Buyer’s guide Lotus Elan Type 26, Type 36, Type 45 and Type 50


Colin Chapman wanted a road car that was easier to build and with less fragile and costly componentry than the troublesome Elite. It was hard to achieve torsional stiffness in an open car with a glassfibre monocoque, so, with designer Ron Hickman, he devised a clever folded-steel backbone chassis to stiffen the GRP shell while adding a minimum of extra weight. With soft, long-travel suspension, it made the Elan one of the best-handling cars ever, with a fine ride too. The new Lotus was announced in October 1962.

For the engine, Chapman and his friend Walter Hayes at Ford conceived a dual-overhead camshaft conversion of its new oversquare small ‘four’. It was to be used in Chapman’s latest model and in a saloon that Hayes wanted to boost Ford’s image with race wins. Former Coventry Climax designer Harry Mundy drew up the brilliant twin-cam head and JAP was contracted to build the engines; assembly moved in-house in ’1967.

Hickman’s styling was simple yet elegant, with faired-in bumpers and pop-up headlights. A Coupé was added in ’1965, styled by John Frayling, but Hickman again took charge of the Elan +2, a longer, wider and more sophisticated fixed-head for families. While all of this was going on, Lotus was winning F1 World Championships and moving its factory wholesale from Cheshunt to Hethel. Up until the +2S of ’1969, all Elans were also available in kit form for home assembly.

Chassis rot was inevitable and most survivors have had theirs replaced. Elans can be reliable if well maintained, and have even been known to clock up 750,000 miles, but not all have been so well cared for. Beware neglected cars, and sought-after models built up from parts – check the history and specification carefully. Originality is now highly valued and converted cars such as chop-top +2s are becoming orphans.

If a car needs a chassis, consider the ancillary work, rebuilding suspension and perhaps running gear, plus all the labour involved. Elan prices are rising, but, unless you do the work yourself, there needs to be a big margin between the purchase price and the value of a pristine car. A tired shell can be even more costly to refurbish, because GRP repair, while straightforward, is labour-intensive. It may well be best to replace a rough body with a new one rather than spend £10k repairing and spraying it. And beware the recent paint-job – has it been done thickly over cracks and crazing, and was it prepped properly?


More refined +2 featured fatter tyres and reinforced sills. Autocar test demonstrated the Elan’s outstanding grip.


Twin Cams became steadily stronger and more powerful, but Stromberg carbs fitted to meet US emissions regs are less desirable (you can’t bolt Webers onto a Stromberg head). Check for 40psi at speed, 20psi at tickover and no excessive blue smoke, knocks and rattles. Does it look clean and well maintained? A rebuilt unit costs £5-6000.

Hood should look good and fit snugly. On early cars it sits on a complex set of GRP mouldings and steel rods; S3-on is much simpler, and costs £419 in Everflex.

Cooling is vital with an aluminium head, and the water pump can be weak. Ensure electric fan works, but isn’t on all the time, and check for oil in coolant and vice versa.

Seat frames rot and break as damp gets in. These are S3 seats, with different trim pattern from S2. Specialists have reintroduced most plastic trim sections.

Clever strut rear end is Elan’s handling and ride secret; novel rubber doughnuts worked well, although parts quality today is suspect and their life can be short.

Vacuum operates pop-up headlamps: check they work, and look for crazing and poor panel fit throughout. Glassfibre repair is costly unless you do it yourself.

Almost all Elans have the superb Corsair 2000E gearbox; late models have a five-speed built by Lotus with Maxi gears. Check for synchro and bearing wear.


Rot spots

1 Front crossmember

2 Chassis front suspension turrets

3 Chassis ‘Y’ for cracks

4 Entire chassis for rot and ripples (crash damage)

5 Door hinges for wear and/or weakness

6 Sill sections on +2 models

7 Chassis mounts for finaldrive torque rods (cracks)

8 Final drive casing (cracks)

9 Chassis rear suspension turrets

10 Rear suspension tubes


On the road

An Elan should feel lively on the road, with a good spread of power through the rev range. The Twin Cam is reliable if well maintained, most critical being the cooling system and the danger of head corrosion with insufficient inhibitor.

Check for leaks around the water pump: rock it to see if the bearings are worn. A ring of bolt heads around it indicates conversion to a removable water pump, a definite plus. Otherwise you have to take off the head to access the pump.

Being on the original chassis isn’t a bonus, because, even if not rusted, it’s likely to be weakened by cracks. The ultimate replacements are those made by Lotus (optionally galvanised), stamped ‘LR’ for ‘Lotus Replacement’. Spydercars’ are also excellent, with extra stiffening and the facility to drop the sump and propshaft.

