
Lotus Emira to go hybrid! | Autocar
Sports car will gain same 'Hyper Hybrid' technology being developed for the brand's luxury EVs
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
An absolutely engaging conversation, the most impactful ever on the Emira.If they go with a hybrid system, I hope they go very light on the ICE. Not gonna lie, this news makes me a little nervous.
Mr. Wolfe
While I love the Elise, and thought the Roadster was pretty cool (and now obviously extremely rare, almost never see them even here in So Cal), I can remember reading an article, maybe posted in this forum, that examined the deplorable weight balance compared to the original. I guess due to the “sled” placement of all the weight from batteries as opposed to mid-rear engine balance. Not sure if there anything in modern EV systems that could correct for this, seems you still have this same issue today (lots of heavy batteries that take up space have to be placed somewhere.Ignoring for a moment that "Lotus has confirmed it is planning a plug-in hybrid version of the Emira sports car" is an outright lie, I find it difficult to imagine a PHEV (= ICE + alternator + Motor + Battery) is going to come anywhere near the mass of the Emira. I know, I know, we are all petrol heads here, but I drove the original *2,877* lbs Tesla Roadster and it was hysterically fun. I would instantly have bought a modern version of that in an Emira body (the original Roadster is showing its age).
Its not for Geely, but it is for Lotus, thats the difference. Geely let Lotus loose with almost zero oversight and...well...you saw what happened.The US Emira launch was a mess due to a combination of incompetence and terrible luck. But Geely Auto sells more than two million cars each year— a hybrid Emira is not a massive challenge.
Just get a 2nd hand. It is great value at 85K-90K for 1000 miles car now.Thanks for checking in on this -- I was like these are some big claims without direct quotes?
I just hope the Turbo 4 stays alive for the 2027 year -- was planning on picking up an Emira around then.
Not sure what you saw but most of us saw Lotus make 2 evs costing over 100k as instructed by their overlords.Its not for Geely, but it is for Lotus, thats the difference. Geely let Lotus loose with almost zero oversight and...well...you saw what happened.
The Roadster never had a sled battery. It's a battery back behind the seats, exactly like the Evija. The weight balance may be right but I assume Lotus got it right in the Evija and thus could do the same for Emira.While I love the Elise, and thought the Roadster was pretty cool (and now obviously extremely rare, almost never see them even here in So Cal), I can remember reading an article, maybe posted in this forum, that examined the deplorable weight balance compared to the original. I guess due to the “sled” placement of all the weight from batteries as opposed to mid-rear engine balance. Not sure if there anything in modern EV systems that could correct for this, seems you still have this same issue today (lots of heavy batteries that take up space have to be placed somewhere.
In the case of a Yaris hybrid, which would include at least some potentially heavy battery storage, im wondering if that could be packaged to preserve the desired weight balance.
But then many of us come back to the subjective joy of hearing what our cars sound like at speed. (I’ve never heard a Yaris hybrid but I’m imagining it can’t compare). These options can never replace that emotion, at least as far as I’m concerned.
Not sure what you saw but most of us saw Lotus make 2 evs costing over 100k as instructed by their overlords.
Guilty as 'charged.'Not sure what you saw but most of us saw Lotus make 2 evs costing over 100k as instructed by their overlords.