mckeann wrote:i would say that if you dont have a 2 or 3K contingency fund then you shouldnt be buying an elise, but maybe i am just unlucky with cars breaking down on me.
top advice that
I was lucky enough to maintain a "fighting fund" about that level for about the first 6 years of Elise ownership, and although I never used it all in one go, it was a vital buffer to ensure the car stayed on the road. That period ended coinciding with the arrival of sproglet #1, funnily enough, and I now do find it a lot harder to keep the car ever-ready.
That said, if you are mechanically minded (I think you said you are), then you will find existing answers to most issues on here or the other Lotus forums, and if not, there is growing collection of "old hacks" (!) here who can work out most new issues from first principles. I owe the equivalent of several years' fighting fund to several of them
Recent owner nxy said an interesting thing to me recently - "now that I know the Elise and what it's like to work on, I'll not be fazed if I were going out to buy another" - I think that's quite a testament to the general simplicity and maintainability of the car.
Specifics I spotted from the ad you posted were the P-Zero tyres (deathtrap, do not drive any distance or at any kind of cornering pace on these other than in bone dry weather, get 'em changed to Toyos or Yoko Advan Neovas pronto). Also ad claims it's metallic, but it looks black? Or is it deep purple or nautilus, both can look black in dull light I guess.
You asked about suspension earlier. The Konis fitted by the factory are, frankly, pants. They will clunk a lot after only a few K miles and whilst they continue to damp OK when this is happening, it is annoying and could mask a true damper failure. Many cars will have been fitted with various aftermarket shocks to cure this, including Spax, Leda, GAZ and Nitron. The latter are "the best quality" but generally rock hard setup and poorly adapted for road use. Although there is a new variant, Nitron Racing Red, that offes some compromise. Noops can comment here I think. I had Spax which claimed to be adjustable but when set to correctly match their springs, were just too hard. And they wore out fairly quickly. I am now on the people's choice, the "S2 for S1 kit" which is a Bilstein damper (some claim it's self-adjusting...I believe them, but it's not necessarily relevant!) and provides what the S1 should have had from day 1. If the dampers on your chosen car do need changing, that's your best option unless it will be predominantly a track car in which case others need to comment.
I think overall there is a good stock of S1s to pick from if you can travel, so take your time to get it right. The variation in quality will be significant. As Simon I said, low mileage examples are not necessarily a good option...many of the wear-related things have yet to happen to them! That said, if you treat each wear-related issue as an opportunity for improvement, you will soon end up with a better S1 than left the factory. I have a relatively late one, a 1999 with all the "fixes" and the subtle tweaks I've made over the years genuinely render it better than the day I picked it up
OK enough waffle, you can get back to the true wisdom now!!
Campbell