Upgrades are numerous, including an aluminium radiator, uprated fan, alloy fuel tank, electric lamp-lift conversion and stronger suspension. Spydercars offers a 2-litre 190bhp-plus Zetec for +2s, plus spaceframe chassis. Such extreme mods are less popular now that originality is prized.

The front suspension used Triumph Herald components; it wears, but the parts to rebuild it as-new are cheap to fit. The rear set-up, being unique to Lotus, is a more complex proposition and the poor quality of replacement rubber doughnuts has led many to convert to CV joints.

Given the age of the cars and the need for almost all electrical items to be double-wired – that is, earthed back to the chassis – electrics can give problems, so check it all works. Fixing may be simple although damp can wreak havoc.


There’s still little that can stay with a sorted Elan on a twisty, bumpy back road. They’ve all shot up in price, but FHCs go for circa 20% less than DHC or Sprint. Nimble Elan’s cockpit is roomier than you might imagine.


OWNER’S VIEW

Peter Battrick

“I bought this 1964 S2 in ’1969 in Canada for $1100 (about £250),” recalls Battrick. “I was 25 at the time. I’d had a TR4A before, which felt agricultural in comparison. The Elan is visceral: even driving down a straight road you feel as if you’re on the edge, it’s fire and brimstone. The front is hard but Colin Chapman put soft struts on the back, which makes it comfortable. When I returned to England in 1972, I converted it to right-hand drive. It was in terrible condition. I fitted a Spyder chassis and a new shell from Boss: the car had been crashed before I bought it – the new body was half the weight and twice as stiff. The doors, bonnet and bootlid are original, as is the running gear, but the seats and colour are S3; it was originally black. I have a 911 as well: they are totally different!”


The knowledge

WHAT TO PAY +2/DHC/Sprint

Show/rebuilt £40/45/50k

Average £18/22/28k

Restoration £5/10/14k

PARTS PRICES

Lotus/Spyder chassis £2460/1794

New bare cylinder head £2730

Water pump rebuild kit £32.50

Rotoflex coupling £92

Brake master cylinder £115

CLUBS

Club Lotus 01362 694459; www.clublotus.co.uk

Lotus Drivers’ Club www.lotusdriversclub.org.uk

BOOKS

The Rebuilding of a Lotus Elan Elanman, Brian Buckland

Lotus Elan Complete Story Crowood, Matthew Vale

Lotus Elan Restoration Guide Brooklands, Gordon Lund

Original Lotus Elan Brooklands, Paul Robinshaw & Christopher Ross

SPECIALISTS

Paul Matty 01527 835656

Mick Miller 01728 603307

PJS 01283 500428

UK Sports Cars 01227 728190

Spydercars 01733 203986

QED 01509 412317

Kelvedon 01775 725457

Tony Thompson 01664 812454

Boss 01953 887471

Cliveyboy.com 01235 520074

Burton 020 8518 9136

Morland Jones 020 8741 2303


TIMELINE

1963 May Elan production starts

1964 Nov Series 2 launched: walnut veneer fascia replaces teak, larger front brakes, battery in boot not cockpit, trim upgrades, new rear lights

1965 Oct Coupé announced; electric windows

1966 Jan 115bhp SE DHC added: high-lift cams, re-jetted Webers, servo brakes, knock-off wheels

1966 Jun S3 DHC unveiled: much better hood, framed door windows, higher diff ratio Jul SE FHC added

1967 Jun 118bhp +2 launched: wider, longer, more luxurious, bigger front discs and larger tyres

1968 Oct S4: flared arches, new rear lights, wider tyres, twin-pipe exhaust, rocker switches, new trim

1968 Nov Stromberg carbs specified; dropped in ’1970

1969 Mar +2S launched (standard +2 dropped Dec): alloy wheels, more instrumentation

1970 Nov two-tone Sprint launched, big-valve 126bhp unit, stiffer diff carrier; big-valve +2S 130 unveiled (production starts in Feb 1971)

1973 Five-speed gearbox option on Sprint and +2S 130/5 Mid Sprint manufacture ends

1974 Dec Last +2S built


FACTFILE

Sold/number built 1963-’1974/c12,450

Construction steel backbone chassis, glassfibre body with steel stiffening around door apertures

Engine iron-block, alloy-head, dohc 1558cc ‘four’, twin carbs: Weber 40DCOE, Stromberg 175CD or Dell’Orto DHLA40 (early big-valves);

Power 105bhp @ 5500rpm-126bhp @ 6500rpm (DIN)

