| Type 
                      1 - Trials Special (1948)  The 
                        first Lotus based on a 1930 Austin 7 saloon. Chapman ensured 
                        that every body panel was stressed such that it would add 
                        to overall strength of the car without adding unnecessary 
                        weight. This was an engineering philosophy which was to 
                      carry on for the rest of Lotus history  |  | 
                   
                    | Type 
                      7 - Lotus Seven (1957 - 1972) The 
                      Lotus Seven began as an uprated version of the successful 
                      Lotus Mark 6 (which was the first production sports car 
                      for Lotus). Steel tube frame with aluminium bodywork, later 
                      with glass-fibre nose and fenders. A variety of engines 
                      were used. Produced mainly in kit form, it enables many 
                      enthusiasts to own a dual-purpose road/racing sports car 
                      at a reasonable price. Four basic variants are produced 
                      by Lotus until 1973, when the rights to manufacture were 
                      taken by Caterham Cars Ltd., which still produces the Caterham 
                    Seven (a development of the Lotus Seven Series 3).
 |  
                         Lotus 
                          6 and 7s at racing at Goodwood, 1958
  Modern 
                          Caterham 7
 | 
                   
                    | Type 
                      10 (1955) In 
                      1954, Chapman brought aerodynamics to racing with Frank 
                      Costin, aeronautical aerodynamics engineer with De Havilland 
                      Aircraft Company. The Mk 8 used a MG 1467cc engine. Customer 
                      Mike Anthony wanted a Mk8 capable of running a 2 litre six 
                      cylinder Bristol engine. The Mk 10 used Dunlop disc brakes 
                      front and rear with an aerodynamic low drag body.
 Type 
                        11 (1956-1958) The 
                        "Eleven" was a class winning car at Le Mans. It set the 
                        world speed record for an 1100cc (67 CID) car at 143mph! 
                        The Eleven won in class at the LeMans 24 hours of Endurance 
                        in the 1500cc and 1100cc classes and took the overall 
                        win for the Index of Performance. Revised in 1956 to Series 
                    2 specifications.
 |  | 
                   
                    | Type 
                      14 - Lotus Elite (1957-1962) The 
                      Lotus Elite was introduced at the 1957 Earls Court Motor 
                      Show and was the first closed passenger offered by Lotus. 
                      It used a glass fibre monocoque chassis comprised of eight 
                      box sections. Independent front suspension by coil springs 
                      and wishbones. Independent rear suspension by Chapman struts 
                      incorporating coil springs. Powered by a 1216cc all aluminium 
                      Coventry Climax engine. Winner in class at LeMans 24 hour 
                    races.
 |  | 
                   
                    | Type 
                        19 (1960 to 1962) The 
                        Lotus revolution began with the Lotus 18 which was one 
                        of the first race cars with mid-engine design. Although 
                        under-powered when compared to the then dominant Ferraris, 
                        the Lotus 18 was capable of out handling them. In the 
                        hands of Sterling Moss, Lotus scored its first Formula 
                        One victory at the 1960 Grand Prix of Monaco.
 For 
                        the road going Type 19, the Type 18 was widened and formed 
                        into Lotus' first mid-engined sports racer, powered by 
                        2.0 and 2.5 Coventry Climax FPF engines. The 19B was built 
                        for Dan Gurney and powered by a Ford V8. The Type 
                        19 was also known as the Lotus Monte Carlo.  |  | 
                   
                    | Type 
                        23 (1962 to 1964) One 
                        of the most popular sports racers in Lotus history. Powered 
                        by the Ford based engines, 1100cc and later the Lotus 
                        Twin Cam. Used Type 19 suspension, with larger tanks.
 The 
                        Type 23 was one of the cars used for styling inspiration 
                        for the Lotus Elise.  |  | 
                   
                    | Type 
                      26 - Lotus Elan (1962 - 1973) The 
                      first Lotus road car to use the now famous steel backbone 
                      chassis over which a glass-fibre body was fitted. First 
                      available as a roadster, an optional hardtop was later offered, 
                      and eventually a coupe version. The Elan continued in production 
                    through to 1974 and became the most produced Lotus ever.
 |  | 
                   
