“I want to say the R500 is not a scary car to drive,” says Dan Webster, the earnestness in his Brummie tone entirely betrayed by the glint in his eyes. “But it probably will be scary the first time you drive it.”
The deadpan delivery makes me laugh out loud, then quietly look inward. I get that Webster, who races an Elise and is the master engine tuner turned overhaul specialist behind Bromsgrove-based High Performance Engineering, rates his product. I also get that, with a McLaren F1’s power-to-weight ratio and a wheelbase shorter than that of a VW Up, the heartbreakingly expensive R500 is going to have some mischief about it. But genuinely scared? By a little Elise? Be serious.
What I’m about to discover is that the 330bhp HPE ‘Special Vehicles R500’, with its polycarbonate windows and plumbed-in fire extinguisher, is an S1 Elise in only the loosest sense. True, it stops short of being a silhouette racer, but only just. The familiar body is really just a doe-eyed Trojan horse for hardware and a degree of obsessiveness more common to motorsport. Beyond the donor car’s extruded-aluminium monocoque, which is stripped then replated, 80% of it is bespoke.
Bespoke and hardcore. You’ll find bladed anti-roll bars (notice how a plastic ruler’s vertical rigidity changes as you rotate it from flat to upright) that alone can transform the handling. There are also carbon-carbon brakes, and a power-distribution module that replaces the original Elise’s rat’s nest of fuses and relays. This PDM allows for on-the-fly brake-bias adjustment and motorsport traction control, while safeguarding an engine hooked up to more sensors than a SpaceX Falcon 9.


The rose-jointed suspension is also completely new, and the brake system is re-engineered to retain the original and sculptural pedal box but add dual master cylinders and a racing-style integral bias bar.











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“I want to say the R500 is not a scary car to drive,” says Dan Webster, and that line fits the whole vibe of this build, because this is not a lightly tuned Elise but a motorsport project wearing an Elise shape like a disguise, with a stripped and replated aluminium tub and most of the car rebuilt with purpose, from polycarbonate windows and a plumbed in fire extinguisher to anti roll bars that can swing the handling balance hard, plus carbon carbon brakes and a modern power distribution module that adds brake bias control, traction control, and sensor heavy engine protection; GameHub Emulator; the result is the kind of short wheelbase, high power to weight machine that feels playful right up until it reminds you it can bite, which is exactly why “not scary” probably only applies after you learn its limits.
Track toy? and expensive,I suppose if you have the wealth then fine,as for the car it does nothing special it's not a ground breaker no new technology,I'd sooner just spend 20% percent of this cars value on something to me just as exciting every time I drive it .
“I want to say the R500 is not a scary car to drive,” says Dan Webster, and that line fits the whole vibe of this build, because this is not a lightly tuned Elise but a motorsport project wearing an Elise shape like a disguise, with a stripped and replated aluminium tub and most of the car rebuilt with purpose, from polycarbonate windows and a plumbed in fire extinguisher to anti roll bars that can swing the handling balance hard, plus carbon carbon brakes and a modern power distribution module that adds brake bias control, traction control, and sensor heavy engine protection; GameHub Emulator; the result is the kind of short wheelbase, high power to weight machine that feels playful right up until it reminds you it can bite, which is exactly why “not scary” probably only applies after you learn its limits.
If you want to know what this sounds like (because of course you do) either search Dan Webster on Youtube for his channel or Honda Elise at Anglesey. Enjoy