Skip advert
Advertisement

Tesla Roadster

Has hi-tech newcomer started a battery-powered performance car revolution?

Only a few years ago, the idea of putting an electric car side-by-side on track with a Porsche 911 Turbo would have been a joke. Even today, Britain’s best-selling electric model, the G-Wiz, can’t reach 60mph!

But the Tesla Roadster isn’t your average zero-emissions vehicle. In fact, it claims a 0-62mph time to match Porsche’s finest…

Unsurprisingly, the concept of a car with no internal combustion engine offering this kind of performance has grabbed plenty of headlines. With the Tesla Roadster now officially on sale in the UK, it’s time to see if it can teach petrol-powered rivals a thing or two about acceleration!

Unfortunately, with the sole official demonstrator busy elsewhere, Tesla could only supply us with a development car from its engineering fleet. We were warned that this older pre-production model wouldn’t be the firm’s fastest – but its pace still raised plenty of eyebrows. What sets the Tesla apart, though, is the driving experience.

Turn the key and a chime signifies the motor is ready. Floor the throttle, and the two-seater surges forward as if it’s attached to a high-powered winch. There are no gearchanges, and it sounds like a washing machine going into a subdued spin cycle!

Built by Lotus in Norfolk, the Tesla uses an Elise-based chassis with special carbon body panels. Add unique headlamps and detailing, and the newcomer looks subtly different, although any Elise owner would feel at home in the near-identical cabin.

Open the engine cover, though, and nothing looks familiar – as it hides one of the world’s largest lithium battery packs. This feeds an electric motor that’s about the size of a watermelon. Power is transmitted through a single-speed gearbox, with peak torque arriving instantly at zero rpm. The Tesla weighs 340kg more than an Elise, at 1,220kg. And while it can’t match the likes of the 911 for eye-watering thrust, our car still covered 0-60mph in only 5.1 seconds.

It did this with zero emissions, too – although the claimed 220-mile range is slashed by hard driving. Push it like this, and you’ll soon have to stop, plug in and wait three-and-a-half hours to recharge.

Plus, look beyond the initial novelty of whirring along at speed in an electric car, and the Tesla lacks feel. You don’t get the sound of an engine or the engagement of changing gear, so it isn’t that exciting to drive – particularly when you consider its massive £96,000 price tag.

Still, what’s significant is the technology and where it could lead us. Thanks to the Tesla, we can now mention performance and electric cars in the same breath!

Details

Chart position: 5

Skip advert
Advertisement

New & used car deals

Volkswagen Tiguan

Volkswagen Tiguan

RRP £38,030Avg. savings £3,285 off RRP*Used from £25,726
MG MG4

MG MG4

RRP £27,005Avg. savings £10,454 off RRP*Used from £13,100
Nissan Qashqai

Nissan Qashqai

RRP £27,415Avg. savings £6,054 off RRP*Used from £12,499
Hyundai Tucson

Hyundai Tucson

RRP £29,820Avg. savings £4,685 off RRP*Used from £12,190
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

New Nissan Juke to get wild design as it goes all-electric
Nissan Juke - front (exclusive image)

New Nissan Juke to get wild design as it goes all-electric

The new Nissan Juke is set to arrive in the UK in 2026, and our exclusive images preview how it could look
News
24 Nov 2025
New Dacia C-Neo preps for its big family car fight in 2026
Dacia C-Neo - front cornering

New Dacia C-Neo preps for its big family car fight in 2026

Romanian firm looks ready to take on a new sector with all-new petrol-powered family car
News
24 Nov 2025
Motability stops offering cars from ‘premium’ brands ahead of Budget
BMW 1 Series - front cornering

Motability stops offering cars from ‘premium’ brands ahead of Budget

Brands such as BMW and Mercedes will be removed from Motability listings "immediately"
News
25 Nov 2025