Specifications
VEHICLE TYPE:
mid-engine, rear-wheel-drive, 2-passenger, 2-door roadster
ESTIMATED BASE PRICE:
$31,890 (base price: $24,438)
ENGINE TYPE:
DOHC 16-valve 4-in-line, aluminum block and head,
Rover engine-control system with port fuel injection
Displacement: 110 cu in, 1795cc
Power: 118 bhp @ 5500 rpm
Torque: 122 lb-ft @ 3000 rpm
Power: 118 bhp @ 5500 rpm
Torque: 122 lb-ft @ 3000 rpm
TRANSMISSION:
5-speed manual
5-speed manual
DIMENSIONS:
Wheelbase: 92.3 in
Length: 134.3 in
Width: 70.8 Height: 47.0 in
Curb weight: 1150 lb
Wheelbase: 92.3 in
Length: 134.3 in
Width: 70.8 Height: 47.0 in
Curb weight: 1150 lb
MANUFACTURER'S PERFORMANCE RATINGS:
Zero to 60 mph: 5.0 sec
Zero to 100 mph: 16.2 sec
Standing 1/4-mile: 14.0 sec @ 95 mph
Zero to 60 mph: 5.0 sec
Zero to 100 mph: 16.2 sec
Standing 1/4-mile: 14.0 sec @ 95 mph
Load your mental blender with one Formula Ford single-seat racer, a Ducati Monster sport bike, a dollop of creativity, and a dash of fine British heritage. Top off with sheer audacity. Stir vigorously. What emerges is the Ariel Atom, a savory sweet concocted by Britain's prolific alternative-car chefs.
The
mere existence of a car boiled down to the bare essence, one that
trumps a Corvette's power-to-weight ratio, compels investigation. To
taste-test this car/bike confection, we journeyed to the southwestern
reaches of England where creator Simon Saunders conceived the Atom to
help level out the peaks and valleys in his Automotive Dynamics,
Limited, design business.
Slipping
into the cockpit for a buzz of the hedgerows surrounding Saunders's
shop and studio in North Perrott, Somerset, our cordial tour guide and
chaperone explained his less-is-more design philosophy. "I decided there
might be some interest in a new sports car that wasn't another Lotus 7
or Cobra copy. My idea is to take existing solutions and make them work
without reinventing the wheel. So the entire powertrain and the majority
of the brake system is straight out of the MGF, the mid-engined sports
car built and sold by Rover
"The
Atom has no doors because making doors work properly is a tremendous
engineering exercise. As a small manufacturer, I sought ways to sidestep
such problems instead of confronting them. Leaving off the doors, the
heater, the stereo system, and other nonessentials are minus points that
become plusses to those who grasp what we're up to."
On
first sight, the Atom seems about 10 percent larger than expectations
that were prompted by a gander at Saunders's Web site
(www.arielmotor.co.uk). As to its size, it's a Boxster with a three-foot
tail bob. To mount up, you step over the thigh-high frame onto the seat
and then slither legs beneath the racy steering wheel. Scuffing the
upholstery or wrinkling the carpet isn't a problem because those items
are nonexistent. Infinite head room and ample leg and elbow room counter
any subliminal parrot-in-a-cage phobia.
Car
and bike cues bombard the senses. The clatter of a 1795cc,
118-horsepower Rover K-series four-cylinder engine a few inches behind
one's head and the Momo steering wheel shout "Car!" but the bike side of
the Atom's personality commands equal attention. What you'll need for
any out-of-the-neighborhood drive are a helmet, a face shield, and
gloves. The courageously exposed mechanical gear and the exoskeletal
space frame are exactly what you'd expect from a designer who began his
career 25 years ago at the Norton bikeworks. Saunders chose the Ariel
name for its instant recognition -- in England. Ariel is the proud, but
defunct, British firm associated with the original pneumatic tire,
bicycles, and motor vehicles with two, three, and four wheels, including
the famous Square Four motorcycle
The
combination of 118 horsepower, abundant low-end torque, and an
1150-pound curb weight does wonders for the libido, even with the two of
us aboard. Brush the gas and you're gone. Shifting down for corners is
optional, mainly serving as tach-needle tickler and engine-noise
booster. Steering is more mental activity than arm exercise, thanks to
the 1.5-turn lock-to-lock gear that's in plain sight just ahead of the
toes and a sticky 15-inch, 50-series Michelin at each corner. When the
sharply crowned road kinks or crests, the Atom tracks like a cruise
missile locked to the landscape. Subtle variations in thumb pressure
keep the aim locked on a distant point on the horizon when the hedgerows
run straight and true. The rocker-arm suspension systems use
metal-to-metal pivots at the wheel end and combination metal-and-rubber
bushings at the chassis end to good effect. Even without seat padding or
sound deadening, harshness and road noise are never annoying. Roll and
pitch are other nonissues.
