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Wikipedia

Lotus Cars

Lotus Group (also known as Lotus Cars, and doing business as Lotus NYO in China[3]) is a British multinational automotive manufacturer of luxury sports cars and electric lifestyle vehicles.

Lotus Group
Lotus logo (2019)
Company typePrivate
IndustryAutomotive
Founded1948; 76 years ago (1948)
FounderColin Chapman
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
  • Qingfeng Feng (CEO)
  • Alexious Lee (CFO)
  • Mike Johnstone (CCO)
ProductsAutomobiles
Production output
867 units[1] (2022)
Revenue £56 million[1] (2022)
Number of employees
1,385 (2021)[2]
ParentGeely Holding (51%)
Etika Automotive (49%)
Websitelotuscars.com

Lotus Group is composed of three primary entities. Lotus Cars, a high-performance sports car company, is based in Hethel, Norfolk. Lotus Tech, an all-electric lifestyle vehicle company, headquartered in Wuhan, China, and operates regional facilities in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Germany.[4] Additionally, Lotus Engineering, an engineering consultancy firm, is headquartered at the Lotus Advanced Technology Centre (LATC) located at the University of Warwick's Wellesbourne Campus.[5]

Lotus was founded and owned for many years by Colin Chapman. After his death and a period of financial instability, it was bought by General Motors, then Romano Artioli, and then DRB-HICOM through its subsidiary Proton, who owned Lotus from 1996 to 2017. Lotus is currently majority owned by Chinese multinational Geely.[6]

Lotus was previously involved in Formula One racing, via Team Lotus, winning the Formula One World Championship seven times. Notable Lotus cars include the Lotus Seven, the Elan, the Esprit, and the Elise.

History edit

Early years edit

The company was formed in 1952 as Lotus Engineering Ltd. by engineers Colin Chapman and Colin Dare, both graduates of University College, London, but had earlier origins in 1948 when Chapman built his first racing car in a garage.[7] The four letters in the middle of the logo stand for the initials of company founder, Anthony Colin Bruce Chapman. When the logo was created, Colin Chapman's original partners Michael and Nigel Allen were led to believe that the letters stood for Colin Chapman and the Allen Brothers.[citation needed][clarification needed]

The first factory was situated in old stables behind the Railway Hotel in Hornsey, North London. Team Lotus, which was split off from Lotus Engineering in 1954, was active and competitive in Formula One racing from 1958 to 1994. The Lotus Group of Companies was formed in 1959. This was made up of Lotus Cars Limited and Lotus Components Limited, which focused on road cars and customer competition car production, respectively. Lotus Components Limited became Lotus Racing Limited in 1971 but the newly renamed entity ceased operation in the same year.[8]

The company moved to a purpose-built factory at Cheshunt in 1959[9] and since 1966 the company has occupied a modern factory and road test facility at Hethel, near Wymondham in Norfolk. The site is a former World War II airfield, RAF Hethel, and the test track uses sections of the old runway.

In its early days, Lotus sold cars aimed at privateer racers and trialists. Its early road cars could be bought as kits, in order to save on purchase tax. The kit car era ended in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Lotus Elan Plus Two being the first Lotus road car not to be offered in kit form, and the Lotus Eclat and Lotus Elite of the mid-1970s being offered only in factory built versions.

After the Lotus Elite of the 1950s, which featured a complete fibreglass monocoque fitted with built-in steel pickup points for mounting major components, Lotus found critical and sales success in the 1960s with the Lotus Elan. This two-seater was later developed to two-plus-two form (Elan +2S). Lotus was notable for its use of fibreglass bodies, backbone chassis, and overhead camshaft engines – initially supplied by Coventry Climax but later replaced by Lotus-Ford units (Ford block, Lotus head and twin cam valve gear). Lotus also worked with Ford on the Lotus Cortina, a successful sports saloon.

Another Lotus of the late 1960s and early 1970s was the two seater Lotus Europa, initially intended only for the European market, which paired a backbone chassis and lightweight body with a mid mounted Renault engine, later upgraded to the Lotus-Ford twin cam unit as used in the Elan.

The Lotus Seven, originating in the 1950s as a simple, lightweight open two seater continued in production into the early 70s. Lotus then sold the rights to produce the Seven to Caterham, which has continued to produce the car since then.

By the mid-1970s, Lotus sought to move upmarket with the launch of the Elite and Eclat models, four seaters aimed at prosperous buyers, with features such as optional air conditioning and optional automatic transmissions. The mid engined line continued with the Lotus Esprit, which was to prove one of the company's longest lived and most iconic models. Lotus developed its own series of four cylinder DOHC engines, the Lotus 900 series, and later a V8, and turbocharged versions of the engines appeared in the Esprit.

Variants of the 900 series engine were supplied for the Jensen Healey sports car and the Sunbeam Lotus "hot hatchback". In the 1980s, Lotus collaborated with Vauxhall Motors to produce the Lotus Carlton, the fastest roadgoing Vauxhall car.

Financial troubles, death of Chapman edit

By 1980, Group Lotus was in serious financial trouble. Production had dropped from 1,200 units per year to a mere 383. The combined reasons were that the world was in the middle of an economic recession and sales in the key United States market had virtually collapsed, along with limited development of the then model range.[10]

In early 1982, Chapman came to an agreement with Toyota to exchange intellectual property and applied expertise. This initially resulted in Lotus Engineering helping to develop the Mk2 Toyota Supra, also known as the Toyota Celica XX. Secondly, it allowed Lotus to launch the new Lotus Excel to replace the ageing Lotus Eclat. Using drivetrain and other components from Toyota enabled Lotus to sell the Excel for £1,109 less than the outgoing Eclat.[10]

Looking to re-enter the North American market, Chapman was approached by young law professor and investment banking consultant, Joe Bianco, who proposed a new and separate United States sales company for Lotus.[11] By creating an unprecedented tax-incentived mechanism wherein each investor received a specially personalised Lotus Turbo Esprit, the new American company, Lotus Performance Cars Inc. (LPCI), was able to provide fresh capital to the Group Lotus in the United Kingdom. Former Ferrari North America general manager John Spiech was brought in to run LPCI, which imported the remarkable Giugiaro-designed Turbo Esprit for the first time. US sales began to quickly jump into triple digits annually.[12]

Chapman died of a heart attack on 16 December 1982 at the age of 54, having begun life as an innkeeper's son and ended a multi-millionaire industrialist in post-war Britain. At the time of his death, the car maker had built thousands of successful racing and road cars and won the Formula One World Championship seven times.

At the time of his death, both Chapman and Lotus were linked with the DeLorean Motor Company scandal over the use of UK Government subsidies for the production of the DMC DeLorean, for which Lotus had designed the chassis. Chasing large sums of money which had disappeared from the DeLorean company, Lotus was besieged by Inland Revenue inspectors, who imposed an £84 million legal "protective assessment" on the company.[13] Chapman died before the full deceit unravelled but, at the subsequent trial of Fred Bushell, the Lotus accountant, the judge insisted that had Chapman himself been in the dock, he would have received a sentence "of at least 10 years".[14]

With Group Lotus near bankruptcy in 1983, David Wickins, the founder of British Car Auctions, agreed to become the new company chairman, through an introduction from his friend Mark Thatcher.[13] Taking a combined 29% BCA/personal stake in Group Lotus,[15] Wickins negotiated with the Inland Revenue, and then brought in new investors: merchant bank Schroeder-Wagg (14%);[15] Michael Ashcroft's Bermudian operating company Benor (14%);[16] Sir Anthony Bamford of JCB (12%).[15] Wickins oversaw a complete turnaround in the company's fortunes, which resulted in him being called "The saviour of Lotus".[13][17]

International ownership edit

 
Lotus final assembly

Despite having employed designer Peter Stevens to revamp the range and design two new concept cars,[18] by 1985 the British investors recognised that they lacked the required capital to invest in the required new model development to production, and sought to find a major motor manufacturing buyer.[15] In January 1986, Wickins oversaw the majority sale of the Group Lotus companies and 100% of North American–based LPCI to General Motors, with engineer Bob Eaton a big Lotus car fan.[15] After four months' control of Group Lotus by the co-owners GM and Toyota, the latter sold GM its stake. By October 1986, GM had acquired a 91% stake in Group Lotus for £22.7 million, which allowed GM to legally force the company buyout.[15]

On 27 August 1993, GM sold the company, for £30 million, to A.C.B.N. Holdings S.A. of Luxembourg, a company controlled by Italian businessman Romano Artioli, who also owned Bugatti Automobili SpA. In 1996, a majority share in Lotus was sold to Proton, a Malaysian car company listed on the Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange.

Lotus Cars were awarded the Queen's Award for Enterprise for contribution to International Trade, one of 85 companies receiving the recognition in that category in 2002. Lotus cars wore the badge of the award for a number of years.[19]

On 24 May 2017, Chinese multinational Geely announced that was taking a 51% controlling stake in Lotus.[20][21] The remaining 49% were acquired by Etika Automotive, a holding company of Proton's major shareholder Syed Mokhtar Albukhary.[22]

In January 2021 Lotus' parent company Geely announced a joint venture with Renault–Nissan–Mitsubishi Alliance and their Alpine division to develop a range of electric performance cars sharing some of their future platforms.[23] In April 2021 Lotus announced plans to produce only electric cars by 2028 and increase production numbers from around 1,500 per annum to tens of thousands. Geely and Etika Automotive provided two billion pounds (US$2.8 billion) to fund the changes.[24]

Lotus Technology, the electric vehicle division of Lotus which has a different ownership structure (30% by Etika and the rest by Geely and Nio Capital) was listed on NASDAQ through a SPAC acquisition. After the listing, 10.3% of shares will be held by the public.[25]

Operations edit

Currently organised as Group Lotus Limited, the business is divided into Lotus Cars and Lotus Engineering.

As well as sports car manufacture, the company also acts as an engineering consultancy, providing engineering development—particularly of suspensions- for other car manufacturers. Lotus's powertrain department is responsible for the design and development of the 4-cylinder Ecotec engine found in many of GM's Vauxhall, Opel, Saab, Chevrolet and Saturn cars. The US Lotus Elise and Exige models used the 1.8L VVTL-i I4 from Toyota's late Celica GT-S and the Matrix XRS both of which are no longer available new. The new Exige has the same V6 engine as its bigger counterpart the Evora and is not available in the US as a road-legal vehicle.

Michael Kimberley, who had been a guiding figure at Lotus in the 1970s, returned and took over as the Acting chief executive officer of the Company and its Group from May 2006. He chaired the executive committee of Lotus Group International Limited ("LGIL") established in February 2006, with Syed Zainal Abidin (managing director of Proton Holdings Berhad) and Badrul Feisal (non-executive director of Proton Holdings Berhad). LGIL is the holding company of Lotus Group Plc.

