Lotus Seven


The Lotus Seven is a small, simple, lightweight two-seater open-top sports car produced by the British manufacturer Lotus Cars between 1957 and 1972.
It was designed by Lotus founder Colin Chapman and has been considered the embodiment of the Lotus philosophy of performance through low weight and simplicity. The original model was highly successful with more than 2,500 cars sold, due to its attraction as a road legal car that could be used for clubman racing.
After Lotus ended production of the Seven, Caterham bought the rights and today Caterham make both kits and fully assembled cars based on the original design known as the Caterham 7.
The Lotus Seven design has spawned a host of imitations on the kit car market, generally called Sevens or sevenesque roadsters.

History

The Lotus Seven was launched in 1957 to replace the Mark VI as the 'entry level' Lotus model, The Seven name was left over from a model that was abandoned by Lotus, which would have been a Riley-engined single-seater that Lotus intended to enter into the Formula Two in 1952 or 1953. However, the car was completed around Chapman's chassis as a sports car by its backers and christened the Clairmonte Special.
Externally similar to Chapman's earlier Lotus Mark VI, but with a different tubular frame similar to the Lotus Eleven, the Seven was powered by a Ford Side-valve 1,172 cc inline-four engine. It was used both on the road and for club racing.
The Lotus Seven S2 followed in 1960 and was supplemented by the Lotus Super Seven S2 from 1961. The Super Seven initially used the larger Cosworth modified 1,340cc Ford Classic engine and later examples were fitted with 1,498cc or 1,599cc engines. The Seven S3 was released in 1968. In 1970, Lotus radically changed the shape of the car to create the slightly more conventional sized Series 4, with a squarer fibreglass shell replacing most of the aluminium bodywork. It also offered some luxuries as standard, such as an internal heater matrix.
Between 1970 and 1975, following a representation agreement, Lotus Argentina SA obtained the licence to manufacture the Lotus Seven in Argentina. This production reached approximately 51 units. These vehicles were not replicas, but built under licence and original brand Lotus.
Under the Purchase Tax system of the time cars supplied as a kit did not attract the tax surcharge that would apply if sold in assembled form. Tax rules specified assembly instructions could not be included. However, once the UK joined the EEC on 1 January 1973, the VAT system was adopted instead so the tax advantage of the kit-built Lotus Seven came to an end.
In 1973, Lotus decided to shed fully its "British tax system"-inspired kit car image. As part of this plan, it sold the rights to the Seven to its only remaining agents Caterham Cars in England and Steel Brothers Limited in New Zealand.
Caterham ran out of the Lotus Series 4 kits in the early 1970s. When this occurred and in accordance with their agreement with Lotus, Caterham introduced its own brand version of the Series 3. They have been manufacturing the car ever since as the Caterham Seven. Steel Brothers Limited in Christchurch, New Zealand, assembled Lotus Seven Series 4s until March 1979 when the last of the 95 kits provided by Lotus was used up. Steel Brothers had a much wider range of factory options than the UK models with carpet, centre console glove-box, radio, window-washer and hard top. Sold largely to competition enthusiasts, the NZ cars also had engine modifications, close-ratio gears and adjustable suspension as factory options. As such they were very successful in local racing. With officially licensed production stopping in 1979, the last Lotus badged Seven, a Series 4, was therefore produced in New Zealand.
Steel Brothers Limited attempted to make a wider, modernised version of the Series 4, the Lotus Super 907, using the twin cam Lotus 907 engine. In the spring of 1978 it was announced that this was to be sold in the United States - but the American importer had no funds and the project came to naught. The single finished Super 907 was moved from the New Zealand to the United States in 2010 to undergo a full restoration.

Analysis of the Seven's performance

Road test

A car with a tuned Ford 1172 cc engine and close ratio gearbox was tested by the British magazine The Motor in 1958. It was found to have a top speed of, could accelerate from 0- in 6.2 seconds and had a fuel consumption of. The test car cost £1,157 including taxes of £386. They commented that car could be bought in component form and then it would have cost £399 for the parts from Lotus, £100 for the Ford engine and gearbox and £27 for the BMC rear axle.

