Type
118
Not
yet announced!....
Type
119 Lotus soapbox (July 2002)
The
worlds fastest go-kart, capable of reaching 60mph
in 4.3 seconds, and has a top speed of 207mph.
The Lotus Type 119 weighs just 77lb, has a carbon fibre
monocoque and utilises bonded aluminium in its construction.
The engineless kart is designed to race on downhill courses
where gravity will power it.
It
competed for the first time at The Goodwood Festival Of
Speed in the '2002 Goodwood Gravity Racing Soapbox Challenge'
- where it was expected to reach a speed of around 60mph.
(Picture © MarkS)
Nine trainee engineers spent ten months building the Type
119. Project leader David Stacey: "We are honoured
to have been given this fantastic opportunity to represent
Lotus Engineering in this very famous and exciting event.
The Type 119 will exhibit many of Lotus' key strengths,
such as the use of state-of-the-art material technologies,
bonded aluminium structures and design innovation."
The
final standings were:
-
1st BMW (Rolls-Royce) Total time : 136.4
-
2nd
McLaren Total time : 137.2 (penalised 5 for not being
ready for the first test day)
-
3rd
Lotus Total time : 139.9
More
info on the type 119 can be found here

Lotus Type 119 (2002)
Finished
2nd in Class, 3rd overall |

Lotus Type 119b (2003)
Finished
1st in Class, 3rd overall |

Lotus Type 119c (2004)
Overall
victory |
M120
- Elise Coupe & M121
- Europa S
Project
M120 suspended in 1998. To answer the obvious question - the
addition of a roof meant that the whole car was stiffer,
which meant that lower sills could be used to accommodate
larger doors - making entry and exit easier.
More
powerful engines were also considered - including the
Rover 2.5 KV6 and even (reportedly) the 1.6 V8 twin turbo
used in the Suzuki concept car (250bhp). The Elise
Coupe eventually emerged in Dec 2005 as the Lotus Europa, click here for
more details.
Lotus ECO2S
The
2002 Geneva motor saw the launch of Lotus Engineering's
project: 'ECO2s' (pronounced ECOS). The project
uses a number of new techniques to reduce emissions and
body weight with the ultimate goal of an environmentally
friendly sports car.
Lotus Engineering are aiming to demonstrate that an ultra-low
CO2 level of 75g/km can be achieved without sacrificing
performance. Projections show that 'ECO2S' may even exceed
today's Elise in terms of vehicle performance, whilst delivering
superior economy and reduced emissions (all with a diesel
engine).

To
achieve its goal, Lotus will be utilising the following
technologies:
-
Light weight bonded and riveted aluminium vehicle structure
- First
stage composite energy absorbing crush cells
- Recyclability
promoted by using CF/TP Matrix
- Second
stage metallic crush cell, giving linear energy absorption
characteristics with low mass
- Dual
Injection Thermoplastic Composite body panels with in
mould colouring
- Chassis
of lightweight construction, consisting of a mixture of
forging and
dual-plate steel components. Double wishbone front, multilink
rear.
- Metal
Matrix Composite brake discs (first seen on the Elise
in 1996)
- 42
volt electrical system
- 1.2l
turbo DI diesel engine!
- close-coupled
acoustic shields
- 4-valve
per cylinder camless valve operation
- multishot,
very high pressure common rail fuel injection
- Active
DeNOx technology with particulate trap
- Low
level series hybrid drive giving automatic stop/start
and transient torque boost
- Two
mode Continuously Variable Transmission
- Active
Noise Control - to retain that 'Sports Car Noise'
Performance
targets are 0-62mph in 6.2 seconds and a top speed of 200km/h
(124mph).
Federalised
Elise, January 2003 (Elise 111R)
In
January 2003 the first official announcement about a US
bound Elise was made, to be based on the European Elise
S3 but with additional safety equipment to satisfy US legalities.
At the same time as this announcement, it was also declared
that the the Lotus Esprit would reach the end of its long
and illustrious life in early 2004 in the USA and mid 2003
in Europe - with an all new replacement to be announced
at a future date. In September 2003 Lotus announced that
the Toyota 2ZZ-GE 1.8 litre 4 cylinder 16-valve engine with
Variable Valve Timing and Lift-Intelligent (VVTL-i) system
had been chosen, to be mated to a six-speed gearbox and
tuned by Lotus specifically for the U.S. and to produce
around 190hp. The Federalised Elise was officially launched
at the 2004 Los Angeles Auto Show where the weight was confirmed
at 891kg, 0-60mph claimed at 4.8 seconds and top speed at
150mph. The additional weight is down to twin airbags, brake
servo and TRW anti-lock brakes, climate control, air-conditioning,
carpets and additional sound proofing and a larger fuel
tank. It also has a starter button.
It
was planned to get some in-life experience of the engine
and to reduce potential launch issues and associated legal
problems in the US by offering the same engine in the new
Exige S2, due to be launched at the Geneva motorshow in
2004. The Toyota Elise was also made available in the UK
under the name 111R in January 2004
|
 