Kimberley retired as CEO on 17 July 2009,[26] replaced on 1 October 2009 by the former Senior Vice-president for Commercial & Brand at Ferrari, Dany Bahar. Bahar intended to drive the brand up-market into the expanding global luxury goods sector, effectively away from the company's traditional light weight simplicity and pure driving experience focus.

Bahar was suspended as CEO on 25 May 2012 on a temporary basis, while an investigation into his conduct was undertaken.[27] Lotus announced on 7 June 2012 the termination of Bahar's employment and the appointment of Aslam Farikullah as the new chief operating officer.[28] The ambitious plans for several new models were cancelled following Bahar's departure. Jean Marc Gales replaced Bahar as the CEO of the company in 2014 and enabled the company to make a profit after decades in 2017, due to his effective market plans and strategies before he left the company in June 2018 due to personal reasons, and was replaced by Feng Qingfeng from Lotus Group's parent company, Geely.

October 2018 saw further senior personnel changes as Phil Popham was named CEO of Lotus Cars, with Feng Qingfeng remaining in charge of Group Lotus.[29]

In January 2021 Matt Windle was appointed managing director of Lotus Cars after Phil Popham stepped down.[30][31]

Formula One and motorsport edit

 
Lotus 72
 
Lotus 77
 
Lotus 99T
 
Lotus E20

In its early days, the company encouraged its customers to race its cars, and it first entered Formula One through its sister company Team Lotus in 1958. A Lotus Formula One car driven by Stirling Moss won the marque's first Grand Prix in 1960 at Monaco. Moss drove a Lotus 18 entered by privateer Rob Walker. Major success came in 1963 with the Lotus 25, which – with Jim Clark driving – won Team Lotus its first F1 World Constructors' Championship. Clark's untimely death – he crashed a Formula Two Lotus 48 in April 1968 after his rear tyre failed in a turn in Hockenheim – was a severe blow to the team and to Formula One. He was the dominant driver in the dominant car and remains an inseparable part of Lotus's early years. That year's championship was won by Clark's teammate, Graham Hill.

Team Lotus is credited with making the mid-engined layout popular for IndyCars, developing the first monocoque Formula One chassis, and integrating the engine and transaxle as chassis components. Team Lotus was among the pioneers in Formula One in adding wings and shaping the undersurface of the car to create downforce. It invented active suspension and was the first to move radiators to the sides of the car to improve aerodynamic performance.

Formula One Drivers' Championship winner for Lotus were Jim Clark in 1963 and 1965, Graham Hill in 1968, Jochen Rindt in 1970, Emerson Fittipaldi in 1972 and Mario Andretti in 1978. In 1973 Lotus won the constructors' championship only; the drivers' title went to Jackie Stewart of Tyrrell. Chapman saw Lotus beat Ferrari as the first marque to achieve 50 Grand Prix victories, despite Ferrari having won their first nine years sooner.

Even after Chapman's death, until the late 1980s, Team Lotus continued to be a major player in Formula One. Ayrton Senna drove for the team from 1985 to 1987, winning twice in each year and achieving 17 pole positions.

Team Lotus established Classic Team Lotus in 1992, as the Works historic motorsport activity. Classic Team Lotus continues to maintain Lotus F1 cars and run them in the FIA Historic Formula One Championship and it preserves the Team Lotus archive and Works Collection of cars, under the management of Colin Chapman's son, Clive.

Team Lotus's participation in Formula One ended at the end of the 1994 season, by which time the team's cars were no longer competitive. Team Lotus-constructed cars won a total of 79 Grand Prix races.

Former racing driver David Hunt (brother of F1 world champion James Hunt) purchased the name 'Team Lotus' and licensed it to the Formula One team Pacific Racing, which was rebranded Pacific Team Lotus.[32] The Pacific Team folded at the end of the 1995 season.

The Lotus name returned to Formula One for the 2010 season, when a new Malaysian team called Lotus Racing was awarded an entry. The new team used the Lotus name under licence from Group Lotus and was unrelated to the original Team Lotus. In September 2010 Group Lotus, with agreement from its parent company Proton, terminated the licence for future seasons as a result of what it called "flagrant and persistent breaches of the licence by the team". Lotus Racing then announced that it had acquired Team Lotus Ventures Ltd, the company led by David Hunt, and with it full ownership of the rights to the "Team Lotus" brand and heritage. The team confirmed that it would be known as Team Lotus from 2011 onwards.

In December 2010, Group Lotus announced the creation of Lotus Renault GP, the successor to the Renault F1 team. This team contested the 2011 season having purchased a title sponsorship deal with the team, with the option to buy shares in the future. The team's car for that season, the R31, was badged as a Renault, while Team Lotus's car, the T128, was badged as a Lotus. In May 2011, the British High Court of Justice ruled that Team Lotus could continue to use the "Team Lotus" name, but Group Lotus had sole right to use the "Lotus" name on its own. As a consequence, for 2012 Lotus Renault GP was rebranded as Lotus F1 Team and its cars were badged as Lotuses, while Team Lotus was renamed Caterham F1 Team (after the sports car manufacturer owned by team principal Tony Fernandes) and its cars were badged as Caterhams.

Group Lotus was also involved in several other categories of motorsport. It sponsored the KV team in the IndyCar Series and used to sponsor the ART team in the GP2 and GP3 Series in 2011 and 2012. In 2011, Lotus also returned to the 24 Hours of Le Mans with a semi-works effort run by Jetalliance Racing, which fielded two Lotus Evoras.

After fielding underpowered and uncompetitive engines in the 2012 Indianapolis 500, in which drivers Jean Alesi and Simona de Silvestro were black-flagged after ten laps for failing to maintain a competitive pace, Lotus was released from its contract and did not participate in future seasons.

Lotus car models edit

Current edit

Current Lotus models include:

  • Lotus Evija: The Lotus Evija is a limited production electric sports car, it is the first electric vehicle to be introduced and manufactured by the company. Codenamed "Type 130", production of the Evija will be limited to 130 units. Production is set to begin early-mid 2021 with delivery in early 2023. The Evija is powered by a 70 kWh battery pack developed in conjunction with Williams Advanced Engineering, with electric motors supplied by Integral Powertrain. The four individual motors are placed at the wheels and each is rated at 375 kW (510 PS; 503 hp), for a combined total output of 1,500 kW (2,039 PS; 2,011 hp) and 1,704 N⋅m (1,257 lb⋅ft) of torque. Lotus claims that the Evija will be able to accelerate from 0 to 100 km/h (62 mph) in under 3 seconds, from 0 to 300 km/h (186 mph) in 9.1 seconds, and achieve a limited top speed of 350 km/h (217 mph).[33]
  • Lotus Emira: Unveiled July 2021, production began March 2022 - this will be the firm's final vehicle powered by an internal combustion engine.[24]
  • Lotus Eletre: The first high-performance electric SUV from Lotus. Eletre is powered by a 112 kWh battery pack and an 800V high voltage system, achieving a maximum range of 600 km and 400 km of range in 20 minutes of charging. The 2024 model offers 603 horsepower for the base and S models, and 905 horsepower the R model and a top speed of 260 km/h. It is the first Lotus to offer features like LiDAR.[34][35] Delivery began on March 29, 2023, and is expected to launch in Europe in the summer or fall of 2023 and in the United States in 2024.[36][37][38]
  • Lotus Emeya

Previous edit

 
Lotus Mark I, 1948
 
Lotus Mark IX and Lotus 6
 
Lotus Eleven
 
Lotus Elite
 
Lotus Elan +2S, 1973
 
Lotus Europa S2
 
Lotus Eclat S2
 
Lotus Esprit V8, 1999
 
Lotus Elise S1
 
Lotus Elise GT1 Road Car, 1997
 
Lotus 340R
 
Opel Speedster/Vauxhall VX220 (based on the Lotus Elise S2)
 