The
Atom's see-through construction acts as a coarse filter for sensory
stimuli. There's nothing quite like having your sinuses supercharged
with essence of British dairy farm. The molded-fiberglass nose cone does
an admirable job of splitting the wind so you never feel weather-beaten
or go-kart vulnerable, but wind whistling up my pant leg is one
experience I've had in neither car nor bike. From the cockpit, there's a
clear view of the live front wheel spindles. High standards of
craftsmanship are evident in the truss structure's neatly filleted
silicon-bronze welds and its clear-over-silver powder coating
A
few observations did enter our gripe register. The shifter is too long
and positioned too far rearward, and there's a lack of suspension action
over bumps. Resilience feels equally divided among tire-sidewall flex,
chassis twist, and suspension travel. In response to complaints of a
brake pedal that's hard to modulate, Saunders explains that pads
installed for racetrack testing are less than ideal on the road. When
it's necessary to back up to complete a U-turn, he acknowledges that the
Atom's racing-type rack-and-pinion gear lacks the tight lock available
in any ordinary car. Rigid powertrain mounts send tremors through the
structure that cause panels to buzz and screech at their resonant
frequencies.
At
this stage in its gestation, the Atom is one part track racer, one part
road car, and not optimized for either task. Dialing it in to suit
specific needs is the owner's responsibility, facilitated by a pricing
structure that begins at the British equivalent of $24,438 for a
bare-bones track model, then climbs quickly as attached lights, larger
wheels and tires, a close-ratio gearbox, a hotted-up engine, and other
options are added. Figure $45,000 for a 187-hp Atom with a full
complement of accessories.
Having
spent more than half of his 46 years as a motor-industry designer,
Saunders has an extensive network of chums willing to help get this
project off the ground. The critical work required of the suspension
geometry, structural analysis, and electronic instrument cluster were
farmed out to appropriate experts such as Jordan Formula 1 engineer Niki
Smart. Where possible, major components -- such as the elegant Tilton
Engineering control-pedal and master-cylinder assembly -- are
well-proven shelf items. Frame manufacturing and assembly are handled by
contractors. Saunders notes, "I've seen too many manufacturers start
big and go bust, so my plan is to start small and grow." So far, Ariel
Motor Company's staff consists of Saunders and his assistant, Jonathan
Howe.
The
car we drove is the third prototype (No. 2 was wrapped around a utility
pole by a journalistic indiscretion). Thirty orders for the car from
around the globe have been received. The inevitable kit version of the
Atom will follow but not, according to Saunders, until his budding
enterprise has successfully produced 50 complete cars to stabilize the
design; to date, he's shipped a half-dozen cars. Visions of Atoms as
driver-training cars and one-marque racers dance in his head.
Apprehensive
of our reputation for complex safety and emissions regulations,
Saunders has no immediate plans to stretch his limited resources all the
way to the New World. But he wouldn't mind hearing from a Yank with the
right combination of entrepreneurial spirit and bureaucratic
experience.
If
you're that Yank, tell Saunders you discovered the Atom here. And that
we have first dibs on a comprehensive track test in this country.
Ariel Motor Company, Limited,
Manor Buildings,
North Perrott,
Crewkerne, Somerset,
England TA18 7ST
44-1460- 78817
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