Top speed

A Seven's top speed greatly depends upon the body configuration, engine power and gearing. Early models with low-powered engines had difficulty exceeding, although a race-prepared Seven was clocked at whilst driven by Brausch Niemann through a speed-trap at the 1962 Natal Grand Prix. In addition, clamshell style wings tend to create drag and generate lift at higher speeds. Cycle wings help alleviate this tendency, and low height Brookland aeroscreens or the lighter Perspex variants that can replace the windscreen help improve top end speed. Sevens do suffer from front end lift at high speed — the nose creates more lift than downforce at speeds over around, although retro fitted "winglets" may counter this.

Low speed acceleration

Nearly all Sevens, due to their extremely light weight have excellent acceleration, especially up to, depending on power. For their time, the original late 1950s Sevens could beat most contemporary saloon cars—and by the early 1960s, with improved Ford-Cosworth engines could take on most high performance sports cars with 0–60 mph time in the low 7 seconds.

Braking

The less powerful early models had drum brakes all round, in common with most road cars of the time. Later models had front disc brakes.
Physics favours small cars in braking and Sevens have excellent stopping distances, but one of the effects of light weight and powerful brakes is the tendency to lock up, especially at the front under strong braking.

Handling

The highest part of the car is about three feet from the road and it has a cloth top and side curtains with plastic back and side windows. The supports for the top and the windshield frame are aluminium. The lower chassis tubes are five inches from the road, while the wet sump, bell housing and one chassis tube are lower, meaning the centre of gravity is very low.
The front/rear weight distribution is nearly equal and the lack of a boot and small petrol tank assure that it remains fairly constant. It is, however, more front-heavy than more modern high performance cars.

Suspension

In the original Seven, the front lower A-arm of the double wishbone suspension is traditional, but for the purpose of reducing weight, the upper suspension integrated an anti-roll bar into a horizontal suspension arm. This approach formed a pseudo-wishbone which was semi-independent in nature. This approach worked well with early crossply tyres, but with later radials, the configuration seriously affected its adjustability.
For the rear suspension, Lotus originally used a live axle. This approach was very cost effective, since most production saloon cars up to the 1980s used these components. A mixture of Ford and Austin components were used. One disadvantage of live axles is higher unsprung weight, affecting handling and ride on rough surfaces.

Aerodynamics

In general, cars with non-optimised aerodynamics tend to be free of adverse aerodynamic effects on handling, but the front wheel arches, of all but the Series I, cause lift at high speeds. Like the good straight line performance, the car's nimble handling is limited in speed range, and this is not usually important in a car intended for public roads.
While the car's frontal area is small, the Lotus Seven has a drag coefficient among the highest of any known production car - ranging from 0.65 to 0.75, depending on bodywork.
Additionally, the clamshell front wings develop lift. This is accentuated by the slight natural lift caused by rotating wheels. Consequently, Sevens have exhibited understeer at high speeds.

Steering

The rack and pinion steering provides a minimum of play and friction. The light weight assures light steering without power assistance, even with very large tyres. The ratio is quick.

Rigidity of the frame

Like racing cars of the time and the equally respected and more expensive Mercedes-Benz 300SL coupe, it had a multi-tube space frame with high sides to allow a stiffer frame. However, the Series II and other road versions had simpler frames than the more race oriented Series I.
It is a stressed skin construction, in which the flat aluminium body panels, and especially the floor, stiffen and effectively triangulate the largely rectangular steel tubular frame structure. This gives a rigid frame with few tubes and very little body weight that does not contribute to the frame stiffness. The flat panels avoid difficulties in shaping aluminum sheet into smooth compound curves. On the down side, it does not allow attractive curves or streamlining.

Mechanical details

Engines

The Series 1 seven usually used the English Ford sidevalve engine with 49 hp, although both BMC series A and FWA s.o.h.c. Coventry Climax engines could be fitted. The series 2 typically used Ford Kent engines of 1,340 cc or 1,500 cc. These were often Cosworth modified; the Cosworth 1,340 cc "Super Seven" delivered and the 1,500 cc "Super Seven 1500". Some late S2 and most S3 sevens were fitted with the later crossflow Kent engine of 1,599 cc; a limited number of cars used the Lotus twin cam engine. The S4 seven could be supplied with 1298 or 1599 cc Kent engines or the twin cam.