|
The
Pininfarina Enjoy, Sept 2003
Concept
car by Pininfarina called the Enjoy. This car converts
from a road car with fenders to a open wheeled, race
car. More details here |
Motorsport
Exige, Jan 2005
A direct motorsport derivative of the successful Lotus Exige.
This Lotus designed and engineered racecar was part manufactured
by RTN, the team responsible for the Le Mans winning Bentley,
using the latest motorsport techniques and procedures to
produce a lightweight yet strong carbonfibre bodywork structure
around the standard road-going Lotus Exige Aluminium extruded
and bonded chassis.
The
Lotus Sport designed fully adjustable suspension system
with double wishbones all round was fabricated and manufactured
by Pilbeam. Power is provided by a 400 hp Swindon Racing
Engines tuned GM 3 litre V6 racing engine linked to a Hewland
sequential six-speed gearbox, with AP-Racing providing the
braking system.
This
one-off racecar has been built for a South East Asian client
and is expected to race in selected sportscar races in Asia.
There are no plans as yet to build further examples of the
Lotus Sport Exige but the base structure has been carefully
designed to comply with key motorsport regulations around
the world. Adhering to the key Lotus philosophy of performance
through lightweight, the Lotus Sport Exige weighs in at
just 850kg. More details here
Lotus Sport
Exige 240R, 25th Feb 2005

Lotus
Sport, the performance division of Lotus Cars Ltd., has
developed the Lotus Sport Exige 240R, a limited edition
high performance sportscar with total global build volumes
kept strictly to 50 cars. With a supercharged and intercooled
high revving engine producing over 240 hp and over 170 lbft
of torque, the Lotus Sport Exige 240R reaches 60 mph in
less than 4 seconds and 100 mph (160 km/h) in less than
10 seconds before topping out at 155 mph (249 km/h). At
this top speed the advanced aerodynamics produce 113 kg
of downforce increasing grip, stability and safety. More
details here
Lotus
Circuit Car, June 2005

Tony
Shute, Head of Product Development at Lotus Cars, explains
what makes the Lotus "Circuit Car" a leading high
performance track car: "The new product has allowed
Lotus to once again apply its key "performance through
lightweight" philosophy. This is in order to achieve
an innovative product for the track day and club racing
Lotus enthusiast whilst staying true to the key design attributes
of the Elise and Exige products. They are considered to
be amongst the finest existing road and track day cars by
thousands of owners around the world, and the "Circuit
Car" will build on this formidable reputation, helping
to further underline Lotus as the ultimate driver's choice."
More here.
Project put on ice as Lotus focused on the
Europa.
Lotus Sport Exige GT3, Dec 2005
A prototype of the Lotus Sport Exige race
car was unveiled at the annual FIA GT Championship presentation
ceremony outside the world famous Casino in Monte Carlo,
Monaco on 02 December, 2005. This car is designed for the
latest FIA series, which will start in 2006, and is for
race cars that have an equal power to weight, and that have
a direct lineage to their road going versions. In its maiden
year (2006), Lotus Cadena will run in the Avon Tyres British
GT Championship, with an eye to entering the FIA GT European
Championship next year. More here
APX
Displayed
at Geneva,the Aluminium Performance Crossover (APX) concept
- a showcase of Lotus Engineerings aluminium Versatile
Vehicle Architecture (VVA). The four-wheel-drive APX seats
5 + 2 and is powered by a 300-hp, supercharged V6 gas engine
- though it weighs in at only 3,461 lbs.

