Making an Elan reliable
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Hi. I've recently acquired a 1966 S3 FHC Elan (pre-airflow) and joined the forum as a place to obtain and share knowledge. I also have a 1969 Alfa Giulia which is a half way house Alfaholics "GTA-R" spec (where Alfaholics is to Alfa as TTR is to Lotus), so am happy with Weber carbs, dizzy based ignition systems, etc.
The car has a few TTR bits on (driveshaft conversion, various bushings, mounts, etc) and has a QED built engine, so mechanically is fairly strong. The gelcoat has got moisture in it at some point so the paint is covered in micro bubbles - a full respray is required at some point.
In the interim, I'm interested in the collected wisdom as to all items I should either replace in the interests of reliability, or things I should specifically check in terms of wear items. For example, I've found that the inner steering column moves a bit in relation to the outer column, so I'm guessing the top and bottom bushes will need replacing. I think this will be a fun job.
In conclusion, what fails on Elans?
The car has a few TTR bits on (driveshaft conversion, various bushings, mounts, etc) and has a QED built engine, so mechanically is fairly strong. The gelcoat has got moisture in it at some point so the paint is covered in micro bubbles - a full respray is required at some point.
In the interim, I'm interested in the collected wisdom as to all items I should either replace in the interests of reliability, or things I should specifically check in terms of wear items. For example, I've found that the inner steering column moves a bit in relation to the outer column, so I'm guessing the top and bottom bushes will need replacing. I think this will be a fun job.
In conclusion, what fails on Elans?
1966 FHC S3 Elan
1969 Alfa Giulia Stepnose - halfway Alfaholics GTA-R
1998 Caterham 7 Superlight R
1969 Alfa Giulia Stepnose - halfway Alfaholics GTA-R
1998 Caterham 7 Superlight R
- Flying Banana
- First Gear
- Posts: 38
- Joined: 15 Jun 2020
I am sure others with more knowledge than I will chime in. But what comes to mind is:
Water pump. If not been done already, a removeable cartridge water pump is more reliable and nice to have.
Keep a fan belt and throttle cable in the car.
Heater valve
The front and rear seals on the motor and front diff seals seem to leak more on Elans than other cars.
Rear wheel bearings on an older car. Replace in pairs.
That is all I can think of at the moment.
Water pump. If not been done already, a removeable cartridge water pump is more reliable and nice to have.
Keep a fan belt and throttle cable in the car.
Heater valve
The front and rear seals on the motor and front diff seals seem to leak more on Elans than other cars.
Rear wheel bearings on an older car. Replace in pairs.
That is all I can think of at the moment.
Tony Vaccaro
LOONY (Lotus Owners of New York)
http://www.lotusowners.com
Drive Fast Take Chances
72 Elan Sprint, 93 Caterham (Bought new), 05 Elise RD (Bought new),
99 Elise190, 05 Elise BLK (Bought nearly new), 2024 Emira, 2005 MiataSpeed Turbo
LOONY (Lotus Owners of New York)
http://www.lotusowners.com
Drive Fast Take Chances
72 Elan Sprint, 93 Caterham (Bought new), 05 Elise RD (Bought new),
99 Elise190, 05 Elise BLK (Bought nearly new), 2024 Emira, 2005 MiataSpeed Turbo
-
tvacc - Fourth Gear
- Posts: 592
- Joined: 24 Dec 2003
In my experience, everything can fail on an Elan, especially given the relative age of many of these unrestored cars.
Rewiring the car, converting to negative ground, and switching to an alternator
CV joints in place of the donut joints
Various switches can intermittently fail/need to be cleaned up
As mentioned, water pump and monitoring seal leaks (the cam cover gaskets and bolts are notorious for leaks - not really a reliability concern, more of a quirk)
I've had both master cylinders leak with time
Ditching the old vacuum-based headlights for electric units
And on and on and on... I think I could name a bunch of minor issues I've had in two years that aren't on the standard "list" of reliability concerns but have been addressed at some point on this forum.
I think my car would have had fewer issues had the prior owner driven it more often.
Rewiring the car, converting to negative ground, and switching to an alternator
CV joints in place of the donut joints
Various switches can intermittently fail/need to be cleaned up
As mentioned, water pump and monitoring seal leaks (the cam cover gaskets and bolts are notorious for leaks - not really a reliability concern, more of a quirk)
I've had both master cylinders leak with time
Ditching the old vacuum-based headlights for electric units
And on and on and on... I think I could name a bunch of minor issues I've had in two years that aren't on the standard "list" of reliability concerns but have been addressed at some point on this forum.