Frame and body

The Lotus Seven was designed with racing in mind, and lightness was of primary concern to Chapman. A front-mounted engine driving the rear wheels and a very lightweight steel spaceframe was covered with unstressed aluminium panel bodywork. The body panels were mainly flat to avoid the expense of more elaborate curved bodywork, and the simple cloth lined plastic doors were hinged from the windscreen. The nose-cone and wheel arches were originally aluminium parts, but these were replaced in the later S2 and S3 models with painted or self-coloured fibreglass.

Weight

Early Lotus Sevens weighed around 1,100 lb. Although the weight crept upward as production progressed, it remained remarkably low for a production car of over a litre displacement.

Suspension

The front was by "A" arms and coil springs with an anti-roll bar serving as the front half of the top A arm. The rear had trailing arms, a triangular centre locating member and solid rear axle.
The geometry and high unsprung weight gave it some bump steer, which owners sometimes treated by moving the supports forward and lengthening the trailing arms.
A model that was sold in the US had independent rear suspension and a Coventry Climax engine.

Problem areas

The series II had problems with its Standard Companion estate car rear axle and differential. This was later solved on the Series III with a Ford Cortina rear end.
The tubular spaceframe chassis suffered from rust, especially from the inside which would lead to its sudden and unexpected collapse.

Lotus Seven in the media

The Lotus Seven has spawned many books, test reports and articles, many of which are still in print.
Lotus Seven 1957-1980
Edited by R.M. Clarke, Brooklands Books, 1980,, Test reports and articles from magazines around the world.
Lotus Seven Collection No. 1, 1957-1982
Edited by R.M. Clarke, Brooklands Books, 1982,, Test reports and articles from magazines around the world.
Lotus & Caterham Sevens Gold Portfolio, 1957-1989
Edited by R.M. Clarke, Brooklands Books, 1989,, Test reports and articles from magazines around the world.
Lotus Seven Gold Portfolio 1957-1973
R.M. Clarke, Brooklands Books, 1996, Test reports and articles from magazines around the world.
Lotus Caterham Seven Gold Portfolio, 1974-95
edited by R.M. Clarke, Brooklands Books, 1996,,, Test reports and articles from magazines around the world
The Legend of the Lotus Seven
Dennis Ortenberger, Osprey, 1981,
Lotus Seven Super Profile
by Graham Arnold, Foulis Motoring Book, Haynes Publishing Group, 1984,
The Lotus and Caterham Sevens, A Collector's Guide
Jeremy Coulter, Motor Racing Publications Ltd., 1986,
Lotus Seven: Collector's Guide
by Jeremy Coulter, Motorbooks International, 1994,,
Lotus Seven: Restoration, Preparation, Maintenance
by Tony Weale, Osprey Automotive, 1991,
Side Glances, Volumes 1, 2, 3 and 4
by Peter Egan, Brooklands Books and Road & Track,
Peter Egan's books are collections of his Road & Track column Side Glances many of which feature his Lotus Sevens.
Lotus and Caterham Seven: Racers for the Road
by John Tipler, Crowood Press, 2005,,
The Magnificent 7: The enthusiasts' guide to all models of Lotus and Caterham Seven
by Chris Rees, Haynes Publishing, Second edition 2007,
Why build a Seven? Putting a Sportscar on the Road, a personal record.
by Michael Eddenden, 2010, Published by lulu.com,
The building of a Caterham Seven from a Club perspective, it includes much on the owners of Lotus Sevens.
Your Kit Car Assembly Manual
by Gary Brizendine, 2004, published by GNB Motorsports LLC,
How to assemble and improve any Lotus Seven or Locost sports car kit.

Replicas

Because of the Seven's relatively simple design, over 160 companies have offered replicas or Seven-type cars over the years. Many have been challenged over the years by the UK rights-holder, Caterham. Such cars are often referred to as "sevenesque" or simply a "seven" or "se7en". Sometimes they are also called clubmans or "locost". Some examples are:
Also see :Category:Lotus Seven replicas

Footnotes