The
design concept is expected to be used for the new Esprit
replacement, but Lotus is also hoping to sell the concept
to third parties.
Simon
Wood, director of Lotus Engineering, said: "We wanted
to demonstrate the true versatility of the VVA technology,
and what better way than to build a type of car that no
one would expect from Lotus.

Lotus Cars has introduced the Exige 265E, which
it describes as the most powerful road version of the car
ever. The E suffix indicates that the Exige has been adapted
to run on bio-ethanol.
So far, the Exige 265E is a research vehicle. Lotus has
fitted a slightly modified version of the 2ZZ VVTL-i supercharged
four-cylinder that powers the production Exige S. Running
on E85, the car delivers 265 horsepower; it sprints from
zero to 60 mph in 3.9 seconds, with a top speed of 158 mph.
Lotus said it added two fuel injectors at the supercharger
inlet to increase the amount of fuel being injected into
the engine under higher loads and to cool the charge air
before combustion. It also enlarged the four existing fuel
injectors on the intake manifold and recalibrated the engine
electronics. Lotus Engineering powertrain chief Geraint
Castleton-White explained: "We wanted to prove that
green sports cars can also be very high-performing sports
cars."
Lotus said it has no immediate plans to put the Exige 265E
into production.
GT3 Exige Announced at Geneva in 2007, see here.
2006-
Rumour Mill - Elise S3 and new Esprit?
 |
With
the temporary
waiver for the Elise in the US due to expire this
year (2006), announcements regarding the Elise S3
and new Esprit are expected imminently. The MSC (Mid-engined
Supercar) is (allegedly) undergoing crash testing
(March 2006) and is due to be launched late 2007 /
early 2008.
The
picture shows what Autosport reported as the expected
car. |
Opposite
is an official Lotus drawing of the new Esprit, from which
Autocar worked. This image was released back in 2004.
Engineering
of the next Esprit is 'racing forward at speed' according
to Lotus. Russell Carr, chief designer at Lotus, believes
that the Esprit's footprint will be 'much more compact than
that of the Lambo [the Gallardo] or the Ferrari [F430]'.
He lists the key Esprit styling components as: the save-the-wedge
shape, the flat or near-flat windscreen, the unique side-window
shapes, the clean almost geometrical body sides (contrast
them with the Elise's scoops and scallops), the flip-up
quad headlights and the flat rear screen.
Power
is expected to come from a V8, perhaps sourced from BMW
and equipped with twin turbos. This will probably be linked
to a six-speed sequential transmission. The new Esprit will
not use a direct derivation of the Elise chassis frame,
but the VVA shown at Geneva in the shape of the APX. In
showing VVA to potential clients, Lotus Engineering has
released renderings of possible supercar chassis and a complete
car, badged Esprit, "close to the real 2008 model".
Other
sketches:
 

Auto
Express published the following pictures (March 15th), but
these have generally been dismissed as not being the new
Esprit, and more likely to be the new Elise (if anything!):

This
is a drawing from Lotus emerged in 2005 along with rumours
that the car will have a Mercedes V8 engine with compressor,
as used in todays Mercedes SLR McLaren. With 1300 kg weight
and an engine from AMG with 626 hp this will become one
of the fastest supercars, and has allegedly been seen testing
alongside the SLR at Hethel. The car will have a launch
control system.
More
"artistic" impressions:


A
test mule spotted at the Nurburgring - this car is allegedly
being used as a drivetrain testbed - note the elongated
wheelbase.

