fbpx
Wikipedia

Caterham Cars

Caterham Cars is a British manufacturer of specialist lightweight sports cars established in Caterham, England, with their headquarters in Dartford, England. Their current model, the Caterham 7 (or Seven), originally launched in 1973, is a direct evolution of the Series 3 Lotus Seven designed by Colin Chapman. In the 1990s the company made the Caterham 21, a two-seater soft top alternative to the MGF and Lotus Elise, (which both sold many more units). A track-only car, the SP/300.R, a joint project with Lola was released for customer testing in 2010 and was scheduled for release in 2013. On 27 April 2011, Team Lotus owner Tony Fernandes announced that he had purchased Caterham.[1][2] On 2 April 2021, news was leaked that Caterham Cars was acquired outright on 31 March 2021 by VT Holdings, Japanese importer for the Caterham Seven since 2009. As well as being a Caterham importer, VT also imports Lotus cars and Royal Enfield motorcycles into Japan.

Caterham Cars Ltd
TypePrivate limited company
IndustryAutomobiles
Founded1973
FounderGraham Nearn
HeadquartersDartford, England, UK
ProductsCaterham Seven 170, Caterham Super Seven 600, Caterham Super Seven 2000, Caterham Seven 360, Caterham Seven 420, Caterham Seven 420 CUP, Caterham Seven 620
ParentCaterham Group
Websitewww.caterhamcars.com

History

Lotus origins

Colin Chapman's Lotus Cars launched the Series 1 Lotus Seven in 1957. The car was immediately embraced by enthusiasts as a low-cost, lightweight sports car and successful race car. Revised Series 2, Series 3 and Series 4 versions were subsequently launched in 1960, 1968 and 1970 respectively.

Caterham Cars had been a major Lotus 7 dealer during the 1960s, and its founder, Graham Nearn, purchased the rights to continue manufacture of the Seven design from Chapman in 1973,[3] after Lotus announced its intention to discontinue the model. Caterham initially restarted manufacture of the Lotus Seven Series 4; however, when this proved unpopular, production switched to a Series 3 model in 1974.

In 1974, under the name of Seven Cars Limited, Caterham built 20 production cars with chassis numbers 1 to 20 and one prototype, with chassis number 0 (CS3 3550 – CS3 3570). Of the 21 cars produced in the first year, all were fitted with the Ford Lotus Twin Cam 1557cc engine, with the exception of chassis number 7 which, intended for racing, was fitted with a 1962cc twin cam engine sourced from Alfa Romeo.

The Lotus/Caterham 7 is widely regarded by car enthusiasts and the media as one of the signature sports cars of the 20th century.[citation needed] With 2007 marking the 50th year of continuous production, the Seven still enjoys strong support and success in clubman-style racing.

Since 2006 Caterham Cars has been run by an ex-Lotus management team led by Ansar Ali (CEO) and Mark Edwards (COO). In June 2012 Ansar Ali announced he was to leave Caterham Cars and Graham Mcdonald (the company's former CFO) became the new CEO.

Construction

As with its Lotus Seven precursors, Caterhams are constructed of aluminium sheet attached to a tubular steel chassis. Nose cone and wings are either GRP or carbon fibre depending on specification. All Sevens are front-engined with rear-wheel drive and two seats. Their extremely high performance is achieved through light weight (less than 500 kg (1,102 lb) on some versions) rather than particularly powerful engines. As well as a lightweight chassis and bodywork, Caterham Sevens achieve their very low mass through their lack of comfort and safety oriented features such as a fixed roof, doors, radio, air-conditioning, airbags, traction/stability control, ABS, satellite navigation or cruise control. As a result, the Seven is somewhat limited in its practicality for everyday usage and is instead recognised by driving enthusiasts for its focus on driving enjoyment, making it an ideal track/race car or 'Sunday' car.

Kit format

Chapman and Lotus helped to pioneer the British kit car industry. The Lotus Seven was offered in kit form to allow buyers to avoid new car tax in the UK. Subsequently, Caterham continued offering cars in 'complete knock down' (CKD) kit form as the tradition of hand building your own Seven was well established amongst enthusiasts. Today, all Caterham Sevens are still offered in kit form in the UK except the CSR (Series 6) model. Modern Caterham kits differ from the majority of kit cars as all parts are supplied ready to assemble, not requiring a donor car, fabrication or any special skills.

International

 
Caterham 7 Roadsport near Caterham South showroom

Although the Seven has always been popular with enthusiasts outside of the UK marketplace, export of the Seven to other markets has increasingly been limited by homologation, safety and emissions regulations in the modern era. As a result, the chassis/engine combinations, specifications, pricing and kit-form availability vary widely between countries.

In the past in the United States Caterhams were sold as kits only, lacking some modern safety features required of manufacturers, but which are not required for individually assembled vehicles. Buyers could either choose to construct the cars themselves or pay their regional dealers or local builders to assemble them. Typically the engine and transmission are sourced separately as a unit – often from Caterham – but all other components (including frame, suspension, differential, driveshaft, interior, wiring and instruments) were provided in kit form.

In the UK, the vehicles can be obtained as kits or entirely assembled by Caterham and registered for the road under IVA (Individual Vehicle Approval) regulations. In the '60s, the original Lotus Seven was sold only in kit form in both the UK and the US, in order to evade the very high taxes on complete new cars that were not assessed on automobile parts.

