The 'Lotus Elite' name was used for two vehicles from
Lotus Cars.
1958
The first
Elite or ''Lotus Type 14'' was an ultra-light two-seater
coupé, produced from
1957 to
1961.
Making its deubut at the 1956
London Motor Show, the 14 spent a year in development, aided by "carefully selected racing customers",
[1] before going on sale.
The Elite's most distinctive feature was its highly innovative
fiberglass monocoque construction, in which a stressed-skin unibody replaced the previously separate chassis and body components. Unlike the contemporaneous
Chevrolet Corvette, which used fiberglass for only exterior bodywork, the Elite also used this glass-reinforced plastic material for the entire load-bearing structure of the car, though the front of the monocoque incorporated a steel subframe supporting the engine and front suspension, and there was a hoop at the
windscreen for mounting door hinges and jacking the car up.
[2] This body construction caused numerous early problems, until manufacture was handed over to
Bristol Aeroplane Company.
[3]
The resultant body was both lighter, stiffer, and provided better driver protection in the event of a crash. The weight savings allowed the Elite to achieve
sports car performance from a 75
hp (55 kW) 1216 cc
Coventry Climax all-aluminium
I4 engine. Climax-powered Elites won their class six times at the 24 hour
Le Mans race as well as two ''Index of Thermal Efficiency'' wins. The Elite was the first Lotus produced car to race in Australia and the original car to be raced in Australia is currently in boxes under re-furbishment.
Advanced
aerodynamics also made a contribution, giving the car a very low
drag coefficient of 0.29 — quite low even for modern cars. This accomplishment is all the more remarkable considering the engineers did not enjoy the benefits of
computer-aided design and
wind tunnel testing. The original Elite drawings were by Peter Kirwan-Taylor.
Frank Costin (brother of Mike, one of the co-founders of
Cosworth), at that time Chief
Aerodynamic Engineer for the
de Havilland Aircraft Company, contributed to the final design.
Like her siblings, the 14 was run in numerous formulae, with particular success at Le Mans and the
Nürburgring, and high (or higher) performance variants were produced, featuring
ZF gearboxes in place of the "cheap and nasty MG" standard ones,
[3] as well as a Super 95 spec, with more horsepower.
[3]
Among its few faults was a resonant vibration at 4000rpm (where few drivers remained, on either street or track)
[6]) and poor quality control, handicapped by overly low price (thus losing money on every copy) and, "[p]erhaps the greatest mistake of all", offering it as a kit, exactly the opposite of the ideal for a quality manufacturer.
[3]
When production ended in 1961, 998 had been built.
[3]
1974
From 1974 to 1982, Lotus produced the considerably larger ''Type 75'' and later the ''Type 83'' 4-seat ''Elite II''.
Lotus' first
saloon car was front engined with rear wheel drive. Like all production Lotuses since the Elan, the Elite II used fiberglass for the hatchback bodyshell, mounted on a steel
backbone chassis evolved from the
Elan and
Europa. It had 4-wheel
independent suspension using coil springs. Power steering and air conditioning were optional from 1974. The Elite II was the basis for the
Eclat, and the later
Excel four-seaters.
The Elite II was Lotus' first car to use the "907" aluminium-
block 4-valve,
DOHC, four cylinder, 2.0 L engine. (The 907 engine had previously been used in
Jensen-Healeys.) The 907 engine ultimately became the foundation for the
Lotus Esprit powerplants, both naturally-aspirated and turbocharged. Elite IIs were available with a 5-speed gearbox standard; from January 1976 an automatic transmission was optional.
Notes
1. Setright, L. J. K., "Lotus: The Golden Mean", in Northey, Tom, ed. ''World of Automobiles'' (London: Orbis, 1974), Volume 11, p.1227.
2. Setright, p.1226.
3. Setright, p.1227.
4. Setright, p.1227.
5. Setright, p.1227.
6. It was cured by substituting a diaphragm clutch spring. Setright, p.1227.
7. Setright, p.1227.
8. Setright, p.1227.
External links
★
Lotus Elite Type 14
★
Lotus Excel - Elite - Eclat Owner's forum. Huge archive of information
★
Lotus Excel Owner's forum - Elites & Eclats welcome