And the latest alleged
"spyshot" (Sept 06, Autocar & Auto Express):
Rumous
say that the new Esprit will use BMW's 4.4-litre V8, which
can also be found in the X5, but massaged to produce more
than 400bhp. It will likely be aimed at such supercars as
Audi's upcoming R8. Although other rumours discount the
use of the BMW engine and blame the lack of an engine for
a delay for the cars launch (now cited as 2009). Officially
the delay is to "incorporate more Lotus DNA and other
enhancements to meet the changing needs of the global marketplace,"
according to a company statement.
Meanwhile, two new models are expected to
debut before the Esprit replacement: a Proton Satria-based
hot hatch developed with the aid of Lotus' handling experts;
and a much revised version with a huge performance hike.
Both are likely to wear Lotus Satria badging and are promising
to be even faster than Proton's own Satria GTi. Also rumoured
is a mid-range Lotus, possibly a 2+2.
Group Lotus CEO Mike Kimberley said the new five-year strategic
plan envisions growth in the company's engineering business
as it expands into new markets and pursues joint ventures
and strategic alliances with other auto firms.
Source unknown:

Other
News
Hethel
made about 4,500 cars in 2005, but it stopped making the
Speedster two-seat roadster for General Motors subsidiaries
Opel and Vauxhall last summer. CEO Kim Ogaard-Nielsen said
they are looking to expand the engineering business which
now accounts for about a quarter of revenues, but Ogaard-Nielsen
plans to grow that to about a third by 2010. "We have
a couple of opportunities where we are going to manufacture
for another company," he said. "We could go up
to 8,000 cars a year." Partners are being sought to
develop vehicles based on the VVA architecture.
The
Europa S, Lotus' version of a two-seat grand tourer, goes
into production in July. Lotus plans to make about 500 annually.
They will go to Europe and Asia, but not the US and Canada.
A
replacement for the Esprit is due in 2008. Lotus also may
add a 2+2 model to its lineup, possibly in 2010.
The
Tesla

Silicon
Valley startup firm Tesla Motors hopes to rock the automotive
world with a pure-electric, high-performance two-seater
called simply the Roadster.
The carbon-fiber-bodied Tesla Roadster was designed by
and jointly developed with Lotus. Final assembly will be
at the Lotus facility in Hethel, England, although Tesla
will maintain an R&D center at its headquarters in Northern
California.
The car is fitted with a lithium-ion battery pack and a
185kW (248 horsepower) electric motor driving the rear wheels
through a clutchless two-speed automatic transmission. The
chassis is bonded extruded aluminum, with double wishbones
at all four corners.
0 to 60 mph is quoted as about 4 seconds and it achieves
the equivalent of 135 mpg. Top speed is estimated at more
than 130 mph. More significantly, Tesla claims the car can
run up to 250 miles on a charge a huge leap over
earlier electrics such as General Motors' EV1.
The Roadster comes with a soft top; a body-color hardtop
is an extra-cost option. Tesla plans to install a charging
station in each owner's garage, but the company will offer
an optional portable charging unit so the car basically
can plug into any 110V or 220V outlet. A full charge takes
as little as three and a half hours. Tesla also plans to
offer a "solar option" that includes installation
of solar panels to help charge the Roadster while at rest.
Tesla estimates the life of the battery pack at around 100,000
miles.
Tesla says it soon will begin accepting deposits on orders.
The company says it expects to launch a nationwide city-by-city
tour in early 2007. The first deliveries, to customers in
California, are targeted for summer 2007, with New York
and Miami next in line for fall 2007. Tesla says it will
not sell the Roadster to people who live outside the continental
U.S.
http://www.teslamotors.com/ |