United States

As of 2014, however, Caterham has named Superformance their official distributor in the United States. International demand has increased dramatically in part due to the addition of a F1 Race team and the changes in Caterham's structure focusing on the distribution of the Seven worldwide. Caterham has since introduced a new model line up and focused on their production and production times to better suit their new international market, making their partnership with Superformance possible. Sevens will be shipped to the US in part-built form and sold as rolling chassis via Superformance's nationwide dealer network for customers to then complete the build personally or through the Superformance dealership. The initial US line-up includes several Caterham Sevens: 280, 360, 480, and the 620R.[4]

Location

Until 1987 the offices, factory and showroom of Caterham Cars were located in the town of Caterham, Surrey.

In 1987, the production and administration of the company moved to a new factory in Dartford, Kent.

Caterham Cars retained a Caterham South showroom and servicing facility in the town of Caterham adjacent to the railway station until February 2013. The Caterham dealership closed after the premises were sold for development and the showroom relocated to temporary facilities in Crawley.[5] Additionally the Caterham Midlands showroom operates outside Leicester.

In 2012 elements of Caterham Cars moved into a new facility in Leafield, Oxfordshire, where it is expected the new models of cars to be produced in the future will be developed and built. This new facility was formerly used by the Arrows F1 team and the Super Aguri F1 team. The Leafield site also accommodated the Caterham F1 team, which moved from its original base in Hingham, Norfolk and competed in Formula One between the 2012 and 2014 seasons.

Caterham 21

 
Caterham 21

In 1994 Caterham also produced a model called the '21'.[6] Mechanically the 21 was very similar to the 7, using a modified 7 spaceframe chassis with a new GRP roadster-style body, including a wrap-around windscreen and fold-away fabric hood (convertible top) manufactured by Oxted Trimming Company.

The 21 benefited from a considerably stiffer setup than a 7, due to the work on the chassis and having a full body. Comfort was introduced in the same minimalist style as the 7, adding just enough to make it a proper roadster without adding too much weight.

Caterham, however, underestimated the effort involved in creating a completely new car and took far too long from its inception to deliver the first customer cars, seeing many people who had placed deposits defect to the Lotus Elise and other vehicles. Early ones were used as "prototypes", leaving customers to help iron out some of the foibles of the new car.[citation needed]

The 21 never sold particularly well, with only 48 ever made. It had moderate racing success in the Belcar 24-hour series in Europe and is credited with helping Caterham develop the widetrack setup used in SVs (amongst other developments) and the CSR's sweeping interior is reminiscent of the original 21 design.

Caterham SP/300.R

The SP/300.R is a new track-only model designed by Caterham alongside Lola Cars. The SP/300.R is a limited edition with limited production to 25 per annum.[7]

Caterham 7 model line-up

 
Classic Caterham

Chassis variants

In 2010 Caterham offers three different chassis variants in the UK.

Series 3 (S3)

The most popular variant retains the same dimensions and layout of the Lotus 7 Series 3.

Series 5 (SV)

Caterham introduced this variant in 2000 to accommodate larger drivers (space is restricted in the S3 for drivers over 6 ft (1.8 m) tall.) Although visually very similar to the S3, the SV is longer, taller and wider and has significantly more space for taller and broader drivers with the added benefits of more luggage space, a larger fuel tank and more stability. The SV chassis is 25 kg (55 lb) heavier than the S3.

CSR (Series 6)

The CSR was launched in 2005 following extensive research and development by Caterham with the objective of creating an improved Seven. The CSR is based on the larger dimensions of the SV but with a substantially revised and stiffer chassis, inboard 'pushrod' front suspensions, fully independent rear suspension, improved aerodynamics, potent Cosworth engines and a new 'integrated' dashboard layout.

Model/trim variants

Classic

The most basic version of the 7 was traditionally offered with a 'live' rear axle but now comes with De Dion tube rear suspension found in other models of the same range. This trim level strips away all non-essential equipment and comforts.

  • Classic trim is available on S3/SV chassis
  • Engines: 1.4-litre K-Series (105 bhp) or 1.6-litre K-Series (120 bhp).

Roadsport

Roadsport is the trim level intended for general usage, different weather conditions and touring. The spec includes a full windscreen and weather equipment to increase practicality. A large range of performance options are available. The Roadsport dates back to 1996 when it was called the Superlight R, in 1998 a much softer version came out called the Seven Clubsport 1.8. The range continued to be developed in the years as a great alternative to someone who wanted a little bit more than a Classic, but less than a Superlight.

  • Classic trim is available on S3/SV chassis
  • Engines: 1.6-litre Ford Sigma (120,125 or 150 bhp) or 2.0-litre Ford Duratec (175 bhp).
Roadsport A

Roadsport A cars are ex-Academy cars, with no engine upgrades. However a number of performance upgrades such removing the windscreens and lights, widetrack front suspension and uprated dampers are allowed, as is professional team support. RSA races at the same events as RSB, but has longer 30-minute races.

Roadsport B

Roadsport B is largely for drivers that have come through the previous season's Academy. Some minor modifications are permitted to the car, including fitting a rear anti-roll bar and sticky Avon CR500 tyres. Technical support is still provided by the factory, and professional team support is not permitted. RSB has 20-minute races at 7 or 8 'double-header' meetings over the course of the season, usually all in the UK.

