Manufacturers

 

Acura

Alfa Romeo

Ariel Atom

Ascari

Aston Martin

Audi

Bentley

BMW

Bugatti

BYD Auto

Cadillac

Caparo

Chevrolet

Dodge

Ferrari

Fiat

Fisker

Ford

Ginetta

Gumpert

Hodge

Hummer

Hyundai

Iconic

Jaguar

Koenigsegg

KTM

Lamborghini

Lexus

Lightning Car Company

Lotus

Maserati

Mastretta

Maxximus

Mazda

McLaren

Mercedes-Benz

MINI

Nissan

Pagani

Perana Performance Group

Porsche

Renault

Rossion

Saleen

Scion

Subaru

Spyker

Tata

Tesla

Toyota

TVR

Veritas

VW

Zagato

Zenvo

 

 

Factory Tuners

 

Audi Quattro GmbH

BMW M GmbH

Cadillac V-Series

Ford SVT

Honda HFP

John Cooper Works

Lexus F-Sport

Mercedes AMG

Nissan Nismo

Renault Sport

Subaru Performance Tuning (SPT)

Toyota Racing Development (TRD)

Volvo R-Design

 

 

Aftermarket Tuners

 

9ff

ABT Sportsline

Avus Performance 

Alpina

ASI

ATT Autotechnik

Brabham

B&B

Brabus

Branew

Cargraphic

edo competition

ENCO Exklusive

Essing Diesel Tuning

Evolution Motorsports

Fab Design

Fesler-Moss

G-Power

Geiger Cars

Gemballa

HAMANN

Hartge

Heffner Performance

Hennessey

Hofele Design

Imola Racing

INDEN-Designs

IND Distribution

JB Car Design

Kahn Design

Karl Schnorr Kraftfahrzeuge

Karvajal Designs

Kicherer

Lingenfelter

Loder1899

Loma Performance

LUMMA Design

Manhart Racing

Mansory

MFK Autosport

MR Car Design

Nothelle

Novitec Rosso

PPI Automotive Design

Premier4509

Prindiville Prestige

Reiter Engineering

Rhys Millen Racing (RMR)

Ruf Automobile

Senner Tuning

SharkWerks

SpeedART

Spoon

STILLEN

SV Motor Company

Switzer Performance

TechArt

Tommy Kaira

Ueli Anliker Design

Unique Sportscars

Vath

Wimmer

Zele Performance

 

Lotus

Lotus Exos Type 125 is the Baddest Track Day Toy Yet

Lotus Exos Type 125 side view

 

For the last decade or so, the term “track day toy” has typically referred to a small, flyweight chassis housing a tiny engine with the power and torque curves of a leaf blower. Cars such as the spindly Ariel Atom, the ageless Caterham 7 and Radical’s platoon of pee-wee LMP racers have all stayed true to this formula and have won critical acclaim and the excitement many buyers worldwide.

 

But what about buyers who want something even more extreme and purposeful? The Caparo T1 has made oodles of Formula 1 technology and engineering available to the hyper-rich weekend hobbyist, but the decision to make it street legal in countries that aren’t ultra strict about such things as crashworthiness and emissions compliance (read: pretty much everywhere but here) meant there were some substantial compromises that crept into the design. The most significant of those compromises? A passenger seat. But what if designers didn’t have to worry about being road legal, or carrying your wife/mistress/etc.?

 

The Top 10 Greatest Front-Wheel Drive Performance Cars

Title Collage

 

That true performance cars can only be rear-wheel drive (and in some glorious instances all-wheel drive) is taken as the gospel truth by a great many gearheads. Never mind that the majority of the world’s new cars pull rather than push themselves down the road, and that the washcloth of automotive history is quite damp with fun rides derided by some as “wrong-wheel drive.” In fact, we managed to name ten front-drivers that are buckets of fun. Without further ado, and in no particular order, here they are.

 

The Fast and the Forbidden: 1990-’92 Lotus Carlton

Lotus Omega Front 3/4 View

 

When you think of a premium General Motors sedan of the early 1990s, what picture forms in your mind’s eye? Chances are it’s a picture of a downsized, front-drive luxury car powered by a wheezy V6 (or, in the case of the C-body Cadillacs, a wheezy and failure-prone V8) with indifferent performance and build quality to match. Now, wipe those horrifying images from your gray matter, and envision a slightly-larger-than-mid-size four-door with wind-tunnel-honed lines, flared fenders, a couple badges depicting the logo of a famous sports car maker, and a plush leather-trimmed interior. Oh, and a twin-turbo, twin-cam straight six sending power to the rear wheels through a Corvette ZR-1’s six-speed manual transmission. Congratulations; you’ve just imagined the Lotus Carlton.

