🚨 2009 Lotus Evora: Emergency Neutral
The 2009 Evora uses a Toyota-sourced floor-mounted manual transmission with a conventional mechanical shifter and cable linkage.
🧰 Drafted with AI under the editorial review of Chris Hackleman & Jeff Moore — cross-check against your owner’s manual when possible.
⚠️ Chock the wheels first — neutral means the car can roll. Set the parking brake while you work, never stand downhill of the vehicle, and try a 12-volt jump before any override: power fixes most stuck-in-park problems instantly.
The procedure
- Ensure the parking brake is firmly engaged and the vehicle is on level ground or properly chocked
- Depress the clutch pedal fully (this may require significant effort if brake boost is unavailable)
- Move the shifter to neutral position - pull to center and ensure it moves freely side-to-side
- Release the clutch pedal slowly while confirming the vehicle is in neutral
- The vehicle can now be pushed or loaded onto a flatbed
With zero electrical power
Manual transmission Evoras do not require electrical power to shift into neutral. The clutch pedal will be very stiff without vacuum assist from a running engine, but the transmission can be shifted mechanically. If the clutch cannot be depressed due to seized hydraulics, the vehicle must be dollied or flatbedded with rear wheels off the ground.