                    | Type 
                        28 - Lotus Cortina (1963 - 1966) Ford 
                        of England came to Lotus to build 1000 special Cortina 
                        GT's with a twin cam engine to compete in Group 2. The 
                        Lotus Cortina sported a completely different rear suspension, 
                        light alloy body panels and Lotus Twin Cam engine. Top 
                        speed was 105 mph, 0-60 in 9.9 sec. The Lotus Cortina 
                        dominated the Sedan classes in its time. Click here 
                        for a Lotus Cortina restoration site; or here 
                    for more Lotus Cortina Mark 1 info.
 |  | 
                
                  | Type 
                      38 - Indianapolis Racer (1965)The 
                      Lotus Type 38 represented a major structural improvement 
                      over its predecessors, the 1963 Type 29 and the 1964 Type 
                      34. The Type 38 was of true monocoque, stressed skin construction, 
                      rather than being merely a "bathtub" with non-stressed 
                      upper bodywork. Lotus estimated that it had 50% greater 
                      torsional stiffness. The off-set suspension and DOHC 4.2 
                      litre 505bhp V-8 engine followed previous Lotus practice.
 This 
                      car, driven by Jim Clark, won the Indianapolis 500 in 1965, and finished 2nd in 
                      1966 behind Graham Hill in a Lola. |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    40 (1965) Only 
                    3 Type 40's were built. The bodywork was distinctive with 
                    two angled stack exhausts emerging from the rear deck. The 
                    last Lotus sports racer to be built. Powered by a Ford 5.3 
                    litre V8, 410 bhp.
 More 
                      Type 40 info here: http://www.pistonheads.com/lotus/type40/                   |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    43 (1966 - 1967) Chapman 
                    truncated the monocoque chassis, ending it abruptly behind 
                    the driver. The engine was mounted to the rear bulkhead and 
                    the entire rear suspension was mounted to the engine and transaxle. 
                    Other teams declared that the car would fold in half at the 
                    first corner. Today EVERY Formula One, Indy Car and World 
                    Endurance Cup car has a truncated monocoque chassis with its 
                    engine and transaxle carrying the rear suspension, it is now 
                    accepted as the "only" way to build a fast race car. Formula 
                  One History
 |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    46 - Lotus Europa (1967 - 1974) The 
                    first non-track mid-priced mid-engined car produced. A glass 
                    fibre body draped over a steel backbone chassis with 4 wheel 
                    independent suspension. Early cars were powered by a Lotus 
                    modified Renault engine. Later this engine was replaced by 
                  the Lotus Twin Cam engine and a 5 speed gearbox.
 |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    49 (1967 to 1970 ) The 
                    Lotus 49 was an uprated Lotus 43 designed for Formula 1 using 
                    a truncated monocoque chassis. In its inaugural race it not 
                    only took pole position in the hands of Graham Hill but was 
                    victorious in the hands of Jim Clark. This car introduced 
                    the Ford Cosworth DFV V8 engine to racing. Later derivatives 
                    of the Lotus 49 introduced aerofoils, high mounted wings, 
                    wedge shaped body panels, and the use of air management to 
                    create downforce. The Lotus 49 took Lotus to the Constructor's 
                    Championship in 1968. Click 
                    here for more Lotus 49 info, or here 
                  for even more.
 |  | 
                 