 
Caterham 7 Superlight R300

Superlight

The Superlight is intended for track and fast road usage. Superlight spec includes performance options such as carbon bodywork and a close ratio 6-speed gearbox. A wind deflector in place of the windscreen makes a helmet more or less mandatory. The Superlight R400 uses a 2.0 litre Ford Duratec engine tuned to 210 bhp (157 kW; 213 PS). The R400 name indicates the car's 400 bhp-per-tonne power-to-weight ratio.

  • Superlight trim is available on S3/SV chassis
  • Engines: 1.6-litre Ford Sigma (150 bhp) or 2.0-litre Ford Duratec (175 bhp, 210 bhp or 263 bhp).
Superlight R300

The Superlight R300 was introduced for 2009, designed to bridge the gap between RSA and the existing Superlight R400 class. It is expected to be popular with experienced RSA racers wanting to move on to the next level in speed.

Superlight R400

The Superlight R400 series is Caterham Motorsport's premier British championship. The R400 is a 220 bhp Cosworth powered dedicated race car with a Quaife six-speed sequential gearbox replacing the standard Caterham unit used in the R300. As with all series above Academy, it runs on Avon CR500 tyres. 2009 Champion Dan Denis, Matt Blyth Racing

Superlight R500

The Superlight R500 series is the latest of Caterham Motorsport's Superlight series of RSA Racing cars. Powered by a 2.0-litre Ford Duratec engine producing maximum horsepower (bhp/rpm) of 263 bhp @ 8500rpm and maximum torque (lb.ft/rpm) of 177 lb.ft @ 7200rpm. With a weight of 506 kg (516 kg) and a sequential gearbox, it is capable of 0–60 mph in 2.88 seconds and a power-to-weight ratio of 520 bhp-per-tonne. Advertised top speed 150 mph. The R500 has been made Top Gear car of the year 2008. In another appearance earlier in the series, it placed fifth on the Power Lap board with a 1:17.9. This time beat the €1,100,000 (£899,000/$1,550,000), 1001 hp Bugatti Veyron.

Superlight R600

In October 2012 a supercharged model for a race-series above the R300-class was released, including slick tyres and a sequential gearbox.[8]

Superlight 620R

In September 2013 Caterham made a car called the 620R. It was based on the R500, but was supercharged. This increased the power output to 315 PS (311 hp; 232 kW) at 7,700 rpm and the torque to 219 lb⋅ft (297 N⋅m) at 7,350 rpm. It also reduced the 0–60 mph (97 km/h) time to 2.79 seconds. It has a power-weight ratio of 568 bhp-per-tonne and a top speed of 155 mph.[9][10]

CSR

The CSR chassis comes in two basic trims which mirror those of the S3/SV cars. The 'basic' CSR has a road and touring oriented spec with full windscreen and weather equipment. This is available as the CSR200 (200 bhp) or CSR260 (260 bhp). The CSR Superlight (also 260 bhp) is the current Caterham performance flagship strips away the windscreen, integrated dash and other comfort-oriented components for maximum performance, with specialist 'Dynamic dampers' added to improve its already phenomenal grip. The 'basic' CSR set an unofficial time of 1.17.4 on the BBC Top Gear test track at Dunsfold, placing it ahead of many of the world's most expensive performance cars.

  • Engines: 2.3-litre Ford Duratec tuned by Cosworth (200 bhp or 260 bhp)

RS Performance RST-V8 engine

The 'Caterham Levante', built by RS Performance Engine Developments Ltd. (RS=Russell Savory), is a mostly-carbon-fibre bodied Caterham, with Kevlar seats, combined with an "over 500bhp" 2.4-litre, 40-valve supercharged V8 and a reduced body weight of 520 kg (1,146 lb), boasts almost 1,000 bhp (746 kW; 1,014 PS) per tonne (initial announced specifications were 550 bhp (410 kW; 558 PS) and 530 kg (1,168 lb), but the RS website specifies "in excess of 500bhp," and 520 kg (1,146 lb) or 530 kg (1,168 lb); the math may or may not achieve "over 1,000 bhp (746 kW; 1,014 PS) per tonne"). The eight cars, costing £115,000, sold out and only eight will be produced to celebrate more than 50 years in production. Two days' of mandatory "driver training" are included in the price of the car. [11][12]

Kit build

All of the 2008 model line-up is available as a 'CKD' complete kit for build by the owner, with the exception of CSR models.

Engines

 
JPE

Historically, engines have been supplied by Ford, specifically Ford Kent engines or Cosworth-derived race-prepared BDA/R units, enlarged to 1.7 litres and generating 150–170 bhp. In the early '90s, Caterham started using powerplants from other sources, with the least expensive models using 1.4-litre K series engines from MG Rover for the base model, and Vauxhall engines including full race versions of the 16 valve 2.0XE "red top" as fitted to 1990 Vauxhall Works Touring Cars. Rover engines span a power output of 110–250 bhp in the R500 Evolution, Vauxhall engines 165 bhp (123 kW; 167 PS) to 320 bhp (239 kW; 324 PS) in some factory built versions of the car. A 250 bhp (186 kW; 253 PS) Caterham JPE (Jonathan Palmer Evolution) briefly held the world record for production car 0–60 mph times (at 3.4 seconds) until it was bettered by the $1.2M McLaren F1(Nowadays, you can buy one for about 18-20 million dollars).

