The assumption seems to be that the existing Europa front solid rotor is under-performing, but, as far as I can see, there's no broad evidence to support such an assertion.
I'd go with that statement as well. As someone else has posted, vented discs weren't that common back in the 1960s so there's no surprise that Lotus kept with the solid 232mm disc. But if heat soak was a problem for them, they always had the option to move to the thicker & larger 245mm disc/caliper of the GT6 as they had those on the Elan+2 and IIRC the later Elite/Eclats. So cost wise it wouldn't have made a massive difference, in fact the added volume might have got them a better deal ?
They added a servo(s) so they obviously had an eye on how the braking effect felt for the driver, or it might just have been marketing, who knows ? But they stayed with the 232 solid disc, so I think that means they thought it worked well enough for a road car.
Rear disc conversions are noted on these forums in many shapes and sizes. Richard's kit seems well regarded all round. There's also many home brew conversions using a variety of different components. The consensus seems to be that converting to rear discs provides a definite improvement.
Based on that, a vented rear rotor should out perform a solid one, right?
I reckon the same logic should be applied to the front rotors but that doesn't seem to happen.
Personally I think rear discs are an improvement. I still have the OEM drums and could easily revert but frankly there's more chance of me flying to the moon and back. However even on the second round of "upgrades" where I changed the front from 232mm to 260mm discs and the rear from 240mm to 258mm, I've stayed with solid discs all round.
I could easily have fitted vented discs as there are plenty of options but as I only ever drive on the road and either I don't drive fast enough or brake hard enough, I've not had brake fade even with the OEM setup. So I figured the lighter solid discs would be fine for me. I just wanted a bigger diameter for less pedal pressure.
Even so, I can see the extra security margin with vented fronts, I'm just not so convinced about vented rears. I know Lotus fit them on the Elise (S1 at least) but I suspect that's because they use the same disc at all 4 corners and adjust the balance with the piston size, so they're saving cash on buying in stuff.
When I did the 2nd conversion I used one of those infra red thermometers to measure the disc temperature after a run and not surprisingly the fronts were considerably hotter than the rear. I forget the numbers and in any case they would only be comparative F/R rather than absolutely accurate temperatures, but I seem to recall the fronts were roughly double the rears.
You'd expect something like that anyway, but for me it says "vented rears aren't required" (just yet
)
Brian