Lotus Emira
  • Lotus Mark I (1948): Austin 7–based sports car
  • Lotus Mark II (1949–1950): Ford-powered trials car
  • Lotus Mark III (1951): 750 cc formula car
  • Lotus Mark IV (1952): Trials car
  • Lotus Mark V (1952): 750 cc formula car, never built
  • Lotus Mark VI (1953–1955): The first "production" racer, about 100 built
  • Lotus Seven (1957–1972): A minimalist open sports car designed to manoeuvre a racing circuit.[39]
  • Lotus Mark VIII (1954): sports racer, MG 1.5 L
  • Lotus Mark IX (1955): sports racer, shorter and improved Eight
  • Lotus Mark X (1955): sports racer for larger displacement, Bristol/BMW 2 L
  • Lotus Eleven (1956–1957): small displacement sports racer (750 – 1500 cc)
  • Lotus 12 (1956–1957): Formula Two and Formula One racecar
  • Lotus 13: Designation not used
  • Lotus 14 (1957–1963): Lotus Elite, the first production street car
  • Lotus 15 (1958–1960): Sports racer, update of the Mk.X, Climax 1.5 – 2.5 L
  • Lotus 16 (1958–1959): F1/F2 car, "Miniature Vanwall"
  • Lotus 17 (1959): Lighter sports racer update of the 11 in response to Lola Mk.I
  • Lotus 18 (1960–1961): First mid-engined Lotus single seater—Formula Junior/F2/F1
  • Lotus 19 (1960–1962): Mid-engined larger displacement sports racer, "Monte Carlo"
  • Lotus 20 (1961): Formula Junior
  • Lotus 21 (1961): Formula One
  • Lotus 22 (1962–1965): Formula Junior/F3
  • Lotus 23 (1962–1966): Small displacement mid-engined sports racer
  • Lotus 24 (1962): Formula One
  • Lotus 25 (1962–1964): Formula One World Champion
  • Lotus 26 (1962–1971): Lotus Elan, production street sports car
  • Lotus 26R (1962–1966): Racing version of Elan
  • Lotus 27 (1963): Formula Junior
  • Lotus 28 (1963–1966): Lotus version of the Ford Cortina street/racer
  • Lotus 29 (1963): Indy car, Ford all-aluminium OHV small block V8
  • Lotus 30 (1964): Large displacement sports racer (Ford small block V8)
  • Lotus 31 (1964–1966): Formula Three space frame racer
  • Lotus 32 (1964–1965): Monocoque F2 and Tasman Cup racer
  • Lotus 33 (1964–1965): Formula One World Champion
  • Lotus 34 (1964): Indy car, DOHC Ford V8
  • Lotus 35 (1965): F2/F3/FB
  • Lotus 36 (1965–1968): Elan Fixed Head Coupe (Type 26 could be fitted with a removable hard top)
  • Lotus 38 (1965): Indy winning mid-engined car
  • Lotus 39 (1965–1966): Tasman Cup formula car
  • Lotus 40 (1965): Sports racer, a development of the 30
  • Lotus 41 (1965–1968): Formula Three, Formula Two, Formula B
  • Lotus 42 (1967): Indy car, Ford V8
  • Lotus 43 (1966): Formula One
  • Lotus 44 (1967): Formula Two
  • Lotus 45 (1966–1974): Convertible (Drop Head Coupe) Elan with permanent side window frames.
  • Lotus 46 (1966–1968): Original Renault-engined Europa
  • Lotus 47 (1966–1970): Racing version of Europa
  • Lotus 48 (1967): Formula Two
  • Lotus 49 (1967–1969): Formula One World Champion
  • Lotus 50 (1967–1974): Lotus Elan +2, four-seat production car
  • Lotus 51 (1967–1969): Formula Ford
  • Lotus 52 (1968): Prototype Europa Twin Cam
  • Lotus 53 (1968): Small displacement sports racer, never built
  • Lotus 54 (1968–1970): Series 2 'Europa' production car.
  • Lotus 55 (1968): F3
  • Lotus 56 (1968–1969): Indy turbine wedge
  • Lotus 56B (1971): F1 turbine wedge
  • Lotus 57 (1968): F2 design study
  • Lotus 58 (1968): F1 design study
  • Lotus 59 (1969–1970): F2/F3/Formula Ford
  • Lotus LX (1960): Lotus Elite built to win at Le Mans with a 2.0 L FPF engine.
  • Lotus 60 (1970–1973): Lotus Seven S4, Greatly modified version of the Seven
  • Lotus 61 (1969): Formula Ford, "the wedge"
  • Lotus 62 (1969): prototype Europa racer
  • Lotus 63 (1969): 4-wheel drive F1
  • Lotus 64 (1969): 4-wheel drive Indy car, did not compete
  • Lotus 65 (1969–1971): Federalized Europa S2
  • Lotus 66: Can-Am design study[40]
  • Lotus 67 (1970): Proposed Tasman Cup car, never built
  • Lotus 68 (1969): F5000 prototype
  • Lotus 69 (1970): F2/F3/Formula Ford
  • Lotus 70 (1970): F5000/Formula A
  • Lotus 71: Undisclosed design study
  • Lotus 72 (1970–1972): Formula One World Champion
  • Lotus 73 (1972–1973): F3
  • Lotus 74 - Texaco Star (1973): F2
  • Lotus 74 (1971–1975): Europa Twin Cam production car
  • Lotus 75 (1974–1982): Elite II, Luxury 4-seat GT
  • Lotus 76 (1974): F1, redundant designation
  • Lotus 76 (1975–1982): Éclat S1, fastback version of Elite II, redundant designation
  • Lotus 77 (1976): F1
  • Lotus 78 (1977–1978): F1 ground effects car
  • Lotus 79 (1975–1980) Lotus Esprit, street GT,[41] redundant designation
  • Lotus 79 (1978–1979): Formula One World Champion, redundant designation
  • Lotus 80 (1979): F1
  • Lotus 81 (1979–1980): Sunbeam Talbot Lotus, redundant designation
  • Lotus 81 (1980–1981): F1, redundant designation
  • Lotus 82 (1982–1987): Turbo Esprit, street GT car
  • Lotus 83 (1980): Elite series 2
  • Lotus 84 (1980–1982): Éclat series 2
  • Lotus 85 (1980–1987): Esprit series 3
  • Lotus 86 (1980–1983): F1 dual chassis, never raced
  • Lotus 87 (1980–1982): F1
  • Lotus 88 (1981): F1 dual chassis car, banned
  • Lotus 89 (1982–1992): Lotus Excel GT, re-engineered Éclat
  • Lotus M90/X100: Toyota-based "new Elan", abandoned in favour of the Elan M100
  • Lotus 91 (1982): F1
  • Lotus 92 (1983): F1
  • Lotus 93T (1983): F1 Turbo
  • Lotus 94T (1983): F1 Turbo
  • Lotus 95T (1984): F1 Turbo
  • Lotus 96T (1984): Indy car project, abandoned
  • Lotus 97T (1985–1986): F1 Turbo
  • Lotus 98T (1986–1987): F1 Turbo
  • Lotus 99T (1987): F1 Turbo, last Lotus F1 winner
  • Lotus 100T (1988): F1 Turbo
  • Lotus Elan (Type M100) (1989–1995): Front-drive convertible Elan.
  • Lotus 101 (1989): F1
  • Lotus 102 (1990–1991): F1
  • Lotus 103 (1990): F1, not produced
  • Lotus 104 (1990–1992): Lotus Carlton/Omega, tuned version of the Opel/Vauxhall saloon.
  • Lotus 105 (1990): Racing X180R, IMSA Supercars Drivers Champ (Doc Bundy)
  • Lotus 106 (1991): X180R, roadgoing homologation special
  • Lotus 107 (1992–1994): F1
  • Lotus 108 (1992): a track only bike ridden by Chris Boardman to win a gold medal at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, also known as the "LotusSport Pursuit Bicycle".
  • Lotus 109 (1994): F1, Last Lotus F1 car.
  • Lotus 110 : Road and TT bike. Often mistaken for the Lotus 108 but completely different bikes.
  • Lotus 111 (1996–2022): Lotus Elise
  • Lotus 112: Partial F1 design, reached as far as the monocoque buck
  • Lotus 113: Number not allocated
  • Lotus 114 (1996): Lotus Esprit GT1 race car
  • Lotus 115 (1997–1998): Lotus Elise GT1
  • Lotus 116: Opel Speedster/Vauxhall VX220, a collaboration with Opel
  • Lotus 117: Elise S2 with Rover engines[citation needed]
  • Lotus 118: Lotus M250, two-seat mid-range sports car concept unveiled in Autumn of 1999, project cancelled in 2001
  • Lotus 119 (2002): Soapbox Derby car made of carbon and aluminium, disc brakes, no engine, for Goodwood Festival of Speed
  • Lotus 120 (2004-2022): Elise S2 with Toyota engines
  • Lotus 121 (2000–2022): Exige S2
  • Lotus 121 (2006): Europa S[42]
  • Lotus 122 (2007–2011): Lotus 2-Eleven, 0-door speedster
  • Lotus 123 (2010–2022): Lotus Evora
  • Lotus 124: Lotus Evora, race car
  • Lotus T125 (2010): Lotus Exos[43]
  • Lotus T127 (2010): Team Lotus F1 car, made for 2010 season
  • Lotus T128 (Formula One car) (2011): Team Lotus F1 car, made for 2011 season
  • Lotus T128 (Le Mans Prototype) (2013): race car built for 24 Hours of LeMans
  • Lotus 129 (2016–2022): Lotus 3-Eleven, 0-door speedster

Announcements of future cars edit

 
Proposed new Lotus Esprit (announced 2010 but subsequently cancelled)

At the 2010 Paris Motorshow, Lotus announced five new models to be introduced over the next five years:[44] Their intention was to replace the Elise with an entirely different model, as well as to introduce two entirely new sports coupes, which would have been known as the Elite and the Elan, a new sports saloon, the Eterne, to rival the Aston Martin Rapide and Maserati Quattroporte, and a modern interpretation of the Esprit supercar.[45]

It became apparent in July 2012 that the firm's financial difficulties had made this plan impossible to implement, and initially all but the Esprit project were cancelled.[46][47] Subsequently, the Esprit project was also cancelled.[48]

Lotus also showed an unnamed city car concept using its 1.2L range-extender engine.[49] In 2011, Lotus revealed this as the Lotus Ethos, a plug-in hybrid car based on the EMAS concept from its parent company Proton, and likely to be primarily built by Proton in Malaysia.[45] This car has also been cancelled.[50]

Lotus CEO at the time Jean Marc Gales confirmed in 2017 that development of an SUV is currently under way, after the company was acquired by the Chinese automotive manufacturer, Geely.[51]

In July 2019 Lotus revealed the Evija, a 1,470 kW (2,000 PS; 1,970 hp) and 1,700 N⋅m (1,254 lb⋅ft) electric supercar.

In January 2021, Lotus teased that the Elise, Exige, and Evora will be discontinued and be replaced by the Type 131 which had yet to be released at the time of announcement. In July 2021, Lotus revealed that this new model will be called Emira.

In November 2021, Lotus teased the future introduction of the future Type 132 SUV.[52]

In September 2023, Lotus announced the Lotus Emeya, the company's first electric GT car.[53]

Lotus engines edit

  • Lotus-Ford Twin Cam
  • Lotus 900 series
  • Range Extender Engine. This all-aluminium, monoblock, 1200 cc, three-cylinder, 47 horsepower, four-stroke engine is specifically designed to directly drive an alternator for electricity generation for series-hybrid cars. The engine is small and light at 56 kg (123 lb), having three cylinders and no detachable cylinder head. The cylinder head and engine block are all one casting to reduce size, weight and production costs. As the engine does not turn belt driven ancillaries such as alternator, power-steering pump or an air conditioning compressor, the block requires no strong points to accommodate such ancillaries, resulting in a simple and light block. The engine has a reduced parts count for lightness and cheaper production.[54][55]
  • On 18 August 2011 Lotus developed an all new in-house designed V8 destined for the new era range of cars. At 170 kg (375 lb) and just 612 mm (24.1 in) long, the unit is dry sump lubricated to save depth and will feature a 180° flat plane crank. The engine is being utilised as a stressed component, a technique pioneered by Colin Chapman in F1, specifically with the 1967 Type 49. It was expected to be used in the Le Mans LMP2 car in 2012. Expected performance is likely to be in excess of 590 PS (434 kW; 582 hp) and with a 9,200 rpm redline.[56]
  • Lotus Omnivore, research engine and prototype.

Lotus Engineering edit

Lotus Engineering Limited is an offshoot of Lotus Cars, which provides engineering consultancy to third-party companies primarily in the automotive industry. As well as Hethel in the United Kingdom Lotus has engineering centres in Ann Arbor, USA, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and Shanghai, China. In 2000, Lotus Engineering, Inc. was established with an office in Ann Arbor, Michigan.[57]

Engineering demonstrators edit

  • Lotus Eco Elise is an engineering demonstrator of its classic sports car that incorporates solar panels into a roof made from hemp, while also employing natural materials in the body and interior of the car.
  • Lotus Exige 265E Bio-fuel
  • Lotus Exige 270E Tri-fuel
  • Lotus Evora 414E Hybrid. Shown at the 2010 Geneva Motor show
  • Lotus Concept City Car. Shown at the 2010 Paris motor show.

APX and VVA edit

The APX (also known as the "Aluminium Performance Crossover") is an aluminium concept vehicle revealed at the 2006 Geneva Motor Show built on Lotus Engineering's Versatile Vehicle Architecture (VVA).