The many aftermarket tuning companies for these cars have also offered the Ford Zetec, Honda Fireblade, Honda Blackbird, Suzuki Hayabusa and even the Mazda Rotary engine. Since 2017, several cars have been built with the direct injection turbo Ford Ecoboost 1.6.litre version of this engine which with a hybrid turbo provides more horsepower than Caterham's own supercharged Duratec, and more torque than any factory car including the V8 Levante.

In 2001, Caterham designated MG Rover the sole engine supplier for factory-built Sevens, with Ford Zetec, Honda Fireblade, Yamaha R1 and Suzuki Hayabusa engines still available for kit assembly. The Rover engines were based on the K series and carried the 'Xpower' branding. However, the partnership evidently came to an end with the collapse of MG Rover, with the 2005 model introducing a Ford Duratec engine.

Typical powerplant output ranges from 140 bhp (104 kW; 142 PS) to over 300 bhp (224 kW; 304 PS), depending on specifications and modifications.

The gearbox is either the classic Ford T9 five-speed or Caterham's own six-speed box. The T9 is cheap and durable, but has gear ratios meant for a much heavier car. The six-speed gearbox is expensive and had early 'teething' problems, but its ratios are considered the perfect match for the Seven. Independent companies such as Quaife do offer replacement gearkits for the T9 as well as sequential boxes for those with a racing fever and the need for a more robust transmission.

The most extreme engine/chassis combination available from the factory as of 2013 was the 620r with the 310bhp / 297Nm engine,[13] bringing the car's 610 kg (1,345 lb) from zero to 60 mph (97 km/h) in 2.79 seconds.[14] The previous model also held a production car world record for zero to 100 mph (160 km/h) back to zero at 10.73 seconds (faster than many modern family saloons can reach 60), set on 27 April 2004.[15]

Motor racing

Formula One

For the 2012 season, Team Lotus was officially renamed Caterham F1 Team.[16] The team continued to compete under this name in the 2013 and 2014 seasons, before financial problems caused it to fold.

GP2 Series

Between 2012 and 2014, Caterham raced in the GP2 series, under the guise Caterham Racing, which was rebranded from the Caterham Air Asia team that raced in the 2011 season.

The team raced under the same Green and Yellow livery as the Formula 1 team.

Caterham Racing was used by the company to act as a feeder team towards developing racing drivers for the Caterham F1 Team, until the company had to cease operations in both series.

Initially based in Hingham, the team had moved to the Leafield Technical Centre alongside the Caterham F1 team in August 2012, where they remained until both teams were terminated in 2014.

Caterham Motorsport Ladder

The Caterham Motorsport Ladder is a progression through the various Caterham Cars championships, starting with the Caterham Academy, and moving through ultimately to their most prestigious European events. The championships which form the ladder are:

Caterham Academy

 
Caterham Academy Cars

In 1995 the Caterham Academy, a novices-only format, was introduced in the UK as the Caterham Scholarship. For a starting price of £24,995 (2017), entrants get a modified Roadsport kit (a factory-built option is available for extra cost) with a sealed Ford Sigma engine and 5-speed gearbox. Having completed the ARDS (racing) licence qualification, the season then consists of a car-control day, a test day, and the season starts with two sprints, and five circuit races.

Since 2000, the popularity of the Academy has led to Caterham providing two parallel Academy championships (Group 1 & Group 2), each resulting in an Academy champion at the end of the year. Approximately 1000 racing drivers have been created through the Caterham Academy.

Karting

At the Autosport International 2012 Caterham announced that it would be creating a karting series starting in 2013. It was stated that the aim of this karting series was to make it easier for people to enter motorsports by providing a cheap karting series in which they could start off.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Tony Fernandes buys Caterham". en.espnf1.com. 2011. Retrieved 23 April 2011.
  2. ^ "Team Lotus confirms Caterham takeover". AUSmotive.com. 2011. Retrieved 27 April 2011.
  3. ^ Henry, Alan (10 November 2009). "Graham Nearn obituary". Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  4. ^ Spark, Local. "Superformance LLC". superformance.com. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
  5. ^ "Caterham Cars – Relocation". British Broadcasting Corporation. 2013. Retrieved 24 February 2013.
  6. ^ "Welcome to 2010 at Caterham21.com". caterham21. Retrieved 23 April 2011.
  7. ^ telegraaf.nl, Caterham Lola SP/300.R heeft prijs (in Dutch)
  8. ^ . life.caterham.co.uk. Archived from the original on 7 October 2012. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 31 January 2014. Retrieved 26 January 2014.
  10. ^ "2013 Caterham Seven 620R". carfolio. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
  11. ^ Biggs, Henry (26 February 2008). . Cars.uk.msn.com. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 23 April 2011.
  12. ^ "RS Performance website". Rsperformance.co.uk. Retrieved 23 April 2011.
  13. ^ "Drive Your Dream | Caterham Cars".
  14. ^ "2018 Caterham 620R full range specs".
  15. ^ "Autocar's record-breaking 0-100-0".
  16. ^ "Team Lotus eye step up as Caterham F1 – Yahoo! Eurosport". Uk.eurosport.yahoo.com. Retrieved 10 September 2012.