                  | Moonraker, 
                      1971 
 
  Colin 
                      Chapman took over the Moonraker Marine boatyard in 1971 
                      and redesigned their product, the Moonraker 36. The boat 
                      had a glass fibre hull and Chapman was to later introduce 
                      a revolutionary technique producing one piece vacuum injection 
                      moulded GRP hulls in an ex-war aircraft hangar on the edge 
                      of Hethel airfield, next to the Lotus Cars factory in Hethel. 
                      The method was eventually used for the production of the 
                      Lotus cars .  Clan 
                      Crusader, 1971 The 
                      Clan Crusader is a fibreglass monocoque sports two-seater, 
                      powered by a Rootes Imp Sport engine. Paul Haussauer and 
                      John Frayling designed this car as a follow-up to the Europa, 
                      but when Chapman didn't accept their plans they started 
                      their own business, aided by government development grants 
                      in Washington near Durham. Approximately 350 cars were built 
                      by Clan Motor Company, some at the beginning being sold 
                      as kit cars. More info here 
                  and the owners club website
 | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    50 - Lotus Elan Plus Two (1967 - 1973) Lotus 
                    enlarged the backbone chassis of the Elan and kept the Twin 
                    Cam engine, the disc brakes, the independent suspension; but 
                    was able to offer two jump seats and a roomier cabin. This 
                    was Lotus' first "family" car. The Elan Plus 2 retained all 
                    of the sporty performance of the standard Elan but, added 
                  practicality.
 |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    72 (1970 to 1975) The 
                    most successful Formula One race car ever raced. The Lotus 
                    72 used variable rate torsion bar springs at both front and 
                    rear, front inboard disc brakes, the continuation of the wedge 
                    aerodynamic bodywork, multiple element rear wing and side 
                    radiators. Today nearly every formula car uses these elements 
                    introduced by the Lotus 72. The Lotus 72 won 3 World's Constructor's 
                    Championships and 2 Driver's Championships and is the only 
                    Formula One race car to have won 20 Grand Prix races. Click 
                  here for more Lotus 72 info.
 |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    75 - Lotus Elite (1974 - 1982) The 
                    new Elite was a four place car with a glass-fibre body and 
                    a steel backbone chassis. 4 wheel independent suspension system. 
                    Power was provided by Lotus' own 907 twin cam 4 valve per 
                    cylinder all aluminium engine. This engine was the first 4 
                  valve production engine sold on the open market.
 |  | 
                 
                  |  DeLorean 
                      DMC12, 1981 In 
                      1981, Chapman became involved in a new venture with his 
                      friend John DeLorean. The DeLorean sports car is now best 
                      remembered for its role in the Back to the Future films, 
                      but prior to this the name DeLorean was best known for scandal. 
                      The British government gave DeLorean tens of millions of 
                      pounds to put his sports car into production in an unemployment 
                      blackspot in Belfast, at an axis between Catholic and Protestant 
                      communities. De Lorean used some of the money to pay Chapman 
                      to design the car (based on the Lotus Esprit), and further 
                      money was extracted from the government using a network 
                      of offshore companies. The car once produced was underpowered, 
                      overpriced, and extremely poor quality - DeLorean declared 
                      insolvency in January 1982. DeLorean's arrest on coke-dealing 
                      charges simply added to the chaos (he successfully defended 
                      those charges). In February, the British government appointed 
                      receivers and by October production had ceased, after only 
                      8,550 cars had been built. DeLorean evaded extradition and 
                      was never jailed for his part in the operation. Colin Chapman 
                      died of a heart attack in 1982. Lotus MD Fred Bushell was 
                      left to serve a three year sentence. The frustrated trial 
                      judge commented that if Chapman and De Lorean had been there 
                      they would have each received 10 year sentences for "an 
                  outrageous and massive fraud".
 | 
                 
                  | Type 
                      76 - Lotus Eclat (1975 - 1982) The 
                      Lotus Eclat was a fastback version of the new Elite. The 
                      rear roof line of the Elite was sloped down into a sporty 
                      fastback. Replacing the glassback of the Elite was a trunk 
                      lid that opened to a generously sized and practical boot.
 This 
                      type designation was also assigned to an F1 car. It featured 
                      twin brake pedals (for left foot braking), with an electronically 
                      activated clutch controlled by a button atop the gear selector. |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    78 (1974) The 
                    JPS Mk1, designed as a replacement for the Type 72. Click 
                  here                    for more Team Lotus info.
 |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    79 - Lotus Esprit (1976 - 1980) The 
                    Lotus Esprit was first shown to the world as a styling exercise 
                    by the famous Italian design studio of Giugiaro Design in 
                    1974. The show car was so successful, and inquiries so great, 
                    that Lotus committed to taking the successor to the Europa 
                    into production. Glass-Fibre bodied, steel backbone chassis 
                    and Lotus' own 907 multi-valve engine mounted mid-ship with 
                    4 wheel independent suspension were all features of these 
                  first Esprits.
 |  | 
                