Whereas the VVA technology was to be used in the development of a new mid-engine sportscar for Lotus cars, the APX is, in fact, a high-performance 7-seat MPV with four-wheel drive and a front-mounted V6 engine from Lotus Engineering's Powertrain division. The engine was designed and developed to be available in a 2.2-litre naturally aspirated and 3.0-litre supercharged variations. An electric version was also shown in the 2007 NADA show.

Versatile Vehicle Architecture (VVA) is an effort by the Lotus car manufacturing company to reduce the investment needed for producing unique, niche-market cars by sharing a number of common components.

Cars produced using VVA:

Projects undertaken by Lotus Engineering edit

 
DeLorean with Lotus designed chassis
 
Sinclair C5
 
Dodge EV
 
Tesla Roadster

Examples of work undertaken by Lotus Engineering include:

  • Lotus Talbot Sunbeam—Talbot's hot hatch rally car of the early 1980s
  • DMC DeLorean. Changes to the original concept led to considerable schedule pressures. The car was deemed to require almost complete re-engineering, which was turned over to engineer Colin Chapman, founder of Lotus. Lotus replaced most of the unproven material and manufacturing techniques with those then employed by Lotus in the Lotus Esprit
  • Vauxhall Lotus Carlton (also Opel Lotus Omega, internal name Lotus Type 104) – At the time (early 1990s) this was the fastest saloon car available, with a top speed of over 175 mph (280 km/h)
  • The 1991 Dodge Spirit R/T with a version of the 2.2 L K-car engine with a 16-valve DOHC head designed by Lotus with over 220 hp (160 kW)
  • Vauxhall VX220 (badged Opel Speedster outside of the UK) – Lotus produced and based the car upon the same aluminium chassis design as the Lotus Elise. Production of these models ended in 2005
  • Lotus styled and assisted with the engineering of the Tesla Roadster, an electric sports car based on the Elise, as well as licensing some technologies to Tesla Motors and constructing the Roadster at their plant in Hethel.[58]
  • The Aston Martin DB9's chassis was developed with the help of Lotus Engineering
  • Lotus was responsible for most of the design, development, and testing, of the LT5 DOHC V8 powerplant for the Chevrolet Corvette C4 ZR-1
  • Lotus designed, developed and tested the GM Ecotec engine and its variants
  • Lotus was responsible for various aspects of the Sinclair C5 electric tricycle
  • Lotus was responsible for the suspension calibration of the Toyota MR2 Mk. I, the Toyota Supra Mk. II and Mk. III, the Isuzu Piazza, the Isuzu Impulse as well as newer Proton models
  • Lotus did engineering work on the PROTON Satria GTi model
  • Lotus was responsible for the development of the Campro engine together with Proton,[59] as well as its variable valve timing system, the Cam Profile Switching (CPS). Currently available in the 1.6-litre and 1.3-litre variants, the Campro engine now powers most of Proton's newer models
  • Lotus has worked on the suspension of the Mahindra Scorpio to make it more stable at high speeds
  • Lotus produced the revised chassis of the Isuzu Piazza
  • Lotus has worked on the suspension and handling of the Volvo 480
  • The Dodge EV concept electric vehicle from Chrysler is based on a Lotus Europa S
  • Lotus has worked on the suspension and handling of the Nissan GT-R[60]
  • Lotus rebuilt, modified, and tuned a Lada Riva on Top Gear season 1, episode 8.
  • The 2006 Volkswagen GX3 features a chassis developed by Lotus for VW
  • The 2009 Kia Soul features Lotus tuned suspension (UK only)
  • 2010: Limo-Green project with Jaguar Cars. Lotus provided the Range Extender engine for a prototype XJ series-hybrid car. The car returned 58 mpg (imperial) running off the range extender alone[61]
  • Lotus partnered with Jaguar for developing chassis system and engine management of the Jaguar C-X75. The engine is a supercharged 1.6 turbo petrol engine rated at 507 PS (500 hp; 373 kW) coupled with a 177 PS (175 hp; 130 kW).
  • Lotus has worked on handling and steering of the 2015 Hyundai Genesis.
  • The 2015 Spyker B6 Venator is powered by a Lotus-built engine originating from a Toyota-sourced block.
  • The Baojun 730, a Chinese minivan with Lotus-tuned suspension, built by a General Motors subsidiary.
  • HB.T, a track bicycle with a novel aerodynamic design; produced in collaboration with Hope Technology and British Cycling.[62]

Lotus based cars edit

Electric vehicles edit

Evija edit

 
Lotus Evija

Lotus unveiled their first production electric hypercar called the Evija in July 2019, production would be limited to 130 units and is scheduled to begin in summer 2020 and is being delivered to customers in early 2023. The car was undergoing development under the codename Type 130. The Evija makes use of a 70 kWh battery pack developed in conjunction with Williams Advanced Engineering. There are 4 electric motors, one placed on each wheel supported by an Integral powertrain. The powertrain is rated at a total output of 2,039 PS (1,500 kW; 2,011 hp) with 1,704 N⋅m (1,257 lb⋅ft) of torque. The Evija has a range of 346 km (215 mi).[63][64][65][66][33]

Other cars edit

The Tesla Roadster is based on the Elise chassis. On July 11, 2005, Tesla and Lotus entered an agreement about products and services based on the Lotus Elise, where Lotus provided advice on designing and developing a vehicle as well as producing partly assembled vehicles.[67][68]

Lotus Engineering has established a group dedicated to hybrid and electric vehicles.[69]

Lotus Engineering developed the Evora 414E as their first hybrid concept car. Featuring a total hybrid range of more than 300 miles.[70]

Lotus joined Jaguar Cars, MIRA Ltd and Caparo on a luxury hybrid executive sedan project called "Limo-Green"—funded by the UK Government Technology Strategy Board. The vehicle will be a series plug-in hybrid.[71][72]

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Gérard ("Jabby") Crombac, Colin Chapman: The Man and His Cars (Patrick Stephens, Wellingborough, 1986)
  • Mike Lawrence, Colin Chapman: The Wayward Genius (Breedon Books, Derby, 2002)
  • Ian H. Smith, The Story of Lotus: 1947–1960 Birth of a Legend (republished Motor Racing Publications, Chiswick, 1972)
  • Doug Nye, The Story of Lotus: 1961–1971 Growth of a Legend (Motor Racing Publications, Chiswick, 1972)
  • Robin Read, Colin Chapman's Lotus: The Early Years, the Elite and the Origins of the Elan (Haynes, Sparkford, 1989)
  • Anthony Pritchard, Lotus: All the Cars (Aston Publications, Bourne End, 1990)
  • Doug Nye, Theme Lotus: 1956–1986 (Motor Racing Publications, Croydon, 1986)
  • William Taylor The Lotus Book (Coterie Press, Luton, 1998, 1999, 2005)
  • William Taylor The Lotus Book Collectibles (Coterie Press, Luton, 2000)
  • Peter Ross, Lotus: The Early Years 1951–54 (Coterie Press, Luton, 2004)
  • Rémy Solnon, Lotus Esprit – le grand tourisme à l'anglaise (Editions Les Presses Littéraires, 2007)
  • Andrew Ferguson, Team Lotus: The Indianapolis Years (Haynes Publishing 1996) no longer available