External links

  • Caterham Racing.com


Coordinates: 51°16′55.44″N 0°4′43.15″W / 51.2820667°N 0.0786528°W / 51.2820667; -0.0786528

caterham, cars, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Caterham Cars news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Caterham Cars is a British manufacturer of specialist lightweight sports cars established in Caterham England with their headquarters in Dartford England Their current model the Caterham 7 or Seven originally launched in 1973 is a direct evolution of the Series 3 Lotus Seven designed by Colin Chapman In the 1990s the company made the Caterham 21 a two seater soft top alternative to the MGF and Lotus Elise which both sold many more units A track only car the SP 300 R a joint project with Lola was released for customer testing in 2010 and was scheduled for release in 2013 On 27 April 2011 Team Lotus owner Tony Fernandes announced that he had purchased Caterham 1 2 On 2 April 2021 news was leaked that Caterham Cars was acquired outright on 31 March 2021 by VT Holdings Japanese importer for the Caterham Seven since 2009 As well as being a Caterham importer VT also imports Lotus cars and Royal Enfield motorcycles into Japan Caterham Cars LtdTypePrivate limited companyIndustryAutomobilesFounded1973FounderGraham NearnHeadquartersDartford England UKProductsCaterham Seven 170 Caterham Super Seven 600 Caterham Super Seven 2000 Caterham Seven 360 Caterham Seven 420 Caterham Seven 420 CUP Caterham Seven 620ParentCaterham GroupWebsitewww wbr caterhamcars wbr com Contents 1 History 1 1 Lotus origins 1 2 Construction 1 3 Kit format 1 4 International 1 4 1 United States 1 5 Location 1 6 Caterham 21 1 7 Caterham SP 300 R 2 Caterham 7 model line up 2 1 Chassis variants 2 1 1 Series 3 S3 2 1 2 Series 5 SV 2 1 3 CSR Series 6 2 2 Model trim variants 2 2 1 Classic 2 2 2 Roadsport 2 2 2 1 Roadsport A 2 2 2 2 Roadsport B 2 2 3 Superlight 2 2 3 1 Superlight R300 2 2 3 2 Superlight R400 2 2 3 3 Superlight R500 2 2 3 4 Superlight R600 2 2 3 5 Superlight 620R 2 2 4 CSR 2 2 5 RS Performance RST V8 engine 2 3 Kit build 3 Engines 4 Motor racing 4 1 Formula One 4 2 GP2 Series 4 2 1 Caterham Motorsport Ladder 4 2 2 Caterham Academy 4 2 3 Karting 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditLotus origins Edit Main article Lotus Cars Colin Chapman s Lotus Cars launched the Series 1 Lotus Seven in 1957 The car was immediately embraced by enthusiasts as a low cost lightweight sports car and successful race car Revised Series 2 Series 3 and Series 4 versions were subsequently launched in 1960 1968 and 1970 respectively Caterham Cars had been a major Lotus 7 dealer during the 1960s and its founder Graham Nearn purchased the rights to continue manufacture of the Seven design from Chapman in 1973 3 after Lotus announced its intention to discontinue the model Caterham initially restarted manufacture of the Lotus Seven Series 4 however when this proved unpopular production switched to a Series 3 model in 1974 In 1974 under the name of Seven Cars Limited Caterham built 20 production cars with chassis numbers 1 to 20 and one prototype with chassis number 0 CS3 3550 CS3 3570 Of the 21 cars produced in the first year all were fitted with the Ford Lotus Twin Cam 1557cc engine with the exception of chassis number 7 which intended for racing was fitted with a 1962cc twin cam engine sourced from Alfa Romeo The Lotus Caterham 7 is widely regarded by car enthusiasts and the media as one of the signature sports cars of the 20th century citation needed With 2007 marking the 50th year of continuous production the Seven still enjoys strong support and success in clubman style racing Since 2006 Caterham Cars has been run by an ex Lotus management team led by Ansar Ali CEO and Mark Edwards COO In June 2012 Ansar Ali announced he was to leave Caterham Cars and Graham Mcdonald the company s former CFO became the new CEO Construction Edit As with its Lotus Seven precursors Caterhams are constructed of aluminium sheet attached to a tubular steel chassis Nose cone and wings are either GRP or carbon fibre depending on specification All Sevens are front engined with rear wheel drive and two seats Their extremely high performance is achieved through light weight less than 500 kg 1 102 lb on some versions rather than particularly powerful engines As well as a lightweight chassis and bodywork Caterham Sevens achieve their very low mass through their lack of comfort and safety oriented features such as a fixed roof doors radio air conditioning airbags traction stability control ABS satellite navigation or cruise control As a result the Seven is somewhat limited in its practicality for everyday usage and is instead recognised by driving enthusiasts for its focus on driving enjoyment making it an ideal track race car or Sunday car Kit format Edit Chapman and Lotus helped to pioneer the British kit car industry The Lotus Seven was offered in kit form to allow buyers to avoid new car tax in the UK Subsequently Caterham continued offering cars in complete knock down CKD kit form as the tradition of hand building your own Seven was well established amongst enthusiasts Today all Caterham Sevens are still offered in kit form in the UK except the CSR Series 6 model Modern Caterham kits differ from the majority of kit cars as all parts are supplied ready to assemble not requiring a donor car fabrication or any special skills International Edit Caterham 7 Roadsport near Caterham South showroom Although the Seven has always been popular with enthusiasts outside of the UK marketplace export of the Seven to other markets has increasingly been limited by homologation safety and emissions regulations in the modern era As a result the chassis engine combinations specifications pricing and kit form availability vary widely between countries In the past in the United States Caterhams were sold as kits only lacking some modern safety features required