Circuit Hethel, Norfolk, 3.52km
Car Lotus Elise 220 Sport
Photos Lotus Driving Academy/Dawn Green
Lotus… no words necessary
NORFOLK, ENGLAND, 2018: Chances areyou would have seen the scene from Senna, the compelling 2010 documentary about the late, great Ayrton Senna. It shows fellow F1 driver and mate Martin Donnelly, who many thought to be a potential champion of the future, lying motionless in the middle of the track 50 metres away from where his Lotus hit the barrier at 230km/h and completely disintegrated during practice for the 1990 Spanish F1 Grand Prix.
At the risk of understatement, Donnelly’s injuries were critical. He had bruising to his lungs and brain (the impact was so violent it cracked the crash helmet), severe breaks to both legs and resultant massive blood loss. During a long and painful recovery, the Northern Irishman suffered kidney failure and was on dialysis for weeks. It looked as if his right leg might have to be amputated.
Remarkably, he survived and even went on to race successfully again though the massive injuries spelt the end of his promising F1 career. These days, Martin Donnelly now heads up the Lotus Driving Academy in the UK. And right now he’s seated alongside, showing me the correct way to lap Lotus’s historic test rack at Hethel.
All the ducks in a row
I’m at the wheel of an Elise 220 Sport, renowned for its subliminal handling and ability to punch well above its weight. Like all Lotus racing and road cars, the Elise is a product of marque founder Colin Chapman’s ‘add lightness’ philosophy. Weighing in at a trim 845kg means it has the wherewithal to thoroughly exploit every skerrick of its supercharged, 1.8-litre Toyota engine’s 162kW of power and 250Nm of torque; evidence a quickfire 0-100km/h time of 4.2 seconds.
But I’m getting mixed messages. A voice inside my head is urging me to hustle the lithe, little Lotus: wring its neck, stomp on the brakes, pitch it into the corner. After all, I know from having driven the Sport 220’s predecessor – the Elise S – 10 years ago, how much rollicking, good fun that can be. But, hardly audible above the rorty engine note and wind rush, Martin is telling me something different.
“Don’t brake, just lift off the throttle, then back on the throttle,” he urges in his unmistakeable Northern Irish accent, delivered in scattergun fashion. “On, off, on, off…”
He is, of course, right. Lifting off the throttle transfers weight forward to aid front end grip turning into a corner; back on the throttle exiting the corner transfers it over the rear wheels which helps get power to the ground. Do as he says and the car immediately feels way more composed. More importantly – in the context of driving a racing circuit – it’s the quicker way around.
Hethel test track layout
With Martin’s sage words continuing to ring in my ears, I’m now braking just once a lap – for a tight chicane near the end of the main straight. Using 3rd gear everywhere except the two straights where we pull 5th, ensures I’m making full use of the engine’s torque curve.
His advice to be less aggressive with steering input and throttle application is also paying dividends. Result? The car fairly flows around the 3.52km track, a technical succession of bends, corners, hairpins and straights that places a premium on handling. Which, of course, is right there in Lotus territory.
But, more than that, we’re driving in the wheel tracks of legends. Hethel is where a multitude of world champions (current, past or future) shook down and developed their Lotus F1 cars that went on to take some 77 grand prix victories. The various aspects of the track carry their name: Senna Curves, Mansell Main Straight, Rindt Hairpin, Fittipaldi Straight, Clark, Graham Hill and Andretti corners.
Elise 220s ready to roll
Originally, the site served as an airfield to heavy bomber squadrons of the U.S. 8th Air Force during World War II, which flew daring, dangerous daylight raids over Germany and occupied Europe. Group Lotus moved its headquarters to Hethel in 1966 and it has been there ever since.
Portions of the runways and taxiways were developed to form the test track and the heritage-listed control tower now forms the basis of clubrooms from which the Lotus Driving Academy operates on track days.
All too soon, the 20-minute ‘Scare Yourself Sensible’ track driving experience – to use its marketing name – is over. It is, of course, a play on the words of that old saying, ‘scare yourself silly’. I’m not convinced I did that, though Martin Donnelly might have another opinion!
What I am sure of is that, of the many similar experiences I have enjoyed at various tracks in the UK, Europe, the US and Australia, this is one of the best.
Drive debrief
Car specs
Basic price new: $87,900
Engine: 1.8-litre supercharged DOHC 16v inline 4-cyl
Power: 162kW @ 6800rpm
Torque:250Nm @ 4600rpm
Transmission: 6-spd manual
Weight: 845kg
Drive: Rear-wheel
0-100km/h: 4.2sec
World War 2 control tower now the Lotus Academy HQ
Barry Green will be well-known to many of you and a welcome discovery for those of you who haven’t been reading his words for years.
He has had an illustrious five-decade-long career writing for such titles as Racing Car News, Sports Car World as well as holding professional journalist roles with Australian Provincial Newspapers and News Limited and motoring writer and editor of the RACQ’s Road Ahead magazine. Along the way he found time to write and self-publish a trilogy of retro motor sport narratives – Driven to Succeed (the biography of Alec Mildren), Longford: Fast Track Back and Glory Days (the Albert Park story from 1953 to 1958).
Now you can revel in his recollections of more than 80 drives of an eclectic mix of machinery on some of the world’s finest roads and racing circuits.