                  | James Bond Submarine Esprit, 1977 The Lotus Esprit was perhaps the most advanced car Bond has driven,                   it had the capability to transform into a submarine, and an array                   of other ingenious gadgets. The Lotus was personally delivered                   to 007 in Corsica in the film The Spy Who Loved Me, driven by Q, who warned Bond to be careful                   with the car. Bond responded to Q with a smart remark, dropped                   the clutch, and took off with a grinding screech.  |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    79 (1978 to 1979) The 
                    Lotus 79 refined the concept of Ground Effects (a concept 
                    first developed by Lotus in their Type 78) to its fullest 
                    extension. It dominated the season scoring 8 Grand Prix wins 
                    out of the 16 races. Lotus became the 1st team in Formula 
                    1 history to score 3 consecutive 1-2 victories. Lotus again 
                    won the Constructor's and Driver's Championships. Every race 
                    car today uses the Ground Effects system of under car air 
                    management. Click 
                  here for more Lotus 79 info.
 |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                      81 - Sunbeam Lotus Talbot (1980) A derivative of the Lotus 
                      907 engine was dropped into a Chrysler (Omni) Sunbeam chassis 
                      and became an instant Rally winner. Click here 
                      for the UK Avenger and Sunbeam Owners Club.
 This 
                      type designation was also used for an F1 car. |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    82 - Lotus Turbo Esprit (1981 - 1987) Lotus 
                    used the turbocharging technology learned in racing and applied 
                    it to the Esprit. Instantly power output was raised to 210 
                    bhp from 2.2 litres. The Turbo Esprit received revised rear 
                    suspension and a revised and stronger chassis. A deeper front 
                    spoiler and taller spoiler were added to cope with the higher 
                    speeds. The Turbo Esprit was capable of 0-60 mph in 6 seconds 
                    and 150 mph. Power was raised to 215 bhp in 1986 with Bosch 
                  K-Jetronic fuel injection.
 |  | 
                
                  | Excel (1982 - 1992)  Around 1982/83 when the Excel was introduced, the Eclat Excel also existed. Lotus put forward the Excel as an improved Eclat to avoid  Type Approval.  Lotus even roled over  the name and the first Excels were badged Eclat on the boot, Excel on the rear wings, but after a short while the Eclat badge was dropped and by late 1983 the Excel was fully established.  http://www.mikecauser.com/http://www.lotusexcel.net
 |  | 
                 
                  |  Ultralight, 
                      1982 Colin 
                      Chapman loved to fly and had a vision of designing and making 
                      an aeroplane for the individual. He dabbled in designing 
                      a personal jet in the 1970's, but turned to ultralights 
                      as they were less regulated. Very simple winged hang gliders 
                      with a small engine and propeller, he was aiming for 2-seat 
                      aeroplanes that could be used for both business and pleasure. 
                      Designer Burt Rutan was contracted to design and build a 
                      prototype 2-seater ultralight for him whilst Lotus developed 
                      a light and small engine. This project was never finished 
                  before Colin Chapmans death.
 | 
                 
                  |  Type 90 (1981) The proposed new Elan project, using Toyota running gear. Became 
                    project X100 when Toyota running gear was dropped.
 Etna - M300 (1984)2 seater 4 litre rear wheel drive concept car. V8 engine giving 336.00 PS (247 kW or 331 HP) at 6500rpm. Top speed:	290.0 km/h (180.2 mph) and 0-60 miles:	4.3 seconds.
 The Lotus Etna concept car was designed by Giorgetto Giuguaro from Ital Design. It was displayed at the Birmingham Motorshow in 1984. The engine was to be mid mounted and the chassis was loosely based around the Lotus Esprit's, however the wheel base was 3 inches longer. Lotus intended it to feature the new 4 litre Lotus Type 909 V8 engine (a derivative of the Esprit engine). Only one car was ever made. More here | 
                
                  | Type 98TThis is the Lotus 98T, as raced in the 1986 F1 season by Ayrton Senna and Jason Dumfries. It was powered by the  Renault 1.5 litre V6 Turbo engine. Senna drove it to two GP victories  and had eight other point finishes. Lotus took third in the  Constructors' points table.
 |  | 
                
                  | Type 99T (1987)Unveiled in London on 3rd February 1987 the Lotus 99T holds the honour  of being the last ever Lotus Formula One car to win a Grand Prix.
 Sportung bright yellow and blue of the sponsors  Camel. Moving away  from the Renault powerplants that had been employed since the Type 93T  in 1983, the 99T harnessed a new twin-turbo Honda unit capable of  pushing out more than 800bhp. This car also reintroduced  the revolutionary ‘Active' suspension  system. Active suspension was eventually  outlawed as it gave massive performance and handling advantages. |  | 
                 