of manufacturers but which are not required for individually assembled vehicles Buyers could either choose to construct the cars themselves or pay their regional dealers or local builders to assemble them Typically the engine and transmission are sourced separately as a unit often from Caterham but all other components including frame suspension differential driveshaft interior wiring and instruments were provided in kit form In the UK the vehicles can be obtained as kits or entirely assembled by Caterham and registered for the road under IVA Individual Vehicle Approval regulations In the 60s the original Lotus Seven was sold only in kit form in both the UK and the US in order to evade the very high taxes on complete new cars that were not assessed on automobile parts United States Edit As of 2014 however Caterham has named Superformance their official distributor in the United States International demand has increased dramatically in part due to the addition of a F1 Race team and the changes in Caterham s structure focusing on the distribution of the Seven worldwide Caterham has since introduced a new model line up and focused on their production and production times to better suit their new international market making their partnership with Superformance possible Sevens will be shipped to the US in part built form and sold as rolling chassis via Superformance s nationwide dealer network for customers to then complete the build personally or through the Superformance dealership The initial US line up includes several Caterham Sevens 280 360 480 and the 620R 4 Location Edit Until 1987 the offices factory and showroom of Caterham Cars were located in the town of Caterham Surrey In 1987 the production and administration of the company moved to a new factory in Dartford Kent Caterham Cars retained a Caterham South showroom and servicing facility in the town of Caterham adjacent to the railway station until February 2013 The Caterham dealership closed after the premises were sold for development and the showroom relocated to temporary facilities in Crawley 5 Additionally the Caterham Midlands showroom operates outside Leicester In 2012 elements of Caterham Cars moved into a new facility in Leafield Oxfordshire where it is expected the new models of cars to be produced in the future will be developed and built This new facility was formerly used by the Arrows F1 team and the Super Aguri F1 team The Leafield site also accommodated the Caterham F1 team which moved from its original base in Hingham Norfolk and competed in Formula One between the 2012 and 2014 seasons Caterham 21 Edit Main article Caterham 21 Caterham 21 In 1994 Caterham also produced a model called the 21 6 Mechanically the 21 was very similar to the 7 using a modified 7 spaceframe chassis with a new GRP roadster style body including a wrap around windscreen and fold away fabric hood convertible top manufactured by Oxted Trimming Company The 21 benefited from a considerably stiffer setup than a 7 due to the work on the chassis and having a full body Comfort was introduced in the same minimalist style as the 7 adding just enough to make it a proper roadster without adding too much weight Caterham however underestimated the effort involved in creating a completely new car and took far too long from its inception to deliver the first customer cars seeing many people who had placed deposits defect to the Lotus Elise and other vehicles Early ones were used as prototypes leaving customers to help iron out some of the foibles of the new car citation needed The 21 never sold particularly well with only 48 ever made It had moderate racing success in the Belcar 24 hour series in Europe and is credited with helping Caterham develop the widetrack setup used in SVs amongst other developments and the CSR s sweeping interior is reminiscent of the original 21 design Caterham SP 300 R Edit Main article SP 300 R The SP 300 R is a new track only model designed by Caterham alongside Lola Cars The SP 300 R is a limited edition with limited production to 25 per annum 7 Caterham 7 model line up EditMain article Caterham 7 Classic Caterham Chassis variants Edit In 2010 Caterham offers three different chassis variants in the UK Series 3 S3 Edit The most popular variant retains the same dimensions and layout of the Lotus 7 Series 3 Series 5 SV Edit Caterham introduced this variant in 2000 to accommodate larger drivers space is restricted in the S3 for drivers over 6 ft 1 8 m tall Although visually very similar to the S3 the SV is longer taller and wider and has significantly more space for taller and broader drivers with the added benefits of more luggage space a larger fuel tank and more stability The SV chassis is 25 kg 55 lb heavier than the S3 CSR Series 6 Edit The CSR was launched in 2005 following extensive research and development by Caterham with the objective of creating an improved Seven The CSR is based on the larger dimensions of the SV but with a substantially revised and stiffer chassis inboard pushrod front suspensions fully independent rear suspension improved aerodynamics potent Cosworth engines and a new integrated dashboard layout Model trim variants Edit Classic Edit The most basic version of the 7 was traditionally offered with a live rear axle but now comes with De Dion tube rear suspension found in other models of the same range This trim level strips away all non essential equipment and comforts Classic trim is available on S3 SV chassis Engines 1 4 litre K Series 105 bhp or 1 6 litre K Series 120 bhp Roadsport Edit Roadsport is the trim level intended for general usage different weather conditions and touring The spec includes a full windscreen and weather equipment to increase practicality A large range of performance options are available The Roadsport dates back to 1996 when it was called the Superlight R in 1998 a much softer version came out called the Seven Clubsport 1 8 