Autocar

MY WEEK IN CARS

- Steve Cropley

SATURDAY, SUNDAY

Great weekend: two Mazda MX-5S to play with. For ages I’ve been itching to get hold of a latestspec MX-5 (20% more poke, 7500rpm-higher rev limit, better damping, reach-adjustable steering column) to compare with my 2015 edition that looks the same but isn’t. There are lots of interestin­g points of comparison: my car rides superficia­lly better but lacks the body control you need in a roadster once you get going a bit. And my engine seems wheezy by comparison.

Mazda’s car, equipped with Bilstein dampers and a dealer-fit Eibach lowering kit, is a bit stiffer but much more controlled and has steering and grip that’s frankly miles better than mine. Plus that extra engine zing. The decision I now face is whether to buy the obviously faster newedition MX-5 or stick with my car but go with the suspension upgrade at a very reasonable £1000-ish. I could also tweak my car’s engine to about 200bhp for £4000 all in, versus £15,000 to change. Nice decision to have to make.

MONDAY

After such a weekend, I got onto one of my regular summer kicks about improving my driving and enjoying it more, so I phoned Jonathan Palmer – former F1 racer, now founder and kingpin of the Palmer Sport driving events business – to ask how and when it would come out of lockdown.

“Great timing,” boomed JP. “We’re starting next Saturday.” Which means that, because of the vagaries of print schedules, by the time you read this, the world’s best driving event will have been going full tilt at Bedford Autodrome since last weekend, clearly with appropriat­e but nonetoo-difficult anti-virus and social distancing measures in place. It’s hard to think of a better way of making yourself feel better about driving (and life) than spending a hard-charging and tyre-smoking but essentiall­y carefree day with JP and his talented team.

WEDNESDAY

Seat’s decision to launch a range of electric scooters allows it to make the right noises about urban pollution and congestion, I suppose. But as someone who already owns an electric scooter (a BMW C-evolution), I can tell Seat that these machines will only make true sense to car ownership when they can be carried in some kind of unit within a vehicle itself. And I’m not just talking about some kind of awkward and backbreaki­ng rack-style carrier across the rear.

Years ago, I went to the Monaco Grand Prix in a Renault estate and discovered that it became instantly useless, because cars were understand­ably banned from inner areas. If we’d been able to carry an e-scooter from the UK, perhaps as part of the car’s structure and charged by its electrical system, and then been able to detach it for use over the race weekend, we’d have been quids in. To me, that’s the next step – indeed, the only one that matters in the relationsh­ip between cars and e-scooters. We don’t want badge engineerin­g, we need someone to deliver true utility.

❝ The world’s best driving event is going full tilt again

FRIDAY

My two favourite car destinatio­ns – the British Motor Museum at Gaydon and the National Motor Museum at Beaulieu – are now back in action, with appropriat­e fanfares and full-on attempts by their organisers to make visits as enjoyable as they were pre-pandemic. I dropped in to Beaulieu again to view the special Motoring In Miniature exhibition they’ve laid on to mark the reopening. The whole thing is inspired by Lord Montagu who, like me, loves early Matchbox toys in particular, before they started to be equipped with plastic addenda and inappropri­ate wheels. The quality and size of his exhibition is really something to see; it’s worth the price of admission alone. I especially loved the display of land speed record car models, a type that has always been a speciality at Beaulieu. Don’t miss it.

 ??  ?? Get yourself down to Bedford Autodrome for
a go in some of these
Get yourself down to Bedford Autodrome for a go in some of these
 ??  ?? Lord Montagu loves toy cars
Lord Montagu loves toy cars
 ??  ??

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