References edit

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External links edit

  • Official website  

lotus, cars, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, february, 2023. 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 Lotus Cars news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Lotus Group also known as Lotus Cars and doing business as Lotus NYO in China 3 is a British multinational automotive manufacturer of luxury sports cars and electric lifestyle vehicles Lotus GroupLotus logo 2019 Company typePrivateIndustryAutomotiveFounded1948 76 years ago 1948 FounderColin ChapmanHeadquartersHethel Norfolk England United KingdomArea servedWorldwideKey peopleQingfeng Feng CEO Alexious Lee CFO Mike Johnstone CCO ProductsAutomobilesProduction output867 units 1 2022 Revenue 56 million 1 2022 Number of employees1 385 2021 2 ParentGeely Holding 51 Etika Automotive 49 Websitelotuscars wbr comLotus Group is composed of three primary entities Lotus Cars a high performance sports car company is based in Hethel Norfolk Lotus Tech an all electric lifestyle vehicle company headquartered in Wuhan China and operates regional facilities in the United Kingdom the Netherlands and Germany 4 Additionally Lotus Engineering an engineering consultancy firm is headquartered at the Lotus Advanced Technology Centre LATC located at the University of Warwick s Wellesbourne Campus 5 Lotus was founded and owned for many years by Colin Chapman After his death and a period of financial instability it was bought by General Motors then Romano Artioli and then DRB HICOM through its subsidiary Proton who owned Lotus from 1996 to 2017 Lotus is currently majority owned by Chinese multinational Geely 6 Lotus was previously involved in Formula One racing via Team Lotus winning the Formula One World Championship seven times Notable Lotus cars include the Lotus Seven the Elan the Esprit and the Elise Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 Financial troubles death of Chapman 1 3 International ownership 2 Operations 3 Formula One and motorsport 4 Lotus car models 4 1 Current 4 2 Previous 4 3 Announcements of future cars 5 Lotus engines 6 Lotus Engineering 6 1 Engineering demonstrators 6 2 APX and VVA 6 3 Projects undertaken by Lotus Engineering 6 4 Lotus based cars 7 Electric vehicles 7 1 Evija 7 2 Other cars 8 See also 9 Further reading 10 References 11 External linksHistory editEarly years edit The company was formed in 1952 as Lotus Engineering Ltd by engineers Colin Chapman and Colin Dare both graduates of University College London but had earlier origins in 1948 when Chapman built his first racing car in a garage 7 The four letters in the middle of the logo stand for the initials of company founder Anthony Colin Bruce Chapman When the logo was created Colin Chapman s original partners Michael and Nigel Allen were led to believe that the letters stood for Colin Chapman and the Allen Brothers citation needed clarification needed The first factory was situated in old stables behind the Railway Hotel in Hornsey North London Team Lotus which was split off from Lotus Engineering in 1954 was active and competitive in Formula One racing from 1958 to 1994 The Lotus Group of Companies was formed in 1959 This was made up of Lotus Cars Limited and Lotus Components Limited which focused on road cars and customer competition car production respectively Lotus Components Limited became Lotus Racing Limited in 1971 but the newly renamed entity ceased operation in the same year 8 The company moved to a purpose built factory at Cheshunt in 1959 9 and since 1966 the company has occupied a modern factory and road test facility at Hethel near Wymondham in Norfolk The site is a former World War II airfield RAF Hethel and the test track uses sections of the old runway In its early days Lotus sold cars aimed at privateer racers and trialists Its early road cars could be bought as kits in order to save on purchase tax The kit car era ended in the late 1960s and early 1970s the Lotus Elan Plus Two being the first Lotus road car not to be offered in kit form and the Lotus Eclat and Lotus Elite of the mid 1970s being offered only in factory built versions After the Lotus Elite of the 1950s which featured a complete fibreglass monocoque fitted with built in steel pickup points for mounting major components Lotus found critical and sales success in the 1960s with the Lotus Elan This two seater was later developed to two plus two form Elan 2S Lotus was notable for its use of fibreglass bodies backbone chassis and overhead camshaft engines initially supplied by Coventry Climax but later replaced by Lotus Ford units Ford block Lotus head and twin cam valve gear Lotus also worked with Ford on the Lotus Cortina a successful sports saloon Another Lotus of the late 1960s and early 1970s was the two seater Lotus Europa initially intended only for the European market which paired a backbone chassis and lightweight body with a mid mounted Renault engine later upgraded to the Lotus Ford twin cam unit as used in the Elan The Lotus Seven originating in the 1950s as a simple lightweight open two seater continued in production into the early 70s Lotus then sold the rights to produce the Seven to Caterham which has continued to produce the car since then By the mid 1970s Lotus sought to move upmarket with the launch of the Elite and Eclat models four seaters aimed at prosperous buyers with features such as optional air conditioning and optional automatic transmissions The mid engined line continued with the Lotus Esprit which was to prove one of the company s longest lived and most iconic models Lotus developed its own series of four cylinder DOHC engines the Lotus 900 series and later a V8 and turbocharged versions of the engines appeared in the Esprit Variants of the 900 series engine were supplied for the Jensen Healey sports car and the Sunbeam Lotus hot hatchback In the 1980s Lotus collaborated with Vauxhall Motors to produce the Lotus Carlton the fastest roadgoing Vauxhall car Financial troubles death of Chapman edit By 1980 Group Lotus was in serious financial trouble Production had dropped from 1 200 units per year to a mere 383 The combined reasons were that the world was in the middle of an economic recession and sales in the key United States market had virtually collapsed along with limited development of the then model range 10 In early 1982 Chapman came to an agreement with Toyota to exchange intellectual property and applied expertise This initially resulted in Lotus Engineering helping to develop the Mk2 Toyota Supra also known as the Toyota Celica XX Secondly it allowed Lotus to launch the new Lotus Excel to replace the ageing Lotus Eclat Using drivetrain and other components from Toyota enabled Lotus to sell the Excel for 1 109 less than the outgoing Eclat 10 Looking to re enter the North American market Chapman was approached by young law professor and investment banking consultant Joe Bianco who proposed a new and separate United States sales company for Lotus 11 By creating an unprecedented tax incentived mechanism wherein each investor received a specially personalised Lotus Turbo Esprit the new American company Lotus Performance Cars Inc LPCI was able to provide fresh capital to the Group Lotus in the United Kingdom Former Ferrari North America general manager John Spiech was brought in to run LPCI which imported the remarkable Giugiaro designed Turbo Esprit for the first time US sales began to quickly jump into triple digits annually 12 Chapman died of a heart attack on 16 December 1982 at the age of 54 having begun life as an innkeeper s son and ended a multi millionaire industrialist in post war Britain At the time of his death the car maker had built thousands of successful racing and road cars and won the Formula One World Championship seven times At the time of his death both Chapman and Lotus were linked with the DeLorean Motor Company scandal over the use of UK Government subsidies for the production of the DMC DeLorean for which Lotus had designed the chassis Chasing large sums of money which had disappeared from the DeLorean company Lotus was besieged by Inland Revenue inspectors who imposed an 84 million legal protective assessment on the company 13 Chapman died before the full deceit unravelled but at the subsequent trial of Fred Bushell the Lotus accountant the judge insisted that had Chapman himself been in the dock he would have received a sentence of at least 10 years 14 With Group Lotus near bankruptcy in 1983 David Wickins the founder of British Car Auctions agreed to become the new company chairman through an introduction from his friend Mark Thatcher 13 Taking a combined 29 BCA personal stake in Group Lotus 15 Wickins negotiated with the Inland Revenue and then brought in new investors merchant bank Schroeder Wagg 14 15 Michael Ashcroft s Bermudian operating company Benor 14 16 Sir Anthony Bamford of JCB 12 15 Wickins oversaw a complete turnaround in the company s fortunes which resulted in him being called The saviour of Lotus 13 17 International ownership edit nbsp Lotus final assemblyDespite having employed designer Peter Stevens to revamp the range and design two new concept cars 18 by 1985 the British investors recognised that they lacked the required capital to invest in the required new model development to production and sought to find a major motor manufacturing buyer 15 In January 1986 Wickins oversaw the majority sale of the Group Lotus companies and 100 of North American based LPCI to General Motors with engineer Bob Eaton a big Lotus car fan 15 After four months control of Group Lotus by the co owners GM and Toyota the latter sold GM its stake By October 1986 GM had acquired a 91 stake in Group Lotus for 22 7 million which allowed GM to legally force the company buyout 15 On 27 August 1993 GM sold the company for 30 million to A C B N Holdings S A of Luxembourg a company controlled by Italian businessman Romano Artioli who also owned Bugatti Automobili SpA In 1996 a majority share in Lotus was sold to Proton a Malaysian car company listed on the Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange Lotus Cars were awarded the Queen s Award for Enterprise for contribution to International Trade one of 85 companies receiving the recognition in that category in 2002 Lotus cars wore the badge of the award for a number of years 19 On 24 May 2017 Chinese multinational Geely announced that was taking a 51 controlling stake in Lotus 20 21 The remaining 49 were acquired by Etika Automotive a holding company of Proton s major shareholder Syed Mokhtar Albukhary 22 In January 2021 Lotus parent company Geely announced a joint venture with Renault Nissan Mitsubishi Alliance and their Alpine division to develop a range of electric performance cars sharing some of their future platforms 23 In April 2021 Lotus announced plans to produce only electric cars by 2028 and increase production numbers from around 1 500 per annum to tens of thousands Geely and Etika Automotive provided two billion pounds US 2 8 billion to fund the changes 24 Lotus Technology the electric vehicle division of Lotus which has a different ownership structure 30 by Etika and the rest by Geely and Nio Capital was listed on NASDAQ through a SPAC acquisition After the listing 10 3 of shares will be held by the public 25 Operations editCurrently organised as Group Lotus Limited the business is divided into Lotus Cars and Lotus Engineering As well as sports car manufacture the company also acts as an engineering consultancy providing engineering development particularly of suspensions for other car manufacturers Lotus s powertrain department is responsible for the design and development of the 4 cylinder Ecotec engine found in many of GM s Vauxhall Opel Saab Chevrolet and Saturn cars The US Lotus Elise and Exige models used the 1 8L VVTL i I4 from Toyota s late Celica GT S and the Matrix XRS both of which are no longer available new The new