Currently reading: Lotus Exige 260 v Ferrari F355

New Lotus or used Ferrari? Both can be had for £45k

You can get a new Lotus Exige 260 and used Ferrari F355 for around £45,000 - but which closed, two-seat, mid-engined, out-and-out sports car should you spend your money on?

Autocar asked Andrew Frankel to test both the £45,950 Lotus Exige 260 Cup and a 1999 Ferrari F355GTB, on sale at Foskers Engineering for £42,995, to get an answer.

It's worth noting now, though, that this F355 is a very good car - with 28,000 miles on the clock, the bodywork is unblemished, the interior no more than lived in, and the extras such as the Fiorano handling kit all in place. Sound cars can cost £10k less.

On the road

Frankel explains that the Lotus stuns at first, then inspires. The supercharged 1.8-litre motor delivers 257bhp with the subtlety of an axe in the back. But if you are in the mood, its tiny dimensions, sub-900kg weight and sublime chassis make it possibly the most thrilling means of getting across a British public road.

Yet the Exige makes the ageing Ferrari feel as sumptuous and comfortable as a suite in the Dorchester. The F355 was based on the old 348, albeit evolved beyond recognition, and has a 380bhp, 3.5-litre V8. It's easy to place on the road and blessed with body control.

On race or track the Exige would romp away. It may be 100bhp shy of the Ferrari, but the F355 weighs half as much again. Their power-to-weight ratios aren't far off, though, and while the Exige will pop 4sec 0-60mph runs all day, the Ferrari needs just 0.6sec more.

The Ferrari is more practical, too. Having someone in the passenger seat is fun, whereas the Lotus is best savoured alone, as a selfish pleasure. The Ferrari loves wide, open spaces, the Lotus small, confined circuits.

The ownership proposition

Foskers will service a F355 for £550 a year, but every three years or 15,000 miles there's an engine out cambelt change that will cost £1500. Earlier cars are inclined to blow their exhaust manifolds, at £1000 per side. F1 gearshifts are largely trouble-free, but reduce clutch life 20 per cent - and a clutch change costs £2000.

By contrast, an annual service costs around £450.

However, F355 prices are rising, whereas the Exige's value will drop, especially if used regularly.

The conclusion

Frankel concludes that the Exige is Lotus's most exciting car, if you discount the lunatic 2-Eleven, but says he'd still pick the Ferrari.

He says: "Albeit for rather different reasons, the Ferrari is just as pleasurable to drive, a whole lot more useable and, well, a Ferrari. The F355 is simply one of the greatest cars ever produced by the most coveted supercar manufacturer on earth."

For the full Lotus Exige 260 versus Ferrari F355 comparison test read this week's Autocar magazine, on sale now.

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Leslie Brook 28 February 2010

Re: Lotus Exige 260 v Ferrari F355

beachland2 wrote:
Any car is £99 in a lot of garages. So £450 is way too much. Oil and filter and general health check. I think it costs £10 more for cars over 3.0 litres.
Good point, do you think you could turn up at kwik-fit and take advantage of their £99 combined service and MOT offer in an F355? It would be fun trying it out... in someone else's F355 of course.

Peter Cavellini 23 February 2010

Re: Lotus Exige 260 v Ferrari F355

And no i'd never want too when i can have something with a decent boot, room for five when the occasion arises,does between 15 and 25mpg, the road tax isn't too high and the isurance isn't sell the kids too high!, plus it's taken Ferrari ten years to cotton on to what we want not what they think we want!,best looking Ferrari in last forty years,that'll be the 308 thankyou!.

zthomasz 23 February 2010

Re: Lotus Exige 260 v Ferrari F355

kcrally wrote:
its time the manufacturers stopped producing cars which are frankly completely illegal

You sir, are an idiot.

kcrally wrote:
the speed limit is 70mph for a reason.

Yes and the reason is the crappy brakes of the 1960s. Do we all drive cars with crappy brakes from the 1960s?