I find that you need to make excuses for almost all cars of that era when comparing to modern sports cars; whereas with the Elan you have to make excuses for the modern stuff that is too large, heavy, stodgy, cumbersome, detarched from the road, stiffly suspended etc. The Elan is a timeless gem!
As a young person in my teens and twenties I was lucky enough to drive my father's 71 S4 FHC Elan frequently and have managed to relive those memories with my own 69 Elan S4 DHC over the last 6 years and can confirm these cars are an absolute delight to drive. The mix of light weight, steering response, power, and road feel is simply fabulous. In response to comments below, I have found more room in the cockpit with a better driving position than my prior 3 Mazda MX-5s, and near luxury features with a powerful heater, lovely walnut dash and electric windows-impressive for a sixties design. The fixed head coupe is more refined than the drop head coup/convertible and the top is a fair amount of work compared to the simplicity of the MX-5. The engine is great but not maintenance free with complex valve adjustment required periodically and a potentially fussy water pump to deal with. Stromberg carbs as fitted to US federal spec cars and Euro spec cars for 1-2 years only actually run quite well with excellent torque-Weber carbs look/sound great, have adjustability for racing but use more fuel,. On federal spec cars, ditch the cross over pipes and modify the timing to Euro specs. The home mechanic can deal with the majority of servicing with the water pump, rear wheel bearings, and valve adjustment most likely requiring specialist help. The lack of such help is a problem here in the US, but less so in the UK. Fortunately, the enthusiast network via elan.net can help. Parts availability is better than when the cars were newish. Finally, even though the Elan was pricy compared to a TR-4 or MGB, I don't recall it ever being more expensive than an E-type. If this car appeals to you, go for it. Take your time to find a well-cared for example or complete one if you fancy a restoration.
In 1971 I bought a 1966 S2 BRG Lotus Elan. What a magnificant car. It went around corners like paint. The shift was short and precise (click click) and it just looked great. Had to sell it and regret it all the time.
That was an outstanding, enjoyable, almost poetic review. i don't own car but I would really like one of these 🙂. Imagine building your own: that would be SO rewarding.
Looking through the comments I see that there is the usual gripe ( from 'someone who knows someone') regarding the reliability. I ran one of these for 15 years and it was completely reliable. In fact the only breakage suffered was the cable in the window lift mechanisim so I would say that if anybody was having reliability problems they were self inflicted.
Their is a big misconception around the Elan being unreliable. If you service and look after them they are very reliable. I have owned one for many years and its been a joy. One owner "Ross Robbins" recently did an 11,000 mile journey around the USA and wrote a book about it. Some friends of mine do long classic endurance rallies in theirs. We are talking mountains and deserts, places you would never think to take a Lotus and they always finish.
This is a 'soft' S4 without the webers that made a MUCH nicer sound. Needs mention of the rear drive doughnuts which even in sprint form made slow running extremely lumpy. The S1 and 2 had a bolt on windscreen which made for a fantastic effect when removed and replaced by flyscreens. Also worth mentioning is that it needs the roll cage round the drivers feet. Any prang that side folds the wheel back to trap feet while the carbs drip on the distributor. BAD VIBE. I had an S1 with all steel cosworth twincam and 180bhp. The early box was close ratio so fitted well. But it got too valuable to 'play' and it is now racing round holland somewhere. Loved that car KNK 984C
Ran on 155 tyres but handled superbly. The popup headlights used vacuum from the inlet manifold...one person found a pint of petrol in their reservoir when servicing them!
In Jamaica, one of those first generation Lotus Elite use to race hear in the late 1950's to the early 70's and was the first car to repricent Jamaica in international compitition. I understand that that same car still exsice but is in the Cayman Islands.
Jimmy Clark liked the Elan. If you don't know about Jimmy Clark, and you like racing, you really should know about him. He was at least as good a driver as anyone you can name. Yes, that includes Senna too.
I owned an S3 S/E fhc for 18 years. Amazing combination of ride and handling, although the original shock absorbers lasted little more than 10,000 miles. Mine ended up on Konis which were much better. I had an interesting comparison when I was given a Triumph Spitfire for a few days. Really hard ride on bumpy roads, but leaned all over the place on corners. Complete opposite of the Elan. It did need plenty of tlc to get the best from it.
The Europa was MORE of a breakthrough by Lotus and was the forerunner to the Elise design, it was mid engine and better balanced than the Elan, although many did not like such a dramatic change of shape in an English car, but were accepting of Italian mid-engine cars of the same era. Now we revere the Elise, although it was a remake of the Europa design. The Mazda MX5 was a copy of the Elan in many ways, but with the built in body rot that the Elan avoided. The MG Midget has many of the characteristics of the Elan convertible, and were very cheap on the market, but now Midget prices are going up for restored or well maintained versions as they become more rare.