Exige has the same V6 engine as its bigger counterpart the Evora and is not available in the US as a road legal vehicle Michael Kimberley who had been a guiding figure at Lotus in the 1970s returned and took over as the Acting chief executive officer of the Company and its Group from May 2006 He chaired the executive committee of Lotus Group International Limited LGIL established in February 2006 with Syed Zainal Abidin managing director of Proton Holdings Berhad and Badrul Feisal non executive director of Proton Holdings Berhad LGIL is the holding company of Lotus Group Plc Kimberley retired as CEO on 17 July 2009 26 replaced on 1 October 2009 by the former Senior Vice president for Commercial amp Brand at Ferrari Dany Bahar Bahar intended to drive the brand up market into the expanding global luxury goods sector effectively away from the company s traditional light weight simplicity and pure driving experience focus Bahar was suspended as CEO on 25 May 2012 on a temporary basis while an investigation into his conduct was undertaken 27 Lotus announced on 7 June 2012 the termination of Bahar s employment and the appointment of Aslam Farikullah as the new chief operating officer 28 The ambitious plans for several new models were cancelled following Bahar s departure Jean Marc Gales replaced Bahar as the CEO of the company in 2014 and enabled the company to make a profit after decades in 2017 due to his effective market plans and strategies before he left the company in June 2018 due to personal reasons and was replaced by Feng Qingfeng from Lotus Group s parent company Geely October 2018 saw further senior personnel changes as Phil Popham was named CEO of Lotus Cars with Feng Qingfeng remaining in charge of Group Lotus 29 In January 2021 Matt Windle was appointed managing director of Lotus Cars after Phil Popham stepped down 30 31 Formula One and motorsport editMain articles Team Lotus Team Lotus 2010 2011 and Lotus F1 nbsp Lotus 72 nbsp Lotus 77 nbsp Lotus 99T nbsp Lotus E20In its early days the company encouraged its customers to race its cars and it first entered Formula One through its sister company Team Lotus in 1958 A Lotus Formula One car driven by Stirling Moss won the marque s first Grand Prix in 1960 at Monaco Moss drove a Lotus 18 entered by privateer Rob Walker Major success came in 1963 with the Lotus 25 which with Jim Clark driving won Team Lotus its first F1 World Constructors Championship Clark s untimely death he crashed a Formula Two Lotus 48 in April 1968 after his rear tyre failed in a turn in Hockenheim was a severe blow to the team and to Formula One He was the dominant driver in the dominant car and remains an inseparable part of Lotus s early years That year s championship was won by Clark s teammate Graham Hill Team Lotus is credited with making the mid engined layout popular for IndyCars developing the first monocoque Formula One chassis and integrating the engine and transaxle as chassis components Team Lotus was among the pioneers in Formula One in adding wings and shaping the undersurface of the car to create downforce It invented active suspension and was the first to move radiators to the sides of the car to improve aerodynamic performance Formula One Drivers Championship winner for Lotus were Jim Clark in 1963 and 1965 Graham Hill in 1968 Jochen Rindt in 1970 Emerson Fittipaldi in 1972 and Mario Andretti in 1978 In 1973 Lotus won the constructors championship only the drivers title went to Jackie Stewart of Tyrrell Chapman saw Lotus beat Ferrari as the first marque to achieve 50 Grand Prix victories despite Ferrari having won their first nine years sooner Even after Chapman s death until the late 1980s Team Lotus continued to be a major player in Formula One Ayrton Senna drove for the team from 1985 to 1987 winning twice in each year and achieving 17 pole positions Team Lotus established Classic Team Lotus in 1992 as the Works historic motorsport activity Classic Team Lotus continues to maintain Lotus F1 cars and run them in the FIA Historic Formula One Championship and it preserves the Team Lotus archive and Works Collection of cars under the management of Colin Chapman s son Clive Team Lotus s participation in Formula One ended at the end of the 1994 season by which time the team s cars were no longer competitive Team Lotus constructed cars won a total of 79 Grand Prix races Former racing driver David Hunt brother of F1 world champion James Hunt purchased the name Team Lotus and licensed it to the Formula One team Pacific Racing which was rebranded Pacific Team Lotus 32 The Pacific Team folded at the end of the 1995 season The Lotus name returned to Formula One for the 2010 season when a new Malaysian team called Lotus Racing was awarded an entry The new team used the Lotus name under licence from Group Lotus and was unrelated to the original Team Lotus In September 2010 Group Lotus with agreement from its parent company Proton terminated the licence for future seasons as a result of what it called flagrant and persistent breaches of the licence by the team Lotus Racing then announced that it had acquired Team Lotus Ventures Ltd the company led by David Hunt and with it full ownership of the rights to the Team Lotus brand and heritage The team confirmed that it would be known as Team Lotus from 2011 onwards In December 2010 Group Lotus announced the creation of Lotus Renault GP the successor to the Renault F1 team This team contested the 2011 season having purchased a title sponsorship deal with the team with the option to buy shares in the future The team s car for that season the R31 was badged as a Renault while Team Lotus s car the T128 was badged as a Lotus In May 2011 the British High Court of Justice ruled that Team Lotus could continue to use the Team Lotus name but Group Lotus had sole right to use the Lotus name on its own As a consequence for 2012 Lotus Renault GP was rebranded as Lotus F1 Team and its cars were badged as Lotuses while Team Lotus was renamed Caterham F1 Team after the sports car manufacturer owned by team principal Tony Fernandes and its cars were badged as Caterhams Group Lotus was also involved in several other categories of motorsport It sponsored the KV team in the IndyCar Series and used to sponsor the ART team in the GP2 and GP3 Series in 2011 and 2012 In 2011 Lotus also returned to the 24 Hours of Le Mans with a semi works effort run by Jetalliance Racing which fielded two Lotus Evoras After fielding underpowered and uncompetitive engines in the 2012 Indianapolis 500 in which drivers Jean Alesi and Simona de Silvestro were black flagged after ten laps for failing to maintain a competitive pace Lotus was released from its contract and did not participate in future seasons Lotus car models editMain article List of Lotus vehicles Current edit Current Lotus models include Lotus Evija The Lotus Evija is a limited production electric sports car it is the first electric vehicle to be introduced and manufactured by the company Codenamed Type 130 production of the Evija will be limited to 130 units Production is set to begin early mid 2021 with delivery in early 2023 The Evija is powered by a 70 kWh battery pack developed in conjunction with Williams Advanced Engineering with electric motors supplied by Integral Powertrain The four individual motors are placed at the wheels and each is rated at 375 kW 510 PS 503 hp for a combined total output of 1 500 kW 2 039 PS 2 011 hp and 1 704 N m 1 257 lb ft of torque Lotus claims that the Evija will be able to accelerate from 0 to 100 km h 62 mph in under 3 seconds from 0 to 300 km h 186 mph in 9 1 seconds and achieve a limited top speed of 350 km h 217 mph 33 Lotus Emira Unveiled July 2021 production began March 2022 this will be the firm s final vehicle powered by an internal combustion engine 24 Lotus Eletre The first high performance electric SUV from Lotus Eletre is powered by a 112 kWh battery pack and an 800V high voltage system achieving a maximum range of 600 km and 400 km of range in 20 minutes of charging The 2024 model offers 603 horsepower for the base and S models and 905 horsepower the R model and a top speed of 260 km h It is the first Lotus to offer features like LiDAR 34 35 Delivery began on March 29 2023 and is expected to launch in Europe in the summer or fall of 2023 and in the United States in 2024 36 37 38 Lotus EmeyaPrevious edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lotus Cars news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Lotus Mark I 1948 nbsp Lotus Mark IX and Lotus 6 nbsp Lotus Eleven nbsp Lotus Elite nbsp Lotus Elan 2S 1973 nbsp Lotus Europa S2 nbsp Lotus Eclat S2 nbsp Lotus Esprit V8 1999 nbsp Lotus Elise S1 nbsp Lotus Elise GT1 Road Car 1997 nbsp Lotus 340R nbsp Opel Speedster Vauxhall VX220 based on the Lotus Elise S2 nbsp Lotus EmiraLotus Mark I 1948 Austin 7 based sports car Lotus Mark II 1949 1950 Ford powered trials car Lotus Mark III 1951 750 cc formula car Lotus Mark IV 1952 Trials car Lotus Mark V 1952 750 cc formula car never built Lotus Mark VI 1953 1955 The first production racer about 100 built Lotus Seven 1957 1972 A minimalist open sports car designed to manoeuvre a racing circuit 39 Lotus Mark VIII 1954 sports racer MG 1 5 L Lotus Mark IX 1955 sports racer shorter and improved Eight Lotus Mark X 1955 sports racer for larger displacement Bristol BMW 2 L Lotus Eleven 1956 1957 small displacement sports racer 750 1500 cc Lotus 12 1956 1957 Formula Two and Formula One racecar Lotus 13 Designation not used Lotus 14 1957 1963 Lotus Elite the first production street car Lotus 15 1958 1960 Sports racer update of the Mk X Climax 1 5 2 5 L Lotus 16 1958 1959 F1 F2 car Miniature Vanwall Lotus 17 1959 Lighter sports racer update of the 11 in response to Lola Mk I Lotus 18 1960 1961 First mid engined Lotus single seater Formula Junior F2 F1 Lotus 19 1960 1962 Mid engined larger displacement sports racer Monte Carlo Lotus 20 1961 Formula Junior Lotus 21 1961 Formula One Lotus 22 1962 1965 Formula Junior F3 Lotus 23 1962 1966 Small displacement mid engined sports racer Lotus 24 1962 Formula One Lotus 25 1962 1964 Formula One World Champion Lotus 26 1962 1971 Lotus Elan production street sports car Lotus 26R 1962 1966 Racing version of Elan Lotus 27 1963 Formula Junior Lotus 28 1963 1966 Lotus version of the Ford Cortina street racer Lotus 29 1963 Indy car Ford all aluminium OHV small block V8 Lotus 30 1964 Large displacement sports racer Ford small block V8 Lotus 31 1964 1966 Formula Three space frame racer Lotus 32 1964 1965 Monocoque F2 and Tasman Cup racer Lotus 33 1964 1965 Formula One World Champion Lotus 34 1964 Indy car DOHC Ford V8 Lotus 35 1965 F2 F3 FB Lotus 36 1965 1968 Elan Fixed Head Coupe Type 26 could be fitted with a removable hard top Lotus 38 1965 Indy winning mid engined car Lotus 39 1965 1966 Tasman Cup formula car Lotus 40 1965 Sports racer a development of the 30 Lotus 41 1965 1968 Formula Three Formula Two Formula B Lotus 42 1967 Indy car Ford V8 Lotus 43 1966 Formula One Lotus 44 1967 Formula Two Lotus 45 1966 1974 Convertible Drop Head Coupe Elan with permanent side window frames Lotus 46 1966 1968 Original Renault engined Europa Lotus 47 1966 1970 Racing version of Europa Lotus 48 1967 Formula Two Lotus 49 1967 1969 Formula One World Champion Lotus 50 1967 1974 Lotus Elan 2 four seat production car Lotus 51 1967 1969 Formula Ford Lotus 52 1968 Prototype Europa Twin Cam Lotus 53 1968 Small displacement sports racer never built Lotus 54 1968 1970 Series 2 Europa production car Lotus 55 1968 F3 Lotus 56 1968 1969 Indy turbine wedge Lotus 56B 1971 F1 turbine wedge Lotus 57 1968 F2 design study Lotus 58 1968 F1 design study Lotus 59 1969 1970 F2 F3 Formula Ford Lotus LX 1960 Lotus Elite built to win at Le Mans with a 2 0 L FPF engine Lotus 60 1970 1973 Lotus Seven S4 Greatly modified version of the Seven Lotus 61 1969 Formula Ford the wedge Lotus 62 1969 prototype Europa racer Lotus 63 1969 4 wheel drive F1 Lotus 64 1969 4 wheel drive Indy