly
than expected. Ironically, though extremely rapid, we found the
most track-focused Noble yet a good deal less enjoyable that we'd
expected while the 911 GT3 RS put in a typically classy performance.
In truth, if you want this kind of car for regular trackday use
you'd be better off buying a three-year old GT3 Cup or 360 Challenge
racecar and saving yourself a heap of cash. That said, if you've
got an RS or Stradale in your garage, we can think of few more desirable
road cars to take on a pilgrimage to Spa or the Nürburgring.
Except perhaps a JP1 or a Radical SR3 Turbo. Both stretch the 'road
car' tag to the absolute limit but if you've got the necessary £60-70k
(The SR3T is up for sale for £44K - Mick) to spend on what
is, to all intents and purposes, a racecar for trackday, then you
won't mind forking out for the Range Rover and Brian James Race
Shuttle trailer to go with it.
There's no denying it's one oflife's great experiences attempting
to push these cars anywhere near their limits. But the truth is,
if you can get the best from either you'd have a much better time
actually racing them. And if you can't, where's the fun in just
scratching the surface? (If you're not a racer this is as much fun
as it gets, trust me - Mick).
That leaves our top three, and few would have predicted it pre-test.
We've tried a number of Ariel Atoms over the years and, though we
love the concept, as the cars have grown from the original's 118bhp
K-series to last year's 220bhp Honda VTEC screamer we've generally
enjoyed the experience less and less.
Thank God that Ariel didn't listen to us, for it would never have
built the wailing 275bhp supercharged Honda VTEC-powered model tested
here. To be fair, Ariel took our criticism of the chassis on board
and has subsequently been tireless in honing its dynamics. Now,
coupled with that breaktaking engine, the Atom's come good in spectacular
style.
In Silver medal position is the Lotus Exige, and Phil Bennett will
hate us for this, as he found little to commend either the Exige
or Elise, bemoaing the lack of accessible power and torque from
the Toyota engine, the understeer-led handling balance and nannying
ABS brakes. While all of this is true, for those of you who can
only justify the purchase of a second car if
a) you can happily cover meaningful, regular, any-weather road mileage
in it
b) it doesn't look like it's been assembled from a Morris Marina
and a stack of old chair legs
c) it's not something that requires regular, major maintenance,
and
d) you're solely lacking Bennett's remarkably hirsute arse, then
the beautifully balanced Exige hits the spot
All of which leaves just one car: the Radical SR4. True, it's not
what most of us would describe as a road car ( I would - Mick),
but then only a handful of this year's are, and one of those costs
£90k, another £140K. The next time you go to a trackday,
look around the paddock. You'll be amazed at how many people trailer
their cars.
What clinches the victory for the SR4 is that not only does it deliver
much of the full-on sensory buzz you get from its big brother the
SR3 Turbo, but you get a greater level of involvement and exploitable,
forgiving, addictive power-oversteer. Consequently you don't need
the skill and commitment of a pro-driver to do it justice.
And with prices starting at £27,000, nor do you need a trust
find to pay for it.
| LAP TIMES |
|
| Radical SR3 Turbo |
65.70 |
| Jaguar JP1 Evo |
67.30 |
| Radical SR4 |
71.55 |
| Ariel Atom 275 |
75.30 |
| Noble M400 |
76.50 |
| Porsche 911 GT3 RS |
76.80 |
| Grinnall Scorpion IV |
77.40 |
| Caterham R500 Evo |
77.40 |
| Lotus Exige S2 |
81.75 |
| Deronda F400 |
81.85 |
| Vauxhall VXR220 |
82.05 |
| Lotus Elise 111R |
82.80 |
| Renault Clio 182 |
88.75 |
| Ferrari 360 CS |
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