They're not Chapman Struts, they're MacPherson Struts. A lot of people seem to think that a Chapman Strut is just a MacPherson strut at the back of the car, but they are two different systems. Unlike MacPherson Struts, Chapman Struts have the halfshaft serving as part of the suspension (the rear half of the A-arm, to be precise). It's counterintuitive in the case of the Elan, because you'd think that a strut suspension at the rear of a Chapman car would be a Chapman Strut. But no.
Yes my maths teacher built one with his brother in 1964-5 and took the whole class out in it gaining 40 kids with a Lotus following you could also follow the plans in the Eagle comic
Absolutely wonderful little cars but you wouldn't want to have a serious prang in one ! I think they're much better on twin Webers or Dellortos (the intake noise is fab) whereas the one in the video is using twin Strombergs which looks like an American spec. A well sorted Elan Sprint with the big valve 130 bhp engine and preferably a 5 speed box is just about the perfect example of a sports car, ever.
Is there an equivalent to British Heritage making Elan shells, other main panels and chassis? I’m thinking that a “new” Elan powered by a small Japanese engine with a five speed ‘box would be a fabulous proposition.
You can buy new chassis and bodies for them. The chassis swop is a very straight forward task and most Lotus on the road will now have a new chassis (mine has) New bodies are less common as the fibreglass is repairable and only the most damaged (usually had a fire) need replacing. Things such as a front end smash will just have a new front grafted on. There is a company called Spyder who make their own Chassis' and fit modern Ford Zetec engines.
'Lotus equals lightweight cars......... I'm sure that is what Lotus will keep on doing'. Alas, with the colossal EV monstrosities like the Eletre and Emeya....... I fear those days are well and truly numbered.
Had a s4 1980 and changed every nut and bolt, new galvanised chassis even red leaded that too. Rebuilt the engine put twin webber 45s on with aircraft fuel lines. New discs and graded hoses, New SS exhaust with twin tail pipes on the back box new dash and interior. Paint job new steel wheels chrome rims tyres and knockons. Etc etc etc. It cost me 6k to complete it and a lot of hours over a two year period. Had to sell it quickly to buy a house to a lotus dealer for 3k, they put it up for sale at 6k the next day as a A1 restoration. I am no longer married to the woman I shared that house with. I do miss that car.😂
Just read some of the other comments. Mine had the twin Webers with dull velocity stacks. I would take the air cleaner off and it would have the most throaty sound. Thought it would suck the hood into them.
It made me thought seeing you in the lotus but you never see many or any at all any lotus europa my dad had one in the early 70s it was talk of the town and you hardly ever see them on the street
Cracking little cars and I agree the greatest British sports car just ahead of the E Type. I would have one in my dream cars garage, probably the later, slightly more powerful, Elan Sprint.
Created in the 60's and still used as a benchmark for modern sportscars. Gordon Murray when designing the McLaren F1 stated he tried to get it to feel like his Lotus Elan
They were not cheap cars in period, but when was the Sprint more expensive than a E Type? I've checked a few old car mags and even after VAT came in the cheapest E Type was over 40% the price of the Lotus.
A standard E-type would be dropped like last week's shopping by a standard twin cam Elan on a twisty road. As would pretty much anything else short of a modern hot hatch with much greater bhp.
When I think of Lotus I think of creative accounting but that might be for another video. But would happily agree that the Elan is the greatest British sports car. ISTR Gordon Murray agrees with me... :o)
I am wearing that same little Casio as I type this. I actually prefer it to my gold Rolex. Like this beautiful Elan, it does what it needs to without excess.
Elan is what I think about when I think about British Roadsters, that and the MG. You can see the DNA with cars like the Mk1 MX5, I just wished Lotus continued with the development to a similar evolution of the MX5, rather than the Elise (Just my opinion).
owned a ND for a year also own an elan 1969.You cant compare the two as one is 50 years newer .Hated the electric steering on the mx5 no feel really let the car down
I find that you need to make excuses for almost all cars of that era when comparing to modern sports cars; whereas with the Elan you have to make excuses for the modern stuff that is too large, heavy, stodgy, cumbersome, detarched from the road, stiffly suspended etc. The Elan is a timeless gem!
What a nice little car! No wonder Mazda has took some inspiration for their Miata/MX-5.
