Assemble an Elan in 3 Hours!
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Drove the S3 to the Black Swan In Ockham Surrey for lunch today. Got talking to a lovely retired chap in the carpark who explained he was a mechanic at Bell & Colville (just down the road) in the 70s.
He was one of the mechanics who would come to your house to assemble your Elan for you. The charge was less than the sales tax would have been I suppose.
He said that two mechanics got it down to a fine art and they could do the job in three hours. The hardest part? Installing the beading above the front bumper. He was a proponent of the boiling water technique.
Fascinsting chap. He also mentioned the huge difficulties they had in selling the final consignment of Sprints, once the Esprit and its futuristic wedge shape arrived. Massive discounts apparently ?1700 I think he said.
Could have chatted to him for hours but family was waiting to go for a walk . . .
Best
Steve
He was one of the mechanics who would come to your house to assemble your Elan for you. The charge was less than the sales tax would have been I suppose.
He said that two mechanics got it down to a fine art and they could do the job in three hours. The hardest part? Installing the beading above the front bumper. He was a proponent of the boiling water technique.
Fascinsting chap. He also mentioned the huge difficulties they had in selling the final consignment of Sprints, once the Esprit and its futuristic wedge shape arrived. Massive discounts apparently ?1700 I think he said.
Could have chatted to him for hours but family was waiting to go for a walk . . .
Best
Steve
1967 S3 SE DHC
1970 +2S (RIP - went out in a blaze of glory in 2001)
1970 +2S (RIP - went out in a blaze of glory in 2001)
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Stevie-Heathie - Third Gear
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Interesting, thanks Steve.
I suspect his memory was playing tricks, as the Espirit was not introduced until that wonderful summer of 1976. I may have a 1975 registered Sprint on my register (not near my data right now) but know of none as late as 76.
The last Sprint came off the production line in March 1973 and were selling slowly by that summer, VAT having increased their cost and reduced their competitiveness by then.
It would be good to gather more memories from folk like this fellow.
Tim
I suspect his memory was playing tricks, as the Espirit was not introduced until that wonderful summer of 1976. I may have a 1975 registered Sprint on my register (not near my data right now) but know of none as late as 76.
The last Sprint came off the production line in March 1973 and were selling slowly by that summer, VAT having increased their cost and reduced their competitiveness by then.
It would be good to gather more memories from folk like this fellow.
Tim
Visit www.lotuselansprint.com
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trw99 - Coveted Fifth Gear
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trw99 wrote:Interesting, thanks Steve.
I suspect his memory was playing tricks, as the Espirit was not introduced until that wonderful summer of 1976. I may have a 1975 registered Sprint on my register (not near my data right now) but know of none as late as 76.
The last Sprint came off the production line in March 1973 and were selling slowly by that summer, VAT having increased their cost and reduced their competitiveness by then.
It would be good to gather more memories from folk like this fellow.
Tim
I suspect confusion was with the second generation wedge shape Elite launch stopping Plus 2S 130/5 sales and the wedge shape Esprit show prototypes affecting Europa Special sales. Like you said the 2 seat Elan was pretty much at the end of its life by then before both these events. In reality neither of these cars replaced the Elan which was an opportunity that Lotus failed to recognise in their desire to move up market to bigger Grand Tourers like the Elite and bigger better mid engined cars like the Esprit. The market for a small compact front engined sport car still existed as demonstrated by the somewhat late attempt by Lotus at the second generation Elan / M100 and the strong success of the Mazda Miata / Mx 5
cheers
Rohan
cheers
Rohan
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rgh0 - Coveted Fifth Gear
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elanner wrote:And from this picture it was only the front suspension hubs/shocks/anti-roll-bar that needed fitting. It looks like the rear was complete (not surprisingly, having new owners fit the Rotoflexes would not have been popular...).
Nick
I would bet the kits came in various states including ones needing the front bumper and chrome strip being fitted
cheers
Rohan
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rgh0 - Coveted Fifth Gear
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I agree with Jim, body was complete & on the chassis, but all the suspension & drive train had to be installed. Engine & gearbox was supplied as a unit. Two of us built mine in a weekend but I would be really surprised if you could assemble one in three hours. Interesting aside is that my identification plate does not have the engine # inscribed on it, because of course being a kit, they didn't know until they shipped it what engine would be in it.
Keith Marshall
69 S4 SE DHC RHD Original owner
69 S4 SE DHC RHD Original owner
- saildrive2001
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Here is an article on building the component car that I wrote for Club Lotus News magazine a while ago.
Tim
Tim
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- 2015 Jul Building an Elan from a Kit.pdf
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Visit www.lotuselansprint.com
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trw99 - Coveted Fifth Gear
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nick - your comment: assembling the rotoflex being "unpopular" makes me smile all over the place -- for me it's so unpopular that i've been planning to put my TTR front and rear race/road suspension back in, as swiss historic MOT status prohibits adjustables and no drilled rotors. they didn't notice the 1" rollbar sandy
- el-saturn
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RE: the comment from billwill.
In 68, my Dad and a friend built two Plus 2s over a couple of weekends with help from the mechanics from the local dealer ... and always talked about the take it apart and rebuild it process that occurred when it went back to the dealer/factory.
The things people did to avoid purchase tax.
N
In 68, my Dad and a friend built two Plus 2s over a couple of weekends with help from the mechanics from the local dealer ... and always talked about the take it apart and rebuild it process that occurred when it went back to the dealer/factory.
The things people did to avoid purchase tax.
N
Nick Baxter
1970 Plus 2S (Federal)
1969 Plus 2 (UK) - sold
1970 Plus 2S (Federal)
1969 Plus 2 (UK) - sold
- nwbaxter66
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Quoting from the CL article above:
?Having taken all this trouble to build a new Elan, the owner was obliged to have the car inspected and road tested by a Lotus dealer, who would then validate the warranty. According to dealers of the time, the most common faults they found on inspecting a home-built car would be to the ride height.....?
Maybe I?m missing something here, but with supplied springs and fixed spring platforms, how was it possible to get the ride height wrong? Metalastic suspension bushes tightened in full droop?
Malcolm
?Having taken all this trouble to build a new Elan, the owner was obliged to have the car inspected and road tested by a Lotus dealer, who would then validate the warranty. According to dealers of the time, the most common faults they found on inspecting a home-built car would be to the ride height.....?
Maybe I?m missing something here, but with supplied springs and fixed spring platforms, how was it possible to get the ride height wrong? Metalastic suspension bushes tightened in full droop?
Malcolm
1966 Elan S3 Coupe
1994 Caterham 7
1994 Caterham 7
- englishmaninwales
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