I think my car would have had fewer issues had the prior owner driven it more often.
1967 Lotus Elan Coupe - Super Safety
2019 Tesla Model 3 Performance
1973 Ford F100 4x4
2019 Tesla Model 3 Performance
1973 Ford F100 4x4
-
MrBonus - Second Gear
- Posts: 180
- Joined: 09 Oct 2017
I do think an important part is something the previous poster touched on. Drive the car. Elans do not like to sit. I am very guilty of that. I have two that I have not driven all year. One since last summer 2019. I plan to drive it from my storage location back to my house in about 2 weeks. I wonder if it will make it.
Tony Vaccaro
LOONY (Lotus Owners of New York)
http://www.lotusowners.com
Drive Fast Take Chances
72 Elan Sprint, 93 Caterham (Bought new), 05 Elise RD (Bought new),
99 Elise190, 05 Elise BLK (Bought nearly new), 2024 Emira, 2005 MiataSpeed Turbo
LOONY (Lotus Owners of New York)
http://www.lotusowners.com
Drive Fast Take Chances
72 Elan Sprint, 93 Caterham (Bought new), 05 Elise RD (Bought new),
99 Elise190, 05 Elise BLK (Bought nearly new), 2024 Emira, 2005 MiataSpeed Turbo
-
tvacc - Fourth Gear
- Posts: 592
- Joined: 24 Dec 2003
Thanks all, that's a very useful list to start with.
I was planning a negative ground conversion, switching the dynamo to an alternator and a geared starter motor as some of my "to do list" over the winter. I'll check the resistance over the switches and replace any which are a bit suspect.
I was planning a negative ground conversion, switching the dynamo to an alternator and a geared starter motor as some of my "to do list" over the winter. I'll check the resistance over the switches and replace any which are a bit suspect.
1966 FHC S3 Elan
1969 Alfa Giulia Stepnose - halfway Alfaholics GTA-R
1998 Caterham 7 Superlight R
1969 Alfa Giulia Stepnose - halfway Alfaholics GTA-R
1998 Caterham 7 Superlight R
- Flying Banana
- First Gear
- Posts: 38
- Joined: 15 Jun 2020
Drive it - drive it - drive it. They are no more unreliable than any other well maintained car, but like lawn mowers and wives they do not like being put away and ignored. As I have stated before, over 200k miles and counting in all weathers and all over the continent - this side of the pond that is. Drive the bloody thing - simples!!
- TBG
- Fourth Gear
- Posts: 697
- Joined: 21 Apr 2020
Everyone has already hit the main culprits. Get rid of the donuts, go to negative ground, replace the useless 2 watt generator with a new mini alternator, and drive it! You might also bleed the brakes and if the brakes need work replace the caliper pistons with stainless units and replace the old rubber brake lines. Enjoy! That’s a wonderful model of the Elan line up!
Famous Frank
67 Elan Coupe
66 Elan S2 SE
65 Elan S2
65 Elan 26R
69 S2 Europa
06 Elise
67 Barracuda
67 Elan Coupe
66 Elan S2 SE
65 Elan S2
65 Elan 26R
69 S2 Europa
06 Elise
67 Barracuda
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Famous Frank - Fourth Gear
- Posts: 556
- Joined: 29 Apr 2004
If you click on my Elan entry in my signature, you'll see the list of things I've upgraded/repaired over my ownership period (5 years). It'll give you some idea of what's failed on mine.
Steve Lyle
1972 Elan Sprint 0248k @ https://www.mgexp.com/registry/1972-Lot ... 48K.30245/
1972 MGB Roadster @ https://www.mgexp.com/registry/1972-MG- ... 842G.4498/
2007 BMW 335i Coupe
1972 Elan Sprint 0248k @ https://www.mgexp.com/registry/1972-Lot ... 48K.30245/
1972 MGB Roadster @ https://www.mgexp.com/registry/1972-MG- ... 842G.4498/
2007 BMW 335i Coupe
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steve lyle - Fourth Gear
- Posts: 510
- Joined: 15 Jun 2015
In terms of leaving you stranded I think the ignition system is most likely. Be very careful about the parts and their quality, the quality of replacement parts can be very suspect. Also look for any wiring modification by previous owners. The coil power goes via a switch in the glove box which is another common failure point.
After that a good check if the brake system for it's condition. It's likely single circuit so one failure means no brakes.