The range continued to be developed in the years as a great alternative to someone who wanted a little bit more than a Classic but less than a Superlight Classic trim is available on S3 SV chassis Engines 1 6 litre Ford Sigma 120 125 or 150 bhp or 2 0 litre Ford Duratec 175 bhp Roadsport A Edit Roadsport A cars are ex Academy cars with no engine upgrades However a number of performance upgrades such removing the windscreens and lights widetrack front suspension and uprated dampers are allowed as is professional team support RSA races at the same events as RSB but has longer 30 minute races Roadsport B Edit Roadsport B is largely for drivers that have come through the previous season s Academy Some minor modifications are permitted to the car including fitting a rear anti roll bar and sticky Avon CR500 tyres Technical support is still provided by the factory and professional team support is not permitted RSB has 20 minute races at 7 or 8 double header meetings over the course of the season usually all in the UK Caterham 7 Superlight R300 Superlight Edit The Superlight is intended for track and fast road usage Superlight spec includes performance options such as carbon bodywork and a close ratio 6 speed gearbox A wind deflector in place of the windscreen makes a helmet more or less mandatory The Superlight R400 uses a 2 0 litre Ford Duratec engine tuned to 210 bhp 157 kW 213 PS The R400 name indicates the car s 400 bhp per tonne power to weight ratio Superlight trim is available on S3 SV chassis Engines 1 6 litre Ford Sigma 150 bhp or 2 0 litre Ford Duratec 175 bhp 210 bhp or 263 bhp Superlight R300 Edit The Superlight R300 was introduced for 2009 designed to bridge the gap between RSA and the existing Superlight R400 class It is expected to be popular with experienced RSA racers wanting to move on to the next level in speed Superlight R400 Edit The Superlight R400 series is Caterham Motorsport s premier British championship The R400 is a 220 bhp Cosworth powered dedicated race car with a Quaife six speed sequential gearbox replacing the standard Caterham unit used in the R300 As with all series above Academy it runs on Avon CR500 tyres 2009 Champion Dan Denis Matt Blyth Racing Superlight R500 Edit The Superlight R500 series is the latest of Caterham Motorsport s Superlight series of RSA Racing cars Powered by a 2 0 litre Ford Duratec engine producing maximum horsepower bhp rpm of 263 bhp 8500rpm and maximum torque lb ft rpm of 177 lb ft 7200rpm With a weight of 506 kg 516 kg and a sequential gearbox it is capable of 0 60 mph in 2 88 seconds and a power to weight ratio of 520 bhp per tonne Advertised top speed 150 mph The R500 has been made Top Gear car of the year 2008 In another appearance earlier in the series it placed fifth on the Power Lap board with a 1 17 9 This time beat the 1 100 000 899 000 1 550 000 1001 hp Bugatti Veyron Superlight R600 Edit In October 2012 a supercharged model for a race series above the R300 class was released including slick tyres and a sequential gearbox 8 Superlight 620R Edit In September 2013 Caterham made a car called the 620R It was based on the R500 but was supercharged This increased the power output to 315 PS 311 hp 232 kW at 7 700 rpm and the torque to 219 lb ft 297 N m at 7 350 rpm It also reduced the 0 60 mph 97 km h time to 2 79 seconds It has a power weight ratio of 568 bhp per tonne and a top speed of 155 mph 9 10 CSR Edit Main article Caterham 7 CSR The CSR chassis comes in two basic trims which mirror those of the S3 SV cars The basic CSR has a road and touring oriented spec with full windscreen and weather equipment This is available as the CSR200 200 bhp or CSR260 260 bhp The CSR Superlight also 260 bhp is the current Caterham performance flagship strips away the windscreen integrated dash and other comfort oriented components for maximum performance with specialist Dynamic dampers added to improve its already phenomenal grip The basic CSR set an unofficial time of 1 17 4 on the BBC Top Gear test track at Dunsfold placing it ahead of many of the world s most expensive performance cars Engines 2 3 litre Ford Duratec tuned by Cosworth 200 bhp or 260 bhp RS Performance RST V8 engine Edit The Caterham Levante built by RS Performance Engine Developments Ltd RS Russell Savory is a mostly carbon fibre bodied Caterham with Kevlar seats combined with an over 500bhp 2 4 litre 40 valve supercharged V8 and a reduced body weight of 520 kg 1 146 lb boasts almost 1 000 bhp 746 kW 1 014 PS per tonne initial announced specifications were 550 bhp 410 kW 558 PS and 530 kg 1 168 lb but the RS website specifies in excess of 500bhp and 520 kg 1 146 lb or 530 kg 1 168 lb the math may or may not achieve over 1 000 bhp 746 kW 1 014 PS per tonne The eight cars costing 115 000 sold out and only eight will be produced to celebrate more than 50 years in production Two days of mandatory driver training are included in the price of the car 11 12 Kit build Edit All of the 2008 model line up is available as a CKD complete kit for build by the owner with the exception of CSR models Engines Edit JPE Historically engines have been supplied by Ford specifically Ford Kent engines or Cosworth derived race prepared BDA R units enlarged to 1 7 litres and generating 150 170 bhp In the early 90s Caterham started using powerplants from other sources with the least expensive models using 1 4 litre K series engines from MG Rover for the base model and Vauxhall engines including full race versions of the 16 valve 2 0XE red top as fitted to 1990 Vauxhall Works Touring Cars Rover engines span a power output of 110 250 bhp in the R500 Evolution Vauxhall engines 165 bhp 123 kW 167 PS to 320 bhp 239 kW 324 PS in some factory built versions of the car A 250 bhp 186 kW 253 PS Caterham JPE Jonathan Palmer Evolution briefly held the world record for production car 0 60 mph times at 3 4 seconds until it was bettered by the 1 2M McLaren F1 Nowadays