‘Think-steer’. Remember that heinously untrue, cynically misleading ad line with which Saab used to walk believing punters down the garden path?
Just as well they were buying into one of the world’s most crashworthy saloons.
Perhaps the copywriters responsible had just driven a De Tomaso Vallelunga and hadn’t yet got off their cloud.
Had they done so, you could see their point: if this could be that good, why couldn’t all cars?
This De Tomaso Vallelunga coupé prototype has a four-speed gearbox – later cars have five forward gears
This is a car in which you don’t consciously change direction: just will it and it happens.
The steering, light yet more communicative than a Lotus Europa’s, less bullying than a Porsche 911’s and guided by a shirt-button wheel that for once doesn’t look out of place, positions you to the inch in any corner.
It would be flattering were it not so obvious that it’s all down to the car rather than the driver.
The steering is so sensitive it would notice if you moved your phone to the other pocket, and it looks after you in ways that Lotus Elise owners can only dream of, combining razor-sharp responses with a platform of stability never captured alive in a Caterham.