                  | Lotus 
                    Esprit Turbo (1988 - 1989) In 
                    1988 the Esprit gave up its original lines of Giugiaro and 
                    received a complete makeover. The new lines were curved and 
                    softer. The interior was also greatly revised. The electrical 
                    system was completely replaced with new wiring, gauges, switches 
                    and central electric door locks. In 1989 the Esprit Turbo 
                    engine received a complete electronic engine management system 
                    based on Delco components. This further boosted output to 
                    228 bhp and 0-60 times were reduced to 5.2 seconds and top 
                    speed rose to 155 mph. A stronger Renault built 5 speed transmission 
                  was also fitted to handle the increased power.
 | 
                     | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    100 - Lotus Elan (1990) Powered 
                    by a 1588cc twin cam 16 valve turbocharged engine that produces 
                    162 bhp, the Elan goes from 0 to 60 in 6.7 seconds and attains 
                    a top speed of 137 mph. The chassis is a hybrid of Lotus' 
                    classic steel backbone mated with advanced composites to create 
                  one the stiffest cars in the world.
 |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    104 - Lotus Carlton/Omega (1990) Lotus 
                    developed and built version of the Vauxhall Omega and Opel 
                    Omega 4 door sedan with a 3.6 lire 24 valve twin turbo straight 
                    six. A 6 speed gearbox from the Lotus developed Corvette ZR-1 
                    allows the Lotus Carlton/Omega to hit 170 mph and 0-60 in 
                    under 6 seconds. Click here 
                  for James Waddington's Lotus Carlton site.
 |  | 
                 
                  |  Lotus 
                      Emotion In 
                      1991 Bertone decided to design a new body for the chassis 
                      of the Lotus Esprit, produced by General Motors. The chassis 
                      is the same length as the Lotus Esprit (245 cm), but with 
                      the total length at just over 4 metres (406 cm) this really 
                      is a very compact car. Link to Bertone 
                          here
 | 
                 
                  | Lotus 
                    Esprit Turbo SE (1989-1993) The 
                    Esprit Turbo SE is a further development of what is a very 
                    capable vehicle. The power of the Esprit Turbo SE is raised 
                    to 280 bhp with the use of a Lotus developed Chargecooler 
                    and and enhanced Engine Management System that uses six fuel 
                    injectors. Outwardly the Esprit Turbo SE sports a deeper front 
                    air dam and a rear wing. 0-60 times have fallen into the mid 
                    4 second range and top speed is in excess of 165 mph. In 1991 
                    three variations of this car were produced, the standard Turbo 
                    SE, the Jim Clark Special, and the X180R (the street version 
                  of the race car).
 |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    108 prototype Olympic bicycle  Gold Medal Barcelona (1992)
 Lotus 
                    developed the aerodynamically optimised carbonfibre Lotus 
                    Sport bicycle, on which Chris Boardman rode to a gold medal 
                    in the 4000 metre pursuit at the Barcelona Olympic Games in 
                    July 1992. Type 110 was the production version of type 108 
                  bicycle.
 |  | 
                 
                  | Type 109 
                      - 
                      F1 car, 1994
 Mugen/Honda 
                      ZA5C engined F1 car.See here 
                  for the full tech spec.
 |  | 
                 
                  | Type 110 
                    - Road BikeThe 
                    road racing version of the carbon bike (brakes and gears, 
                    twin rear blades), as ridden by Boardman et al in the Tour 
                  de France
 |  | 
                 
                  | Scorpion 
                    Tank
  The 
                    army recruited Lotus in 1994 to develop active suspension 
                    and active track tensioning for the Scorpion tank; by keeping 
                    the Scorpion's body steady while on the move, they improved 
                    its speed over rough terrain and created a more stable gun 
                    platform. Boats, trucks, buses and even microlights appear 
                  in their portfolio of projects. | 
                 
                  | Lotus 
                    Esprit S4 & S4s (1994-1995) The 
                    S4 represented a significant milestone for the Esprit model. 
                    Exterior changes included new front and rear bumpers and valances, 
                    new sidepods, a mid-mounted rear wing, and 17" wheels. Inside, 
                    a larger passenger cabin, the addition of a passenger airbag, 
                    and power assisted steering helped to elevate the Esprit to 
                    new levels of refinement. Joining the S4 for 1995 was the 
                    S4s, which was visually distinguished by an aggressive rear 
                    wing providing additional downforce. A larger turbocharger 
                    provided up to 300 bhp and was complimented by a firmer suspension 
                    with uprated springs and dampers. Top speed of 165 mph and 
                  a 0-60 mph time of 4.6 seconds.
 |  | 
                 