you can buy one for about 18 20 million dollars The many aftermarket tuning companies for these cars have also offered the Ford Zetec Honda Fireblade Honda Blackbird Suzuki Hayabusa and even the Mazda Rotary engine Since 2017 several cars have been built with the direct injection turbo Ford Ecoboost 1 6 litre version of this engine which with a hybrid turbo provides more horsepower than Caterham s own supercharged Duratec and more torque than any factory car including the V8 Levante In 2001 Caterham designated MG Rover the sole engine supplier for factory built Sevens with Ford Zetec Honda Fireblade Yamaha R1 and Suzuki Hayabusa engines still available for kit assembly The Rover engines were based on the K series and carried the Xpower branding However the partnership evidently came to an end with the collapse of MG Rover with the 2005 model introducing a Ford Duratec engine Typical powerplant output ranges from 140 bhp 104 kW 142 PS to over 300 bhp 224 kW 304 PS depending on specifications and modifications The gearbox is either the classic Ford T9 five speed or Caterham s own six speed box The T9 is cheap and durable but has gear ratios meant for a much heavier car The six speed gearbox is expensive and had early teething problems but its ratios are considered the perfect match for the Seven Independent companies such as Quaife do offer replacement gearkits for the T9 as well as sequential boxes for those with a racing fever and the need for a more robust transmission The most extreme engine chassis combination available from the factory as of 2013 was the 620r with the 310bhp 297Nm engine 13 bringing the car s 610 kg 1 345 lb from zero to 60 mph 97 km h in 2 79 seconds 14 The previous model also held a production car world record for zero to 100 mph 160 km h back to zero at 10 73 seconds faster than many modern family saloons can reach 60 set on 27 April 2004 15 Motor racing EditFormula One Edit Main article Caterham F1 For the 2012 season Team Lotus was officially renamed Caterham F1 Team 16 The team continued to compete under this name in the 2013 and 2014 seasons before financial problems caused it to fold GP2 Series Edit Main article Caterham Racing GP2 team Between 2012 and 2014 Caterham raced in the GP2 series under the guise Caterham Racing which was rebranded from the Caterham Air Asia team that raced in the 2011 season The team raced under the same Green and Yellow livery as the Formula 1 team Caterham Racing was used by the company to act as a feeder team towards developing racing drivers for the Caterham F1 Team until the company had to cease operations in both series Initially based in Hingham the team had moved to the Leafield Technical Centre alongside the Caterham F1 team in August 2012 where they remained until both teams were terminated in 2014 Caterham Motorsport Ladder Edit Main article Caterham Racing The Caterham Motorsport Ladder is a progression through the various Caterham Cars championships starting with the Caterham Academy and moving through ultimately to their most prestigious European events The championships which form the ladder are Caterham Academy Edit Main article Caterham Academy Caterham Academy Cars In 1995 the Caterham Academy a novices only format was introduced in the UK as the Caterham Scholarship For a starting price of 24 995 2017 entrants get a modified Roadsport kit a factory built option is available for extra cost with a sealed Ford Sigma engine and 5 speed gearbox Having completed the ARDS racing licence qualification the season then consists of a car control day a test day and the season starts with two sprints and five circuit races Since 2000 the popularity of the Academy has led to Caterham providing two parallel Academy championships Group 1 amp Group 2 each resulting in an Academy champion at the end of the year Approximately 1000 racing drivers have been created through the Caterham Academy Karting Edit At the Autosport International 2012 Caterham announced that it would be creating a karting series starting in 2013 It was stated that the aim of this karting series was to make it easier for people to enter motorsports by providing a cheap karting series in which they could start off See also EditList of car manufacturers of the United KingdomReferences Edit Tony Fernandes buys Caterham en espnf1 com 2011 Retrieved 23 April 2011 Team Lotus confirms Caterham takeover AUSmotive com 2011 Retrieved 27 April 2011 Henry Alan 10 November 2009 Graham Nearn obituary Retrieved 21 February 2019 Spark Local Superformance LLC superformance com Retrieved 6 April 2018 Caterham Cars Relocation British Broadcasting Corporation 2013 Retrieved 24 February 2013 Welcome to 2010 at Caterham21 com caterham21 Retrieved 23 April 2011 telegraaf nl Caterham Lola SP 300 R heeft prijs in Dutch Telegram from Caterham HQ Caterham launches premier Superlight R600 series Caterham Life life caterham co uk Archived from the original on 7 October 2012 Retrieved 13 January 2022 Seven 620 R Caterham Cars Archived from the original on 31 January 2014 Retrieved 26 January 2014 2013 Caterham Seven 620R carfolio Retrieved 2 July 2018 Biggs Henry 26 February 2008 Revealed 550 bhp V8 Caterham V8 Caterham Cars uk msn com Archived from the original on 14 July 2011 Retrieved 23 April 2011 RS Performance website Rsperformance co uk Retrieved 23 April 2011 Drive Your Dream Caterham Cars 2018 Caterham 620R full range specs Autocar s record breaking 0 100 0 Team Lotus eye step up as Caterham F1 Yahoo Eurosport Uk eurosport yahoo com Retrieved 10 September 2012 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Caterham Cars External links EditCaterham official website UK Caterham Racing com Caterham USA website Coordinates 51 16 55 44 N 0 4 43 15 W 51 2820667 N 0 0786528 W 51 2820667 0 0786528 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Caterham Cars amp oldid 1137819139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.