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Thursday 07 July 2022 6:12 pm

Caterham Seven 170R review: Seeing the light

By: Tim Pitt

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Caterham Seven 170R

This is the first press car I’ve ever collected that comes with a crash helmet. Still, it doesn’t come with much else. There’s no windscreen, for starters, and no doors or roof. Clamber inside and you’ll search in vain for carpets, a heater or a radio. The Caterham Seven 170R is motoring boiled down to the basics.  

Fittingly for a car that originates from the Lotus Seven, the 170R is the ultimate exponent of Colin Chapman’s ‘Simplify, then add lightness’ philosophy.

At 440kg, it’s the lightest production car on sale – and nearly a tonne lighter than a new Lotus Emira. It makes anything this side of a skateboard look morbidly obese. 

Special kei

Caterham Seven 170R

Having so little heft means this entry-level Caterham (£27,385, or £24,990 if you build it yourself) can make do with 85hp from a 660cc three-cylinder Suzuki engine: good for 0-62mph in 6.9 seconds and a very blustery 105mph. It also qualifies for compact ‘kei car’ status in Japan, where the majority will be sold. 

Prepped and ready for a dawn raid in the Caterham Seven 170R. pic.twitter.com/tbMspDkUmy

— Tim Pitt (@timpitt100) May 18, 2022

You can have your Seven in softer 170S spec, but I sampled the hardcore 170R, with adjustable sports suspension, a Quaife limited-slip diff and hard-shell composite seats.

Mine also came loaded with options, including lashings of carbon fibre trim and Aston Martin Golden Saffron paint, bumping the price up to £32,605. Not quite such cheap thrills, then.

Fancy footwork

Caterham Seven 170R

Strapping in with a four-point harness behind a tiny Momo wheel, the Caterham immediately feels like a racer for the road.

There are compromises, however. The footwell of the narrow-bodied 170 is so tight that I’m forced to drive with bare feet, or risk pressing two pedals at once. And the lack of a windscreen means sunglasses are essential, while a crash helmet is advisable beyond city speeds – unless you literally want flies in your teeth.

To be honest, the novelty of driving in a helmet wears thin very quickly, so I’d opt for a proper screen. Doing so also gives your ears unfettered access to the raspy three-pot engine, which serves up hilarious wastegate whistles on the over-run. It’s guaranteed to make you giggle. Official fuel economy of 58.4mpg might raise a smile, too.

Wake up, shake up

Caterham Seven 170R

The 170R isn’t particularly fast, but short gear ratios (you’ll need fourth for 70mph), skinny 155-section tyres and being al fresco all add to the sensation of speed.

A lot of modern sports cars feel frustrating because you can rarely exploit their performance on the road. The Caterham is the opposite; you can wring it out almost anywhere.

Blowing away the cobwebs. pic.twitter.com/fTm5Vcxbzw

— Tim Pitt (@timpitt100) May 19, 2022

Sitting almost atop the live rear axle, the tarmac inches from your elbows and a view of the front suspension jostling ahead, you’re acutely aware of the road and how the chassis reacts to its every nuance.

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The steering feels disconcertingly direct at first, but you soon tune into its vivid, hyperactive responses. Compared to a ‘normal’ car, it feels like the Seven has downed a double espresso. 

Cheaper thrills

Caterham Seven 170R

Unlike more powerful Caterhams – such as the 137hp Super Seven 1600 I tested last year – the 170R doesn’t have the oomph to easily break traction and behave like a hooligan. Well, unless the road is wet, of course, in which case you’ll be getting wet too.

While its limits are relatively low, though, the car has an alert, throttle-adjustable sense of balance, helped by the rear diff fitted to this ‘R’ version. 

For about £200 a month (after a decent deposit), the Seven 170R offers an intense, all-consuming driving experience that makes every journey feel adventurous. I’d still choose one of the more powerful, four-cylinder models if your budget allows, but this is a great first rung on the Caterham ladder. Just don’t forget to tick the box marked ‘windscreen’.  

Tim Pitt writes for Motoring Research

PRICE: £24,990

POWER: 85hp

0-62MPH: 6.9sec 

TOP SPEED: 105mph

FUEL ECONOMY: 58.3mpg

CO2 EMISSIONS: 109g/km

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