                  |  Type 
                      112 (1995) A 
                      stillborn F1 car intended for the 95 season. Sadly it never 
                      progressed beyond the drawing board as a result of Teams 
                      demise.
 112 
                      was originally allocated to the car which became the Elise, 
                      but the number was swapped for 111 (which had already been 
                      allocated to the 95 F1 car) because at one early stage the 
                      intention was to call the Elise "one-eleven" in 
                      honour of the original Lotus Eleven from the fifties. | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    111 - Lotus Elise (1996) Conceived 
                    as a low production model, the Elise has shattered sales expectations 
                    and returned Lotus to the forefront of sports car production. 
                    This incredible car has also spawned some very interesting 
                    limited editions, including the 340R, the Exige coupe, and 
                    several motorsport derivatives.
 The 
                      major (IMO) derivatives of the Elise are summarised below, 
                  for a more complete list of variations on the Elise, click here
 |  | 
                
                 
                  | Type 113Number 
                    not allocated!
 Type 
                      114 - Le Mans / GT2 Esprit 
                      (1996) The Type 114 debuted at the BPR Karcher Global Endurance GT series four hour race at Donnington., an improved version was later  unveiled at the Paul Richard 
                      circuit for the first race of 1996 GT series. It had a Lotus 
                      V8 engine, a six-speed racing transmission, F1-style aerodynamics, 
                      carbon brakes, and is down to the 900 kg minimum weight 
                      limit. After showing initial promise, it retired due to 
                  fractured exhaust. More info  here
 | 
                 
                  | Lotus 
                    Esprit V8 (1997) After 
                    more than 20 years, the Esprit's venerable 4 cylinder engine 
                    was replaced with a compact yet powerful 3.5 litre twin turbo 
                    V8. This very special car is the quickest and fastest of all 
                    road going Lotus. Capable of attaining 60 mph in just over 
                    4 seconds with a top speed of 180 mph places this Esprit firmly 
                    in supercar territory. A revised suspension benefits from 
                    17" front and 18" rear wheels mounting Michelin or Dunlop 
                    Z rated high performance tires. The latest V8 includes AP 
                    Racing Brakes with cross-drilled discs, OZ Racing wheels, 
                    and a tailgate-mounted rear wing. Available options include 
                  a removable glass roof panel.
 |  | 
                 
                  | Lotus Emme 
                      (1997) While 
                      mainly specialising in scooters, the Brazilian company Emme 
                      joined Lotus in 1997 to produce a sedan based on the existing 
                      Emme 420 and 420T. The turbocharged 16-valve engine produced 
                      over 121 hp per litre and 354 Newton metres of torque, achieving 
                      0-60 mph in 4.9 sec, 0-100 mph in 11.9 sec, and with a top 
                  speed 171mph. Only 12-15 were ever built.
 |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                      115 - Lotus Elise GT1 (1997) In 1997
      Lotus unveiled the Lotus Elise GT1, a derivative of the Lotus Elise and
      powered by a 3.5 litre eight-cylinder engine with 580bhp. The body is carbon-fibre.  Performance is 0-60 in  3.8 seconds,
      and top speed is 200 mph.
 For more info click here |  | 
                 
                  | 340R 
                    (August 1999) Outrageously 
                    styled and dynamically outstanding, the 340R is powered by 
                    a 1.8-litre VHPD (Very High Performance Derivative) K series 
                    engine producing 180PS. And in an extremely light car, equipped 
                    with a close ratio gearbox, that adds up to explosive performance 
                    of 0-60mph in 4.4secs, for instance, and a top speed of 133mph 
                  (214km/h).
 |  | 
                 
                  | Exige 
                      (April 2000)The 
                      Exige is a road-going replica of the Sport Elise racer, 
                      albeit with a few concessions to type approval regulations 
                      and the rigours of everyday road use.
 More 
                      info here |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                      116 - Opel Speedster / Vauxhall VX220 (2000) 
                      Nicknamed 
                      the Skipton in Hethel during development, Lotus 
                      has worked in co-operation with designers and engineers 
                      from the Opel/Vauxhall International Technical Development 
                      Centre in Ruesselsheim, Germany, to build the VX200 (named 
                      the Speedster for the European market). Lotus built the 
                      original concept show car - one of the stars of the March 
                  1999 Geneva Motorshow. For more info, click here
 |  | 
                
