The Caterham Seven 275R might be the perfect specification to discover what Caterham is all about. The 275R came with a 1.6-litre naturally aspirated four-cylinder Ford Sigma engine mated to short-throw 5-speed manual gearbox. Our car was fitted with the optional 310-tune, which meant the Ford block was now producing 147bhp instead of 135. That doesn’t sound like much but when you realise the car only weighs 540kg you get a power to weight ratio that will outperform a Porsche 911GTS. The numbers aren’t the only thing that play in favour of the 275R: it’s the experience that makes this car so special. Every kilometre we covered on our road trip was an occasion. Because of the lack of any assistance or electronic system every single movement you make with the steering wheel or the pedals provides unfiltered feedback from the car.
It sounds like a cliché, but after just a few kilometres you feel entirely at one with the car. Our car had the optional R-pack which added the much-appreciated locking differential for better stability when accelerating out of a corner and greater control when the back slides out, which happens occasionally because obviously the only form of traction control is your right foot. It also offers an experience that is often missed in modern performance cars: the satisfaction of a perfectly executed corner combination. Because the Caterham is unassisted, everything is up to the driver. Entering a corner while downshifting with the perfect heel and toe technique, braking as late as possible without locking up a wheel and powering back out of the corner counter-steering with the back of the car stepping out just ever so slightly - this is a satisfaction that is no longer achievable in modern cars because you know the ABS will stop the wheels from locking up, the automatic paddle gearbox will execute perfect downshifts and the traction control system will keep you straight or offer you a controlled slide when exiting a corner. But in the Caterham, it’s all up to you.
The Caterham 275R, then, is a machine that delivers twice the fun of the average sports car while offering an unfiltered driving experience. And did I mention it costs less than half of the cars it outperforms?