After that a good check if the brake system for it's condition. It's likely single circuit so one failure means no brakes.
'73 +2 130/5 RHD, now on the road and very slowly rolling though a "restoration"
- mbell
- Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 2643
- Joined: 07 Jun 2013
I forget to mention the distributor. Points are fine, but Petronix has left me stranded 4 or 5 times with different cars. I just moved to buying Powerspark. They are a UK company and for like $$200 US$ I got a electronic distributor, wires and coil. I now have Powerspark in 4 of my Lotus and Caterham cars.
Tony Vaccaro
LOONY (Lotus Owners of New York)
http://www.lotusowners.com
Drive Fast Take Chances
72 Elan Sprint, 93 Caterham (Bought new), 05 Elise RD (Bought new),
99 Elise190, 05 Elise BLK (Bought nearly new), 2024 Emira, 2005 MiataSpeed Turbo
LOONY (Lotus Owners of New York)
http://www.lotusowners.com
Drive Fast Take Chances
72 Elan Sprint, 93 Caterham (Bought new), 05 Elise RD (Bought new),
99 Elise190, 05 Elise BLK (Bought nearly new), 2024 Emira, 2005 MiataSpeed Turbo
-
tvacc - Fourth Gear
- Posts: 592
- Joined: 24 Dec 2003
Make sure you have the heavy duty engine mounts not the standard ones. TTR and others sell them. With a QED engine your probably already have them but, in my exprerience, the standard ones currently available fail on the carb side with depressing regularity. Last time it happened to me I was at the top of the Buttertubs pass in Yorkshire with my 92 year old mother on board. Convenient!
Elan S2 26/5614
Alfa Romeo Alfetta Berlina 1974
Westfield 7SE
Alfa Romeo Alfetta Berlina 1974
Westfield 7SE
- quaybook
- Second Gear
- Posts: 128
- Joined: 24 Aug 2009
Thanks all for your responses so far.
That's the problem - not driving things. I'm generally short on time, so don't get to drive very much for pleasure, hence my wanting to make things as good as they can be for a seldom used car. I also have a 1998 Caterham Superlight R which hasn't moved for 3 years, so that also requires a light recommissioning... That's also due to the car being a one trick pony and that trick not being very aligned with being a socially responsible road user!
TBG wrote:Drive it - drive it - drive it. They are no more unreliable than any other well maintained car, but like lawn mowers and wives they do not like being put away and ignored. As I have stated before, over 200k miles and counting in all weathers and all over the continent - this side of the pond that is. Drive the bloody thing - simples!!
That's the problem - not driving things. I'm generally short on time, so don't get to drive very much for pleasure, hence my wanting to make things as good as they can be for a seldom used car. I also have a 1998 Caterham Superlight R which hasn't moved for 3 years, so that also requires a light recommissioning... That's also due to the car being a one trick pony and that trick not being very aligned with being a socially responsible road user!
1966 FHC S3 Elan
1969 Alfa Giulia Stepnose - halfway Alfaholics GTA-R
1998 Caterham 7 Superlight R
1969 Alfa Giulia Stepnose - halfway Alfaholics GTA-R
1998 Caterham 7 Superlight R
- Flying Banana
- First Gear
- Posts: 38
- Joined: 15 Jun 2020
Don’t forget the main battery earth connection to the chassis under the car. Many people move it to one of the rear turrets.
On the subject of steering column bushes, do a search on this forum as someone has posted a very good guide. If I remember rightly the workshop manual is not entirely correct!!
In my experience the water pump is fine as long as you don’t run with the fan belt very tight. I suspect the poor reputation is more to do with the difficulty of replacing it than it’s failure rate. But it must be worth considering if the head is off for any reason.
No-one has mentioned the front trunnions yet (oil or grease!) - either way do it regularly, it’s no fun if one lets go. Luckily i was going slowly...
On the subject of steering column bushes, do a search on this forum as someone has posted a very good guide. If I remember rightly the workshop manual is not entirely correct!!
In my experience the water pump is fine as long as you don’t run with the fan belt very tight. I suspect the poor reputation is more to do with the difficulty of replacing it than it’s failure rate. But it must be worth considering if the head is off for any reason.
No-one has mentioned the front trunnions yet (oil or grease!) - either way do it regularly, it’s no fun if one lets go. Luckily i was going slowly...
- steve.thomas
- Second Gear
- Posts: 119
- Joined: 24 Jun 2010
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