                 
                  | Lotus 
                    Extreme concept car (2000) The 
                    proposed vehicle is a radical, two-seater, with a fighter-cockpit 
                    seating arrangement, bringing together influences from aerospace, 
                    motorcycle and powerboat vehicles. Its construction will comprise 
                    of an aluminium chassis with composite bodywork and carbon 
                    fibre aerodynamic finning. The driving experience will be 
                    maximised by a unique suspension system, which will allow 
                    the vehicle to lean into bends. The total weight of the vehicle 
                    would be in the region of only 450kg, and the concept specification 
                    estimates a top speed of 150mph and a 0-60mph time of around 
                  5 seconds. More info here, more pictures here
 |  | 
                 
                  | Lotus 
                      Shopping Trolley (2000) "The 
                      fundamental techniques of vehicle engineering apply to both 
                      sportscars and to all other vehicles including the humble 
                      shopping trolley. The requirements for a fine handling sportscar 
                      are both stability and agility in the driving experience. 
                      This can be a conflict but with clever, intelligent design 
                      you can find a perfect and balance between sporty handling 
                  and confidence inspiring stability."  More info here
 |  | 
                 
                  | Type 
                    117 - Lotus Elise Mark II (2001) (This 
                    car is identified as a 111 variant for type approval). The 
                    Elise updated. The smooth contours have faded in favour of 
                    a more aggressive angular image. Available with two options 
                    - the Sports Tourer or the Race Tech. 
                      Nicknamed 
                  the Monza in Hethel during development.
 More info here, and some pre-production model pictures here (along with the M250) |  | 
                 
                  | 
					 Electric Lotus Elise, manufactured 
                      by Zytek Electric Vehicles Limited. The Zytek electric Lotus 
                      Elise is powered by two oil-cooled, internally mounted brushless 
                      DC, Zytek electric motors. Power is transmitted through 
                      custom Zytek gearboxes and standard Lotus drive shafts, 
                      each motor weighing only 13 kg but producing up to 75kW 
                      (100bhp) and 550 Nm torque. The car has a driving Range 
                      of about 120 miles (urban driving), and a top speed of 90 
                      mph. Acceleration is 0-90 mph in 11.2 sec, and the car weighs 
                      875 kg (with battery pack). Other features include trailing 
                  throttle and pedal activated regenerative braking. | 
                 
                  | 
                     M250 (Type 118?) Frankfurt 
                      Motorshow 1999 - Powered 
                      by a mid-mounted Lotus-tuned 3.0 litre V6 engine that drives 
                      the rear wheels through a six-speed gearbox, project M250 
                      was aimed to slot into the Lotus line-up between the Elise 
                      and the Esprit.  
                      Click here for a preview of the 
    M250. More info from Pistonheads.
 Unfortunately 
                  this programme was cancelled :-(  | 
                 
                  | Lotus 
                    Lada (2002)
  A 
                      1996 Lada  given a £100,000 makeover by Lotus cars of Norfolk, 
                        all courtesy of the BBC TV series Top Gear. Modifications 
                        made were sports lowered and much stiffened suspension, 
                        bilstein dampers, sports brakes, unique paint and decals, 
                        specially trimmed OMP racing seats with interior specially 
                        tailored to match, Momo steering wheel, big fat BBS alloy 
                        wheels with Yokohama track tyres. The engine is a Fiat 2 
                        litre twin cam engine that has been stage 2 race tuned by 
                        renowned race engineer Guy Croft, and coupled to a fiat 
                        131 five speed box via a race clutch. it develops approximately 
                        180bhp at 5,000 RPM, is capable of 0-60 in about 7 seconds 
                        and has a top speed of 135mph. More info here: http://www.guy-croft.com/page11.html | 
                |  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. More info here (Picture © MarkS) M120 
                        - Elise Coupe (1998) & M121 
                              - Europa S (2005) Project 
                        M120 was 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 (codenamed Sepang) eventually emerged in Dec 2005 as the Lotus Europa, click here for 
                      more details.  Lotus ECO2S, 2002 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.
 More info here 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 
                       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.
 More details here
 Lotus Sport Exige 240R, 25th Feb 2005                      Lotus 
                      Sport, the performance division of Lotus Cars Ltd.,  
                      developed the Lotus Sport Exige 240R, a limited edition of 50 cars. With a supercharged and intercooled engine producing over 240 hp and over 170 lbft 
                      of torque, 0- 60mph in 
                      less than 4s and 100mph (160 km/h) in less than 
                      10s before topping out at 155 mph (249 km/h). At 
                      this top speed the  aerodynamics produce 113 kg 
                      of downforce increasing grip, stability and safety. More 
                    details here and here
 