car did not compete Lotus 65 1969 1971 Federalized Europa S2 Lotus 66 Can Am design study 40 Lotus 67 1970 Proposed Tasman Cup car never built Lotus 68 1969 F5000 prototype Lotus 69 1970 F2 F3 Formula Ford Lotus 70 1970 F5000 Formula A Lotus 71 Undisclosed design study Lotus 72 1970 1972 Formula One World Champion Lotus 73 1972 1973 F3 Lotus 74 Texaco Star 1973 F2 Lotus 74 1971 1975 Europa Twin Cam production car Lotus 75 1974 1982 Elite II Luxury 4 seat GT Lotus 76 1974 F1 redundant designation Lotus 76 1975 1982 Eclat S1 fastback version of Elite II redundant designation Lotus 77 1976 F1 Lotus 78 1977 1978 F1 ground effects car Lotus 79 1975 1980 Lotus Esprit street GT 41 redundant designation Lotus 79 1978 1979 Formula One World Champion redundant designation Lotus 80 1979 F1 Lotus 81 1979 1980 Sunbeam Talbot Lotus redundant designation Lotus 81 1980 1981 F1 redundant designation Lotus 82 1982 1987 Turbo Esprit street GT car Lotus 83 1980 Elite series 2 Lotus 84 1980 1982 Eclat series 2 Lotus 85 1980 1987 Esprit series 3 Lotus 86 1980 1983 F1 dual chassis never raced Lotus 87 1980 1982 F1 Lotus 88 1981 F1 dual chassis car banned Lotus 89 1982 1992 Lotus Excel GT re engineered Eclat Lotus M90 X100 Toyota based new Elan abandoned in favour of the Elan M100 Lotus 91 1982 F1 Lotus 92 1983 F1 Lotus 93T 1983 F1 Turbo Lotus 94T 1983 F1 Turbo Lotus 95T 1984 F1 Turbo Lotus 96T 1984 Indy car project abandoned Lotus 97T 1985 1986 F1 Turbo Lotus 98T 1986 1987 F1 Turbo Lotus 99T 1987 F1 Turbo last Lotus F1 winner Lotus 100T 1988 F1 Turbo Lotus Elan Type M100 1989 1995 Front drive convertible Elan Lotus 101 1989 F1 Lotus 102 1990 1991 F1 Lotus 103 1990 F1 not produced Lotus 104 1990 1992 Lotus Carlton Omega tuned version of the Opel Vauxhall saloon Lotus 105 1990 Racing X180R IMSA Supercars Drivers Champ Doc Bundy Lotus 106 1991 X180R roadgoing homologation special Lotus 107 1992 1994 F1 Lotus 108 1992 a track only bike ridden by Chris Boardman to win a gold medal at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics also known as the LotusSport Pursuit Bicycle Lotus 109 1994 F1 Last Lotus F1 car Lotus 110 Road and TT bike Often mistaken for the Lotus 108 but completely different bikes Lotus 111 1996 2022 Lotus Elise Lotus 112 Partial F1 design reached as far as the monocoque buck Lotus 113 Number not allocated Lotus 114 1996 Lotus Esprit GT1 race car Lotus 115 1997 1998 Lotus Elise GT1 Lotus 116 Opel Speedster Vauxhall VX220 a collaboration with Opel Lotus 117 Elise S2 with Rover engines citation needed Lotus 118 Lotus M250 two seat mid range sports car concept unveiled in Autumn of 1999 project cancelled in 2001 Lotus 119 2002 Soapbox Derby car made of carbon and aluminium disc brakes no engine for Goodwood Festival of Speed Lotus 120 2004 2022 Elise S2 with Toyota engines Lotus 121 2000 2022 Exige S2 Lotus 121 2006 Europa S 42 Lotus 122 2007 2011 Lotus 2 Eleven 0 door speedster Lotus 123 2010 2022 Lotus Evora Lotus 124 Lotus Evora race car Lotus T125 2010 Lotus Exos 43 Lotus T127 2010 Team Lotus F1 car made for 2010 season Lotus T128 Formula One car 2011 Team Lotus F1 car made for 2011 season Lotus T128 Le Mans Prototype 2013 race car built for 24 Hours of LeMans Lotus 129 2016 2022 Lotus 3 Eleven 0 door speedsterAnnouncements of future cars edit nbsp Proposed new Lotus Esprit announced 2010 but subsequently cancelled At the 2010 Paris Motorshow Lotus announced five new models to be introduced over the next five years 44 Their intention was to replace the Elise with an entirely different model as well as to introduce two entirely new sports coupes which would have been known as the Elite and the Elan a new sports saloon the Eterne to rival the Aston Martin Rapide and Maserati Quattroporte and a modern interpretation of the Esprit supercar 45 It became apparent in July 2012 that the firm s financial difficulties had made this plan impossible to implement and initially all but the Esprit project were cancelled 46 47 Subsequently the Esprit project was also cancelled 48 Lotus also showed an unnamed city car concept using its 1 2L range extender engine 49 In 2011 Lotus revealed this as the Lotus Ethos a plug in hybrid car based on the EMAS concept from its parent company Proton and likely to be primarily built by Proton in Malaysia 45 This car has also been cancelled 50 Lotus CEO at the time Jean Marc Gales confirmed in 2017 that development of an SUV is currently under way after the company was acquired by the Chinese automotive manufacturer Geely 51 In July 2019 Lotus revealed the Evija a 1 470 kW 2 000 PS 1 970 hp and 1 700 N m 1 254 lb ft electric supercar In January 2021 Lotus teased that the Elise Exige and Evora will be discontinued and be replaced by the Type 131 which had yet to be released at the time of announcement In July 2021 Lotus revealed that this new model will be called Emira In November 2021 Lotus teased the future introduction of the future Type 132 SUV 52 In September 2023 Lotus announced the Lotus Emeya the company s first electric GT car 53 Lotus engines editLotus Ford Twin Cam Lotus 900 series Lotus 907 Lotus 910 Lotus 911 Lotus 912 Lotus 920 Lotus 918 Range Extender Engine This all aluminium monoblock 1200 cc three cylinder 47 horsepower four stroke engine is specifically designed to directly drive an alternator for electricity generation for series hybrid cars The engine is small and light at 56 kg 123 lb having three cylinders and no detachable cylinder head The cylinder head and engine block are all one casting to reduce size weight and production costs As the engine does not turn belt driven ancillaries such as alternator power steering pump or an air conditioning compressor the block requires no strong points to accommodate such ancillaries resulting in a simple and light block The engine has a reduced parts count for lightness and cheaper production 54 55 On 18 August 2011 Lotus developed an all new in house designed V8 destined for the new era range of cars At 170 kg 375 lb and just 612 mm 24 1 in long the unit is dry sump lubricated to save depth and will feature a 180 flat plane crank The engine is being utilised as a stressed component a technique pioneered by Colin Chapman in F1 specifically with the 1967 Type 49 It was expected to be used in the Le Mans LMP2 car in 2012 Expected performance is likely to be in excess of 590 PS 434 kW 582 hp and with a 9 200 rpm redline 56 Lotus Omnivore research engine and prototype Lotus Engineering editLotus Engineering Limited is an offshoot of Lotus Cars which provides engineering consultancy to third party companies primarily in the automotive industry As well as Hethel in the United Kingdom Lotus has engineering centres in Ann Arbor USA Kuala Lumpur Malaysia and Shanghai China In 2000 Lotus Engineering Inc was established with an office in Ann Arbor Michigan 57 Engineering demonstrators edit Lotus Eco Elise is an engineering demonstrator of its classic sports car that incorporates solar panels into a roof made from hemp while also employing natural materials in the body and interior of the car Lotus Exige 265E Bio fuel Lotus Exige 270E Tri fuel Lotus Evora 414E Hybrid Shown at the 2010 Geneva Motor show Lotus Concept City Car Shown at the 2010 Paris motor show APX and VVA edit Main article Lotus APX The APX also known as the Aluminium Performance Crossover is an aluminium concept vehicle revealed at the 2006 Geneva Motor Show built on Lotus Engineering s Versatile Vehicle Architecture VVA Whereas the VVA technology was to be used in the development of a new mid engine sportscar for Lotus cars the APX is in fact a high performance 7 seat MPV with four wheel drive and a front mounted V6 engine from Lotus Engineering s Powertrain division The engine was designed and developed to be available in a 2 2 litre naturally aspirated and 3 0 litre supercharged variations An electric version was also shown in the 2007 NADA show Versatile Vehicle Architecture VVA is an effort by the Lotus car manufacturing company to reduce the investment needed for producing unique niche market cars by sharing a number of common components Cars produced using VVA Lotus APXProjects undertaken by Lotus Engineering edit nbsp DeLorean with Lotus designed chassis nbsp Sinclair C5 nbsp Dodge EV nbsp Tesla RoadsterExamples of work undertaken by Lotus Engineering include Lotus Talbot Sunbeam Talbot s hot hatch rally car of the early 1980s DMC DeLorean Changes to the original concept led to considerable schedule pressures The car was deemed to require almost complete re engineering which was turned over to engineer Colin Chapman founder of Lotus Lotus replaced most of the unproven material and manufacturing techniques with those then employed by Lotus in the Lotus Esprit Vauxhall Lotus Carlton also Opel Lotus Omega internal name Lotus Type 104 At the time early 1990s this was the fastest saloon car available with a top speed of over 175 mph 280 km h The 1991 Dodge Spirit R T with a version of the 2 2 L K car engine with a 16 valve DOHC head designed by Lotus with over 220 hp 160 kW Vauxhall VX220 badged Opel Speedster outside of the UK Lotus produced and based the car upon the same aluminium chassis design as the Lotus Elise Production of these models ended in 2005 Lotus styled and assisted with the engineering of the Tesla Roadster an electric sports car based on the Elise as well as licensing some technologies to Tesla Motors and constructing the Roadster at their plant in Hethel 58 The Aston Martin DB9 s chassis was developed with the help of Lotus Engineering Lotus was responsible for most of the design development and testing of the LT5 DOHC V8 powerplant for the Chevrolet Corvette C4 ZR 1 Lotus designed developed and tested the GM Ecotec engine and its variants Lotus was responsible for various aspects of the Sinclair C5 electric tricycle Lotus was responsible for the suspension calibration of the Toyota MR2 Mk I the Toyota Supra Mk II and Mk III the Isuzu Piazza the Isuzu Impulse as well as newer Proton models Lotus did engineering work on the PROTON Satria GTi model Lotus was responsible for the development of the Campro engine together with Proton 59 as well as its variable valve timing system the Cam Profile Switching CPS Currently available in the 1 6 litre and 1 3 litre variants the Campro engine now powers most of Proton s newer models Lotus has worked on the suspension of the Mahindra Scorpio to make it more stable at high speeds Lotus produced the revised chassis of the Isuzu Piazza Lotus has worked on the suspension and handling of the Volvo 480 The Dodge EV concept electric vehicle from Chrysler is based on a Lotus Europa S Lotus has worked on the suspension and handling of the Nissan GT R 60 Lotus rebuilt modified and tuned a Lada Riva on Top Gear season 1 episode 8 The 2006 Volkswagen GX3 features a chassis developed by Lotus for VW The 2009 Kia Soul features Lotus tuned suspension UK only 2010 Limo Green project with Jaguar Cars Lotus provided the Range Extender engine for a prototype XJ series hybrid car The car returned 58 mpg imperial running off the range extender alone 61 Lotus partnered with Jaguar for developing chassis system and engine management of the Jaguar C X75 The engine is a supercharged 1 6 turbo petrol engine rated at 507 PS 500 hp 373 kW coupled with a 177 PS 175 hp 130 kW Lotus has worked on handling and steering of the 2015 Hyundai Genesis The 2015 Spyker B6 Venator is powered by a Lotus built engine originating from a Toyota sourced block The Baojun 730 a Chinese minivan with Lotus tuned suspension built by a General Motors subsidiary HB T a track bicycle with a novel aerodynamic design produced in collaboration with Hope Technology and British Cycling 62 Lotus based cars edit Detroit Electric SP 01 based on Elise chassis Hennessey Venom GT based on the Exige Elise chassis Infiniti Emerg e concept car based on Evora 414E Melkus RS2000 based on Elise chassis Rinspeed sQuba concept car based on Elise chassis Tesla Roadster based on Elise chassis