Where are you pulling that figure from?So to summarise,
For $57,000USD more, you get an additional 30hp and the car is 193kg lighter than the 400.
Good value?
I think the guys at hanger111 could get much more out of a 400 for 60K.
Where are you pulling that figure from?
An Evora is $89,900 starting; the GT430 is around $125,000 when converted. This is a rather good deal for $35,000 more. In the UK, it's only £40,500 pounds more; the Evora starts at £72,000 with this at £112,500.
Based on directly converted British pricing for a primarily EU market car, instead of the actual US pricing for the actual US market car that Lotus has not actually announced or shown yet.The conversation for me at least is performance by dollar, with the 430 it just isn't there.
We are the only website apparently with a US price listed as a definite because all we did is convert the pricing directly into US dollars. Autoblog sourced it as $125,000.Base price per the gtplanet article is 146,000.
146K-90K = 56,000
However, another source says we won't even get the car, backed up by the lack of response by those on Lotus forums trying to contact their dealers.Only 60 Evora GT430s will be built, at a base price of 112,500 pounds (VAT included) that will escalate quickly with options. That's around $125 grand, assuming you could get one here. Check out Lotus' website for details.
While Lotus says this particular GT430 will not be available in North America, it did promise to bring a U.S.-spec version across the pond in the spring of 2018. Pricing is a mystery but will assuredly surpass the Evora 410’s low triple-digit price tag.
This is a comparison that people throw against exotics all the time. The aftermarket world is a different beast that rarely ever comes out in the black per money spent.Not a good deal.
A good deal, if I had the money would be the base 400 paired with a custom Hayabusa V8 pushing 500hp revving to 10,000rpm.
The Busa conversion can be custom built and installed for 30K.
So for 120,000 you'd have a 500hp Evora.
The real question is why the base Lotus Evora checks in at over 3,000lbs stock.
We are the only website apparently with a US price listed as a definite because all we did is convert the pricing directly into US dollars. Autoblog sourced it as $125,000.
http://www.autoblog.com/2017/07/20/evora-gt430-revealed-lotus-most-powerful-road-car-ever/
However, another source says we won't even get the car, backed up by the lack of response by those on Lotus forums trying to contact their dealers.
http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/2017/07/lotus-evora-gt430/
This is a comparison that people throw against exotics all the time. The aftermarket world is a different beast that rarely ever comes out in the black per money spent.
You can spend $30,000 doing that, and your Evora will be worth much, much less than a GT430 at the end of the day. Chances are it will be worth less than a $90,000 new Evora as well.