Torque 108lb ft @ 4000rpm-113lb ft @ 5500rpm (DIN)

Transmission four/five-speed manual, RWD

Suspension: front wishbones, coils, telescopics, anti-roll bar rear spring/damper struts, lower wishbones

Steering rack and pinion

Brakes Girling discs, 9 ½  in front, 10in rear, servo on SE, Sprint and +2, which has 10in front discs

Length 12ft 1in-14ft (3685-4265mm)

Width 4ft 8in-5ft 3 ½ in (1420-1615mm)

Height 3ft 9 ½ in-3ft 11in (1155-1195mm)

Wheelbase 7ft-8ft (2135-2440mm)

Weight 1410-1970lb (641-895kg)

0-60mph 8.7-6.7 secs

Top speed 114-125mph

Mpg 22-30

Price new £1882-2476 (1970)


INSURANCE

£156.59, for a Londoner, 30, full no claims, clean license on a ’1969 S4 DHC as a garaged second car, value £30k, 5000 ltd miles. RH: 01277 206911.


THE ALTERNATIVES

ALFA ROMEO SPIDER

Sweet styling, a stiff monocoque and tasty twin-cam plus five speeds made the Alfa a fine sporting car. Performance was always well behind the Elan, but S2-4 are now better value.

Sold/no built 1966-’1994/c120,000

Mpg 24-34

0-60mph c13-9.2 secs

Top speed 106-116mph

Price new £2199 (1750, 1970)

Now £10-45,000


 

TRIUMPH TR5/6

The TR was keenly priced with a smooth ‘six’, versatile overdrive gearbox and injection, even if its traditional chassis construction was decades behind the Lotus. Fun, in a different way.

Sold/no built 1967-’1976/94,797

Mpg 19-28

0-60mph 8.1 secs

Top speed 120mph

Price new £1401 (1970)

Now £15-50,00


One to buy £29,995

Year of manufacture ’1967

Recorded mileage 5145

Vendor UK Sports Cars, Wingham, Kent; tel: 01227 728190

For: Special; unmolested; drives beautifully.

Against: Not for those who want a shiny new pin.


This S3 SE is incredibly original, and received a new Lotus galvanised chassis in the 1980s. It has never been repainted, so the body is variously stress-cracked, star-chipped, microblistered and rubbed through, with a few tiny nibbles out of the glassfibre. But it is utterly charming. The doors have not dropped, so there aren’t the usual marks on the sill tops. The wheels have some surface rust and the nearside rear rim is a little dinged.

Sweet S3 wears factory paint; Pirellis have lots of tread. Its interior has an unrepeatable just-worn-in ambience. Twin Cam just right, too: oil cleanish; coolant nice and pink.


Inside, the vinyl and centre console are good with no cracks. The factory carpets have faded and are worn through and coming adrift at the sills. The dash varnish is cracking slightly, but it retains every original switch plus the gearknob and steering wheel. Everything works bar the left electric window, and the roof is in good shape.

The motor still has its air trunking, with new items such as carb tops, heater valve and starter solenoid. Only the oil-filler cap is non-original, presumably as a result of a repair to the neck.

It starts easily, idles sweetly and drives beautifully, possibly the nicest Elan you’ll ever have a feel of. The controls are light and easy with no slop, the engine is eager with a spot-on exhaust note and a solid 42psi oil pressure (at 75ºC), the gearchange easy and the brakes pull up straight.

There’s a fantastic history file, too. It is a joy to behold and we wouldn’t change a thing: to paint this reference car would be a crime. It needs to be preserved, so we’d call £30k too cheap. PH


 

Little Elan’s exquisite Ron Hickman styling has barely aged in more than 50 years.


Our verdict

 

A good Elan, of any model, is an absolute joy to drive and a pleasure to own. Plus, it’s more spacious and practical than it looks. The ideal is a car with full history and a sheaf of bills from respected specialists. Chassis and even body replacement doesn’t harm values, but nonoriginal spec, apart from reversible sensible improvements, does. Choose carefully.


 

FOR

  • Lotus innovation at its best
  • Superb styling, rust-free body
  • Fanatical following and great back-up
  • One of the best-handling cars ever

AGAINST

  • Non-original bitzas abound
  • Chassis rot means costly replacement
  • Scruffy bodywork can be even more expensive to make perfect

How useful was this post?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 4.3 / 5. Vote count: 10

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this post.

RECOMMEND BLOGS

1 COMMENT

  1. With the launch of the type 26 Elan, Lotus once again offered their products in kit-form, with an asking price of £1095, representing a thirty-percent saving over a fully built example…