Vauxhall VX220 Opel Speedster based on the EliseElectric vehicles editEvija edit nbsp Lotus EvijaLotus unveiled their first production electric hypercar called the Evija in July 2019 production would be limited to 130 units and is scheduled to begin in summer 2020 and is being delivered to customers in early 2023 The car was undergoing development under the codename Type 130 The Evija makes use of a 70 kWh battery pack developed in conjunction with Williams Advanced Engineering There are 4 electric motors one placed on each wheel supported by an Integral powertrain The powertrain is rated at a total output of 2 039 PS 1 500 kW 2 011 hp with 1 704 N m 1 257 lb ft of torque The Evija has a range of 346 km 215 mi 63 64 65 66 33 Other cars edit The Tesla Roadster is based on the Elise chassis On July 11 2005 Tesla and Lotus entered an agreement about products and services based on the Lotus Elise where Lotus provided advice on designing and developing a vehicle as well as producing partly assembled vehicles 67 68 Lotus Engineering has established a group dedicated to hybrid and electric vehicles 69 Lotus Engineering developed the Evora 414E as their first hybrid concept car Featuring a total hybrid range of more than 300 miles 70 Lotus joined Jaguar Cars MIRA Ltd and Caparo on a luxury hybrid executive sedan project called Limo Green funded by the UK Government Technology Strategy Board The vehicle will be a series plug in hybrid 71 72 See also edit nbsp Cars portalList of car manufacturers of the United KingdomFurther reading editGerard Jabby Crombac Colin Chapman The Man and His Cars Patrick Stephens Wellingborough 1986 Mike Lawrence Colin Chapman The Wayward Genius Breedon Books Derby 2002 Ian H Smith The Story of Lotus 1947 1960 Birth of a Legend republished Motor Racing Publications Chiswick 1972 Doug Nye The Story of Lotus 1961 1971 Growth of a Legend Motor Racing Publications Chiswick 1972 Robin Read Colin Chapman s Lotus The Early Years the Elite and the Origins of the Elan Haynes Sparkford 1989 Anthony Pritchard Lotus All the Cars Aston Publications Bourne End 1990 Doug Nye Theme Lotus 1956 1986 Motor Racing Publications Croydon 1986 William Taylor The Lotus Book Coterie Press Luton 1998 1999 2005 William Taylor The Lotus Book Collectibles Coterie Press Luton 2000 Peter Ross Lotus The Early Years 1951 54 Coterie Press Luton 2004 Remy Solnon Lotus Esprit le grand tourisme a l anglaise Editions Les Presses Litteraires 2007 Andrew Ferguson Team Lotus The Indianapolis Years Haynes Publishing 1996 no longer availableReferences edit a b Lotus Cars Ltd 2022 Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 31 December 2022 4 Lotus Cars Ltd Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 31 December 2021 Why Lotus has a different name in China All cars news 18 January 2023 Retrieved 4 October 2023 About Lotus Lotus Cars Media Site media lotuscars com Retrieved 28 September 2023 The Lotus Advanced Technology Centre at Wellesbourne warwick ac uk Retrieved 2 October 2023 Lotus sold to Geely Syed Mokhtar s Etika for 100m The Edge Malaysia Retrieved 1 September 2023 Lotus Heritage lotuscars com Archived from the original on 12 September 2018 Retrieved 8 March 2019 Golden Gate Lotus Club Archived 1 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 1 May 2008 Lotus cars Cheshunt Archived 1 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 26 December 2007 a b The Final Chapman Years LotusEspritWorld com Retrieved 14 July 2012 Joseph Bianco Profile Forbes com 19 December 1983 Archived from the original on 13 March 2012 Retrieved 9 September 2017 Car and Driver Lotus Lives April 1983 a b c Obituary David Wickins Daily Telegraph 31 January 2007 Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 14 July 2012 Lawrence Mike 2002 Wayward Genius Breedon Books a b c d e f The Toyota and GM Link LotusEspritWorld com Retrieved 14 July 2012 Andy McSmith and Ben Laurance 16 January 2000 Ashcroft s Lotus position The Observer Retrieved 14 July 2012 Auctions magnate began by selling just one old car GetHampshire co uk 13 February 2007 Archived from the original on 23 June 2013 Retrieved 14 July 2012 Peter Stevens Biography www peterstevensdesign co uk Retrieved 23 June 2020 The Queen s Awards for Enterprise 2002 international trade Focus Queen s Awards NewsBank The Times London Times Newspapers Limited 22 April 2002 Retrieved 14 February 2011 Chinese car giant Geely has bought Lotus topgear com 24 May 2017 Retrieved 25 May 2017 Macfarlane Alec 24 May 2017 Lotus has been purchased by Chinese automaker Geely CNNMoney Retrieved 25 May 2017 Anthony Lim 24 May 2017 DRB Hicom to sell Lotus in its entirety for 100 million Geely to acquire 51 Etika Automotive to buy 49 Driven Communications Archived from the original on 27 May 2017 Retrieved 27 May 2017 Glon Ronan 14 January 2021 Alpine joins forces with Lotus to develop an electric sports car Autoblog Retrieved 23 January 2021 a b Carey Nick 27 April 2021 British sports carmaker Lotus aims to expand go all electric by 2028 Yahoo News London Reuters Retrieved 27 April 2021 Lawson Alex 31 January 2023 Chinese owner of Lotus Technology to list a stake in US via blank cheque firm The Guardian Lotus CEO Mike Kimberley to step down Motortorque askaprice com Archived from the original on 24 March 2010 Retrieved 30 September 2010 Lotus owners suspend chief Bahar over complaint BBC News 25 May 2012 Retrieved 25 May 2012 Lotus Appoints Chief Operating Officer Confirms dismissal of Dany Bahar Press release Group Lotus Limited 7 June 2012 Archived from the original on 10 June 2012 Retrieved 7 June 2012 Lotus Appoints Phil Popham As Lotus Cars CEO 15 February 2019 Retrieved 9 March 2019 permanent dead link Matt Windle Appointed MD Lotus Cars Lotus Cars Ltd Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 31 December 2021 p 2 Pacific forms alliance with Lotus grandprix com 28 February 1995 Retrieved 1 December 2016 a b Calin Razvan 14 October 2022 1 500 kW Lotus Evija EV Is the World s Most Powerful Production Car Hits 217 MPH Auto Evolution Lotus Eletre The Electric Hyper SUV Lotus Cars www lotuscars com Retrieved 13 November 2023 2024 Lotus Eletre Review Pricing and Specs Car and Driver 10 July 2023 Retrieved 13 November 2023 Inc Lotus Technology Lotus Technology begins delivery of Eletre luxury electric SUV www prnewswire com Retrieved 13 November 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help Panait Mircea 21 August 2023 Lotus Eletre Finally Makes North American Debut US Launch Scheduled for 2024 autoevolution Retrieved 13 November 2023 Lotus Eletre specs pricing and more detailed for European launch Autoblog Retrieved 13 November 2023 The rights to the Seven were sold in 1973 to Caterham Cars Updated versions of this 1957 design are also produced by other speciality firms including Westfield Sportscars and Donkervoort Originally the number seven was applied to a Riley powered Formula 2 car but the vehicle was never completed in its original form finally emerging instead as the Clairmonte Special a two seat sports car powered by a Lea Francis engine Chapman Clive September 2016 The Lotus That Never Blossomed Motor Sport Vol 92 no 9 pp 84 85 A mid engined sports car launched in the early 1970s It was styled by Italian designer Giorgetto Giugiaro The Esprit started with a light 4 cylinder design which went through several iterations of turbo charging and electronic upgrades before finally being replaced by a highly advanced V8 The last Lotus Esprit rolled off the production line on 20 February 2004 after 28 years in production A total of 10 675 Esprits were built since production began in 1976 GT inspired two seater claimed to offer a more upmarket sportscar experience although it is based on the same chassis as the Elise and Exige limiting accommodation and practicality Power comes from a Lotus tuned variant of the turbocharged four cylinder engine which powers the VX220 The Europa has been criticised in the motoring press for being expensive and for lacking equipment and practicality compared to rivals like the Porsche Cayman Lotus 125 Ultimate Track Car to Debut at Pebble Beach Alongside Elise SC RGB Edition AutoGuide com News Autoguide com 5 August 2010 Retrieved 30 September 2010 Chris Knapman 1 October 2010 Paris Motor Show 2010 five new models from Lotus The Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 11 August 2011 a b Dan Strong 21 June 2011 Lotus confirms new V8 and city car too Auto Express Retrieved 11 August 2011 Nick Gibbs 30 July 2012 Lotus Five Car Future Is Canned PistonHeads Travis Okulski 25 July 2012 Lotus Cancels Nearly All of Dany Bahar s Future Lotus Cars Jalopnik New Lotus Esprit Is Dead MotorAuthority 29 September 2014 Retrieved 29 September 2014 Tim Pollard 16 December 2010 Lotus supermini here in October 2013 Bahar Car magazine Retrieved 30 September 2011 Lotus City Car Concept Cancelled image 1 of 3 Medium Photos Pics Images Australian specifications themotorreport com au Retrieved 1 December 2016 Lotus Boss Nobody Makes a Lightweight Good Handling SUV Road amp Track 19 January 2017 Retrieved 19 January 2017 Lotus Type 132 Teaser 1 Breathe Lotus Cars Media Site Lotus unveils Emeya its first Hyper GT Lotus Cars Media Site media lotuscars com Retrieved 13 November 2023 Abuelsamid Sam 22 June 2010 Lotus and Fagor Ederlan Group to produce range extender engine Autoblog Green Green autoblog com Retrieved 30 September 2010 Home Lotus Engineering lotuscars com Retrieved 30 September 2010 VIDEO Lotus fire up all new in house V8 The Lotus Forums 16 September 2011 Retrieved 18 December 2011 Lotus Engineering Centres Archived 5 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 18 June 2010 Done deal Lotus will build the Tesla Roadster in Hethel autoblog 29 July 2006 Retrieved 11 August 2011 About Proton Engineering Archived 8 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Proton Cars UK NISSAN GT R press information nissan global com Retrieved 1 December 2016 Jaguar UK Jaguar International Jaguar com Archived from the original on 25 October 2013 Retrieved 30 September 2010 Arthurs Brennan Michelle 2 August 2021 Lotus x Hope HB T Team GB s track bike in detail cyclingweekly com Retrieved 3 January 2022 Markovich Tony 5 July 2019 Lotus Type 130 electric supercar officially named Evija Autoblog Retrieved 31 May 2020 Cars Lotus 19 February 2020 Lotus Evija Production Comes Alive retrieved 19 February 2020 Petrany Mate 16 July 2019 The Lotus Evija Is Britain s 2000 Horsepower Hyper EV Road amp Trackaccess date 31 May 2020 Kew Ollie 16 July 2019 This is the Lotus Evija a 1 972bhp electric hypercar Top Gear Retrieved 31 May 2020 Dopson Clive Wood Simon Colson Thomas E Eberhard Martin F 11 July 2005 Supply agreement for products and services based on Lotus Elise technology OneCLE Archived from the original on 17 June 2016 Retrieved 7 September 2010 Tesla Lotus Position Lotus Position Archived from the original on 19 February 2023 Retrieved 19 February 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link last checked 2023 02 19 Abuelsamid Sam Lotus Engineering establishes group dedicated to hybrid and electric vehicles autoblog com Retrieved 1 December 2016 Evora 414E Hybrid Archived from the original on 12 September 2018 Retrieved 30 March 2018 Future Jaguar XJ May Cut CO2 Via Lotus LimoGreen Project GreenCarReports com 20 February 2009 Archived from the original on 23 February 2009 Retrieved 22 June 2009 UK Technology Strategy Board TSB to Award 45M to 16 Low Carbon Vehicle Projects Green Car Congress 8 May 2008 Retrieved 8 May 2008 Cheshunt Lotus Elite Works Chassis 1468 lotuseliteworldregister com Archived from the original on 12 February 2018 Retrieved 1 December 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lotus Cars Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lotus Cars amp oldid 1217157114 Lotus Engineering, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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