To Test the Lotus Emira V-6, We First Battled British Build Quality
It took three tries and two cars to get Emira test numbers, but were the results worth the wait?Pros
- Sublime to drive
- Steering reminds us how good hydraulic assist can be
- More comfortable and luxurious than past Lotus cars
Cons
- Shifter balks at fast gear changes
- Narrow pedal box makes correct pedal usage a challenge
- Build quality is as bad as you expect a British car to be
Any time we get a Lotus at MotorTrend, there are bound to be a few jokes about British build quality. But when the all-new 2024 Lotus Emira V-6 came in for performance testing, we found life imitating art. After several tries, we finally got numbers out of the Emira, and in terms of build quality, it proved itself to be quite Brih-ish.
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Emira Stops—Then Stops
Our drive out to the testing grounds was uneventful, and our first evaluation that day happened to be brake testing—which, in the case of the Lotus Emira, turned out to be its last test. On the initial run, we brought the Emira up to speed as our procedure requires then got hard on the brake pedal. The Emira scuttled to a halt, and when we reached for the shift lever to shift back into first and pull around for another run, it had gone limp. Seems the lever was no longer attached to the gearbox, which was now stuck in fourth gear as a result.
Oops.
Peeking through the mesh that shows off the shift linkage, we could see what appeared to be a loose cable hanging down below the metal bits. With only fourth gear available, we figured the Emira was hardly in any condition to make a decent acceleration run, so we called Lotus to pick up the stricken sportster. The same Emira was back to us a few days later; the problem, it turns out, was a nut that had come loose in the shift linkage (as opposed to MotorTrend’s usual problem, when a nut gets loose behind the steering wheel).
Pop Goes the Lotus
With the Emira repaired, we got right back at it, this time combining acceleration and brake testing (since any time we speed up, we also need to slow down). Our first two launches, at 3,500 and 4,000 rpm respectively, caused the Emira to bog down. Our third launch at 5,000 rpm showed promise, but we fumbled the 3–4 upshift before hitting the quarter-mile mark. The Emira’s shifter, while boasting a very satisfying mechanical action, has long throws and narrowly spaced gates, a weird combination that makes it easy to miss a shift when you’re trying to row quickly.
We decided to try 5,500 rpm for our fourth launch. We wound up the motor, let the clutch in, and—POP! That’s not a noise one wants to hear when trying to get a manual-transmission car into motion (or when already in motion, or, you know what, it’s just not something you want to hear in a car generally), a state the Emira was most definitely not achieving.
Another phone call to Lotus and another flat-bed rescue ensued. The problem? According to Lotus, “An axle snapped.” No more detail was forthcoming, but we assume a halfshaft left go.
Oops, Mark II.