As a young person in my teens and twenties I was lucky enough to drive my father's 71 S4 FHC Elan frequently and have managed to relive those memories with my own 69 Elan S4 DHC over the last 6 years and can confirm these cars are an absolute delight to drive. The mix of light weight, steering response, power, and road feel is simply fabulous. In response to comments below, I have found more room in the cockpit with a better driving position than my prior 3 Mazda MX-5s, and near luxury features with a powerful heater, lovely walnut dash and electric windows-impressive for a sixties design. The fixed head coupe is more refined than the drop head coup/convertible and the top is a fair amount of work compared to the simplicity of the MX-5. The engine is great but not maintenance free with complex valve adjustment required periodically and a potentially fussy water pump to deal with. Stromberg carbs as fitted to US federal spec cars and Euro spec cars for 1-2 years only actually run quite well with excellent torque-Weber carbs look/sound great, have adjustability for racing but use more fuel,. On federal spec cars, ditch the cross over pipes and modify the timing to Euro specs. The home mechanic can deal with the majority of servicing with the water pump, rear wheel bearings, and valve adjustment most likely requiring specialist help. The lack of such help is a problem here in the US, but less so in the UK. Fortunately, the enthusiast network via elan.net can help. Parts availability is better than when the cars were newish. Finally, even though the Elan was pricy compared to a TR-4 or MGB, I don't recall it ever being more expensive than an E-type. If this car appeals to you, go for it. Take your time to find a well-cared for example or complete one if you fancy a restoration.
In 1971 I bought a 1966 S2 BRG Lotus Elan. What a magnificant car. It went around corners like paint. The shift was short and precise (click click) and it just looked great. Had to sell it and regret it all the time.
❤ Always loved these.....that's why I bought an mx5 😊
Ditto
I parked my MX5 mk1 next to an Elan once - couldn't quite believe how much smaller the Lotus was...
That was an outstanding, enjoyable, almost poetic review. i don't own car but I would really like one of these 🙂. Imagine building your own: that would be SO rewarding.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Looking through the comments I see that there is the usual gripe ( from 'someone who knows someone') regarding the reliability.
I ran one of these for 15 years and it was completely reliable. In fact the only breakage suffered was the cable in the window lift mechanisim so I would say that if anybody was having reliability problems they were self inflicted.
Their is a big misconception around the Elan being unreliable. If you service and look after them they are very reliable. I have owned one for many years and its been a joy.
One owner "Ross Robbins" recently did an 11,000 mile journey around the USA and wrote a book about it. Some friends of mine do long classic endurance rallies in theirs. We are talking mountains and deserts, places you would never think to take a Lotus and they always finish.
Have owned my S3 coupe for 50 years and still love driving it.
This is a 'soft' S4 without the webers that made a MUCH nicer sound.
Needs mention of the rear drive doughnuts which even in sprint form made slow running extremely lumpy.
The S1 and 2 had a bolt on windscreen which made for a fantastic effect when removed and replaced by flyscreens.
Also worth mentioning is that it needs the roll cage round the drivers feet. Any prang that side folds the wheel back to trap feet while the carbs drip on the distributor. BAD VIBE.
I had an S1 with all steel cosworth twincam and 180bhp. The early box was close ratio so fitted well.
But it got too valuable to 'play' and it is now racing round holland somewhere. Loved that car KNK 984C
These deserve so much more attention imo. Absolutely lovely cars.
They are!
Ran on 155 tyres but handled superbly.
The popup headlights used vacuum from the inlet manifold...one person found a pint of petrol in their reservoir when servicing them!
In Jamaica, one of those first generation Lotus Elite use to race hear in the late 1950's to the early 70's and was the first car to repricent Jamaica in international compitition. I understand that that same car still exsice but is in the Cayman Islands.
Jimmy Clark liked the Elan.
If you don't know about Jimmy Clark, and you like racing, you really should know about him. He was at least as good a driver as anyone you can name. Yes, that includes Senna too.
I owned an S3 S/E fhc for 18 years. Amazing combination of ride and handling, although the original shock absorbers lasted little more than 10,000 miles. Mine ended up on Konis which were much better. I had an interesting comparison when I was given a Triumph Spitfire for a few days. Really hard ride on bumpy roads, but leaned all over the place on corners. Complete opposite of the Elan. It did need plenty of tlc to get the best from it.
The Europa was MORE of a breakthrough by Lotus and was the forerunner to the Elise design, it was mid engine and better balanced than the Elan, although many did not like such a dramatic change of shape in an English car, but were accepting of Italian mid-engine cars of the same era. Now we revere the Elise, although it was a remake of the Europa design. The Mazda MX5 was a copy of the Elan in many ways, but with the built in body rot that the Elan avoided. The MG Midget has many of the characteristics of the Elan convertible, and were very cheap on the market, but now Midget prices are going up for restored or well maintained versions as they become more rare.
One if my uncle's had an Elan and the other a Europa. Remember whizzing around as a kid which was thrilling.
They're not Chapman Struts, they're MacPherson Struts. A lot of people seem to think that a Chapman Strut is just a MacPherson strut at the back of the car, but they are two different systems. Unlike MacPherson Struts, Chapman Struts have the halfshaft serving as part of the suspension (the rear half of the A-arm, to be precise). It's counterintuitive in the case of the Elan, because you'd think that a strut suspension at the rear of a Chapman car would be a Chapman Strut. But no.
