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- Lotus Elise Get Reinvented as 600 kg and Single-seat ‘VHPK’
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It has been thirty years since the original Lotus Elise stunned the world at the 1995 Frankfurt Motor Show. The Series 1 weighed under 725 kg yet delivered more excitement than cars with twice the power, proving once and for all that lightness mattered more than brute force.
While Lotus itself has moved on after being sold by Proton to Geely, the brand today is focused on EVs which are far removed from the lightweight philosophy that once defined it.
A small British company has chosen this milestone to pay tribute instead. The result is the Analogue Automotive VHPK, a carbon bodied single seat reinterpretation of the Elise’s purest form - basics and stripped off everything unnecessary.
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Similar to Autobytel Lotus Championship racers of the early 2000s, the VHPK places the driver at the centre - literally. The effect is not only weight savings but also a perfect sense of balance and connection, the kind that made Gordon Murray design the T.50 the same way.
Beneath its sculpted carbon skin sits a Rover K-series engine, the very powerplant that gave the original Elise its character. Here it has been enlarged to a new 1.9-litre displacement and tuned to produce around 250 hp.
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That figure may seem modest until you remember the VHPK weighs just 600 kg. The result is a staggering power to weight ratio of 400 hp/tonne, the sort of number that embarrasses modern supercars.
Some will argue a Honda K-series might have been the more logical choice, but Analogue Automotive’s decision to retain the Rover unit is deliberate, a nod to history as much as to performance.
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The car is built around a carbon monocoque, with carbon fiber wheels, carbon ceramic brakes and bespoke suspension components all working to preserve the razor sharp handling the Elise was known for.
Sitting directly over the rear axle, the driver experiences a sense of immediacy and agility that few modern cars can replicate. However, do take note, the VHPK is not intended as a daily driver or a grand tourer. It is a machine devoted entirely to the joy of driving, an undiluted interpretation of Colin Chapman’s mantra to simplify and add lightness.
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John Danby Racing Autobytel Race Lotus Elise
Only 35 examples of the VHPK will be built, each hand-made and fetch a price tag around US$475,000 (RM2.2 million), a figure that underscores its exclusivity while still undercutting the multi-million-dollar hypercars it will happily humble.
Three decades after the Elise redefined the sports car, Analogue Automotive has shown that the light-weight formula is still as intoxicating as ever. Simply put, the VHPK is not a restomod, but a love letter to how the original Elise got it right the first time.
Source: Autoblog | Carthrottle Image: John Danby Racing
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Written By
Kumeran Sagathevan
More then half his life spend being obsessed with all thing go-fast, performance and automotive only to find out he's actually Captain Slow behind the wheels...oh well!