 

Although it has its origins as the Vauxhall Carlton (or the left-hand-drive Opel Omega for the Continental markets), this fab-four-door was tuned by and marketed as a Lotus. (Why use GM Europe’s big sedans as the starting point? The General owned Lotus from 1986 to 1993.) The Lotus’ 3.6L 24-valve six was similar to the 3.0L 24-valve unit found in the Carlton/Omega GSi, but the addition of the two Garrett T25 turbochargers prompted engineers to use a new block casting with a different bottom end design. When all was said and done, the engine was putting down 377hp and 419 lb.-ft of torque. Backing it up was the aforementioned Corvette ZR-1-spec ZF six-speed stick, which allowed the Lotus Carlton to hit 60 mph in 5.2 seconds, and a top speed in excess of 176 mph.

 

Tokyo 2009 Preview: 2010 Lotus Exige Scura AKA Stealth - Price, Details & Pictures

2010 Lotus Exige Scura

 

The flurry of announcements is heating up prior to the 2009 Tokyo Motor Show. Details on the 2010 Lotus Exige Stealth or 2010 Lotus Exige Scura (depending on what market you are in) have just been released and my heart is aflutter. But let me take a step back and explain the excitement. When the Lotus Exige first emerged on the scene, there was an individual in LA who immediately took his car to a custom shop and got the body repainted in matte-black along with carbon-fiber highlights. Strangely enough, I came across this Lotus quite often and it was this particular Exige that got me pumped about these fierce urban racers. I remember searching far and wide to try and find out whether or not Lotus offered this as an option and was disappointed with the answer. However, that is all about to change.

 

2010 Lotus Exige S240 Gets A Minor Refresh

2010 Lotus Exige S240

 

If it ain't broke don't fix it... The new 2010 Lotus Exige S240 will drop in the US and Canada this fall with some minor aerodynamic and styling tweaks, without making too many changes to the underlying platform. The most noticeable difference is the revised front end with includes larger intakes pushing air through the radiator and a new splitter. Ahead of each front wheel are two additional air intakes to feed the twin oil coolers. At the rear, Lotus introduces a more pronounced and wider "low drag" wing which is mounted further back and higher to increase stability, reduce drag and maintain amazing downforce at high speeds.


Frankfurt Motor Show 2009: Lotus Evora Type 124 Endurance Racecar Makes Debut

Lotus Evora Type 124 Endurance Racer

 

British manufacturer Lotus Cars has been a motorsports behemoth for what seems like forever. So, it's only natural that they would be releasing a racing version of their latest and greatest sports car, the 2010 Lotus Evora. Their new Type 124 Endurance Race Car has just made its official debut at the Frankfurt Motor Show and its transformation from the street to the track is stellar. Not only is this Evora completely reworked from the inside out, the Type 124 benefits from everything one would expect to make a competitive GT3-spec racer.

 

North Coast Triumph Association 18th Annual British Car Show

2009 North Coast British Car Show

 

Today, the North Coast Triumph Association hosted its 18th Annual British Car Show at Shaker Square, in Cleveland, Ohio. The event was located on the green space inside the inner quadrants of the historic district and featured a wide variety of classic, vintage and modern vehicles of UK origin. There was a nice mixture of brands such as Jaguar, Aston Martin, Austin Healey, MG, Lotus, Triumph, Rolls Royce, Morgan and DeLorean.

 

2010 Lotus Evora Official US Specs Leaked

2010 Lotus Evora Concept

 

Back in March, we provided information concerning the European delivery of the Lotus Evora. However, since then there hasn't been any information on a stateside release and big question marks remain. Now, thanks to the folks at Lotusenthusiast.net, we finally have the official US specs and they are impressive. The car will sport a Toyota-produced 3.5L V6 engine capable of 276 hp and 258 lb-ft of torque. This by itself is not so overwhelming, but when you factor in the weight of the car (3,047 pounds) the car sprints 0 to 60 mph in 4.9 seconds. It also tops out at 162 mph and get 32.5 mpg.

 

The 2010 Lotus Evora will ride on either standard cast wheels or optional forged wheels in size 18" x 8" in front and 19" x 9.5" in rear wrapped in Pirelli P-Zero tires. Braking will come from ventilated front and rear discs with cross-drilled rotors optional. In any case, the Lotus will drop from 60 mph to 0 in 110.2 feet, which is pretty phenomenol. An aero package will also be available which includes a front splitter, flat underbody, rear diffuser and floating rear wing.