  Lotus Circuit Car, June 2005
 Tony 
                      Shute, Head of Product Development at Lotus Cars: "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." 
                      Project  delayed whilst Lotus focused on the 
                    Europa. More here.  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 was designed for the 
                       FIA series to start in 2006  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 ran in the Avon Tyres British 
                      GT Championship. More here
  APX, VVA technology, Feb 2006
 Displayed 
                      at Geneva, the Aluminium Performance Crossover (APX) concept 
                      - a showcase of Lotus Engineerings aluminium Versatile 
                    Vehicle Architecture (VVA). 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. More details here Exige 265E, Aug 2006  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. Lotus  
                      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 and  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. See here for full details  GT3 Exige, 2007
 Lotus Sport, the  race car performance arm of Lotus Cars Ltd, unveiled the Lotus Exige GT3  concept road vehicle at the 77th annual Geneva International  Motor Show. More details here Tesla, 2006 
 Silicon 
                      Valley startup firm Tesla Motors developed a pure-electric, high-performance two-seater 
                    called simply the Roadster. The carbon-fiber-bodied Tesla Roadster was originally designed by 
                    and jointly developed with Lotus.  More info here and at http://www.teslamotors.com/ | 
                
                  |  EVE HYBRID, March 2007
 The EVE programme was undertaken by a  cross-functional team of Lotus and Proton engineers working together at  Hethel  and Shah Alam, Kuala Lumpur.  The resulting EVE Hybrid demonstrator, based on a Proton Gen.2 compact midsize car with a 1.6litre gasoline  engine, but with tailpipe emissions down by  22% and fuel economy improved by 28%. See here for more details
  Evora, July 2008 (Type 124)
 One of the  stars of the London Motorshow was the launch of the Lotus Evora. This is the long awaited 'Project Eagle' 2+2 sports car. Later, in Geneva Switzerland, Lotus officially confirmed Evora (named after a town in Portugal) production specifications ahead of the May 2009 launch in Europe. See here for details Announced to the 2009 Frankfurt Motorshow, the  Evora Type 124 to be homologated for either FIA or GT3-spec racing, but until the technical regulations for those series are finalised - and until Lotus knows exactly how quick the Evora Type 124 is - the two factory-supported cars will run broadly to VLN Nurburgring endurance championship regs. RUMOURS - past & present - see here ;) Exos, 2010 
 The Exos Experience, initiated and operated by Lotus Motorsport, is an elite club. A club in which the limited number of Lotus 125 owner drivers can refine their driving skills and challenge themselves in Formula 1™ inspired technology combined with expert one-to-one advice from former Grand Prix drivers and trainers. Full press release here, full report from the Golden Gate Lotus Club here Elite, 2014 (announced 2010) Set for release in spring 2014, this 2+2 GT  will set a new benchmark in design, performance and emissions. A front-mid positioned 5.0l V8 engine delivering up to 620 PS meaning drivers can expect to go from 0-100 km/h in approximately 3.5 to 3.7 seconds. Petrol, hybrid optional with hybrid gearbox & integrated electric motors and KERS. Full press release here 
  Have the wing mirrors fallen off already? ;)
 Motorsport PlansOctober 2010. Plans unveiled for IndyCar, GP2 and GP3, Evora GT4, GT2, LMP2 (planned for the 24 Hr Le Mans in 2012) here. 
 DAWN OF A NEW ERA PARIS 2010A new fleet of cars announced at the Paris Mororshow, Sept 2010 - see here for more details. The models include a replacement for the Elise, an all-new Esprit, the Elite and a larger Eterne saloon based on it, a new Elan and  a new city car co-developed with parent firm Proton. Geneva 2011Details of the Enduro and Evora, plus club racer here |