Come on! You have to give credit where credit is due...would it have done nearly so well if EMMA PEEL hadn't owned one?!
John Steed and Emma Peel were the Avengers I remember. Back when TV was worth watching.
@@alancrisp1582 Oh dear!
Yes my maths teacher built one with his brother in 1964-5 and took the whole class out in it gaining 40 kids with a Lotus following you could also follow the plans in the Eagle comic
Absolutely wonderful little cars but you wouldn't want to have a serious prang in one ! I think they're much better on twin Webers or Dellortos (the intake noise is fab) whereas the one in the video is using twin Strombergs which looks like an American spec. A well sorted Elan Sprint with the big valve 130 bhp engine and preferably a 5 speed box is just about the perfect example of a sports car, ever.
Is there an equivalent to British Heritage making Elan shells, other main panels and chassis? I’m thinking that a “new” Elan powered by a small Japanese engine with a five speed ‘box would be a fabulous proposition.
Absolutely epic idea!
Yes it is possible to buy an all new body and chassis for these cars. Not as cheap as the average kit car though an excellent base.
You can buy new chassis and bodies for them. The chassis swop is a very straight forward task and most Lotus on the road will now have a new chassis (mine has)
New bodies are less common as the fibreglass is repairable and only the most damaged (usually had a fire) need replacing. Things such as a front end smash will just have a new front grafted on.
There is a company called Spyder who make their own Chassis' and fit modern Ford Zetec engines.
'Lotus equals lightweight cars......... I'm sure that is what Lotus will keep on doing'.
Alas, with the colossal EV monstrosities like the Eletre and Emeya....... I fear those days are well and truly numbered.
Had a s4 1980 and changed every nut and bolt, new galvanised chassis even red leaded that too. Rebuilt the engine put twin webber 45s on with aircraft fuel lines. New discs and graded hoses, New SS exhaust with twin tail pipes on the back box new dash and interior. Paint job new steel wheels chrome rims tyres and knockons. Etc etc etc. It cost me 6k to complete it and a lot of hours over a two year period. Had to sell it quickly to buy a house to a lotus dealer for 3k, they put it up for sale at 6k the next day as a A1 restoration. I am no longer married to the woman I shared that house with. I do miss that car.😂
Just read some of the other comments. Mine had the twin Webers with dull velocity stacks. I would take the air cleaner off and it would have the most throaty sound. Thought it would suck the hood into them.
Lovely car 👍👍👍👏👏⭐️⭐️⭐️
It made me thought seeing you in the lotus but you never see many or any at all any lotus europa my dad had one in the early 70s it was talk of the town and you hardly ever see them on the street
Cracking little cars and I agree the greatest British sports car just ahead of the E Type. I would have one in my dream cars garage, probably the later, slightly more powerful, Elan Sprint.
Created in the 60's and still used as a benchmark for modern sportscars.
Gordon Murray when designing the McLaren F1 stated he tried to get it to feel like his Lotus Elan
They were pretty pricey though, maybe with good reason. The Sprint version cost more than an E-type and therein lies a problem.
They were not cheap cars in period, but when was the Sprint more expensive than a E Type? I've checked a few old car mags and even after VAT came in the cheapest E Type was over 40% the price of the Lotus.
A standard E-type would be dropped like last week's shopping by a standard twin cam Elan on a twisty road. As would pretty much anything else short of a modern hot hatch with much greater bhp.
When I think of Lotus I think of creative accounting but that might be for another video. But would happily agree that the Elan is the greatest British sports car. ISTR Gordon Murray agrees with me... :o)
I am wearing that same little Casio as I type this. I actually prefer it to my gold Rolex. Like this beautiful Elan, it does what it needs to without excess.
Lovely car!
What is that music in the distant background? Kinda annoying?
YES a million times until you have owned one, and driven it. ❤
Elan is what I think about when I think about British Roadsters, that and the MG. You can see the DNA with cars like the Mk1 MX5, I just wished Lotus continued with the development to a similar evolution of the MX5, rather than the Elise (Just my opinion).
Take a Miata: plenty is possible from there.
My sister's BF, back in 1969, had a white Elan. Yummy.
Owned both , mx5 better.
Might save me some money,I've a nice mk1 mx5 and keep thinking about a elan as people say they so good,mx5 is massively reliable for 30 Yr old.
@@grahamhaynes7658 mine was good for 23yrs new owner drove it away . Tears 😭
@@JimGlasgow-e5osorry to hear that.
owned a ND for a year also own an elan 1969.You cant compare the two as one is 50 years newer .Hated the electric steering on the mx5 no feel really let the car down
Talks over the engine sound. Please, take a breath, lad.
5:59