Undoubtedly, Colin Chapman designed the Mk 7 with motor racing very much in mind. Essentially a road-legal conversion from the Mk 6 race car, the Seven allowed its owners to take part in club racing (and usually stormed the field) and drive home straight away. In classic Chapman approach, its minimalist design was made for optimum lightness without any consideration for creature comfort, not even weather protection ! Its tubular steel spaceframe chassis was state of the art in its days. Even today with aluminum and carbon-fiber technology it would be difficult to trim much weight from it. The first series of 243 cars (from 1957-60) employed full aluminum body. Later cars made the curvy parts (nose cone and front fenders) in glass-fiber composite to save cost. Most of the axles and suspension bits came from mass production cars, though with Chapman's unique geometry to optimize roadholding. There were a lot of powertrains for selection. The earliest samples used a Ford 1.2-liter side-valve engine with only 40 horsepower for disposal. However, as the Seven weighed less than 400 kg, it was capable of a pretty remarkable 80 mph and 16-second 0-60. Fitted with a more specialized Coventry Climax 1.1-liter SOHC engine with 75hp, the Seven was simply flying. For cost-conscious buyers, a cheaper alternative was BMC's 1-liter A-series engine, which was also found under the bonnet of Mini. From its birth to its last year in the hands of Lotus, the
Seven went through 4 series and countless of running changes. Series 2
saw the powerful Cosworth 1.3 and 1.5-liter engines which produced 85
and 100hp respectively. They also brought the name "Super Seven".
Series 3 introduced Lotus' own twin-cam 1558cc engine, which could
produce 125hp in the hottest Holbay tune. With good power-to-weight
ratio, the Super Sevens could match contemporary Ferraris and Porsches
in short sprint, and cut them in corners. Top speed was bounded by its
poor aerodynamics (Cx was around 0.7), but on smaller, slower circuits
it could easily dominate its class. No wonder it was banned from most
races.
By the early 1970s, Lotus decided to concentrate its effort on classier road cars such as the still-born Esprit. After some 2500 Sevens had been built (most in kits form), it sold the production rights to Caterham, its sole local dealer for Seven then. In the first dozen years, Caterham did not alter the Seven much. The only bold decision it made was to revert production from the Series 4 to Series 3. S4 was originally supposed to take Seven to mass production with its simplified structure, full glassfiber body shell and more spacious cockpit. Unfortunately, contemporary production technique for glassfiber body was raw, failing to shape it to the required curvature thus the S4 was square and unappealing to fans. Reverting to S3 was proved to be a correct decision. Today, the Caterham Seven remains in S3 form. 1992 Caterham 7 JPE The first major change was introduced in 1985. Live axle rear suspension was replaced with De Dion axle for better control. Entering 1990s, the long-serving Ford-Cosworth engine was replaced by new Opel 2-liter 16V (from Astra). This made the 175hp Seven HPC. 1992 came the special edition JPE (Jonathan Palmer Edition), named after the ex-F1 racing driver who participated in its tuning. It was powered by the touring car specification, 250hp version of the same Opel 2-liter engine. Performance was truly stunning – 0-60 mph was claimed to be 3.5 seconds, whereas 0-100 mph took 8.5 seconds. If that was not quite the fastest in the world, its 0-100mph-0 performance was definitely so. With a measured time of 12.41 seconds, it held the world record until a McLaren F1 LM broke that nearly a decade later. 1999 Caterham 7 Superlight R500 Following Opel was Rover K-series engines in the form of 1.4, 1.6 and 1.8 liters. The K-series was renowned for lightweight, thus its marriage with the Seven was made in heaven. Caterham took this advantage and introduced the Superlight series – the 140hp / 470kg Superlight (1996), the 190hp / 470kg Superlight R (1997) and 230hp / 460kg Superlight R500 (1999). Incredibly, the 50-year-old sports car can still teach modern supercars a thing or two in performance and handling. It still provides the closest driving experience to that of a go-cart or even a Formula 3 race car. The formula set by Colin Chapman never gets outdated. 2008 Caterham 7 Superlight R500 |
Model |
Lotus 7 (S1) |
Lotus Super 7 (S2) |
Lotus 7 twin-cam SS (S3) |
Year of production |
1957-60 (S1) |
1960-68 (S2) | 1968-70 (S3) |
No. produced |
243 units (S1) |
1,310 units (S2) | 340 units (S3) |
Layout |
Front-engined, Rwd |
Front-engined, Rwd | Front-engined, Rwd |
Chassis |
Tubular steel spaceframe |
Tubular steel spaceframe | Tubular steel spaceframe |
Body |
All aluminum panels |
Aluminum panels + glass-fiber nose cone and fenders |
Aluminum panels + glass-fiber nose cone and fenders |
Engine |
Ford inline-4, side valves, 2v/cyl |
Ford-Cosworth inline-4, ohv, 2 v/cyl |
Lotus-Holbay inline-4, dohc, 2v/cyl |
Capacity |
1172 cc |
1340 cc | 1558 cc |
Power |
40 hp |
85 hp |
125 hp |
Torque |
52 lbft |
80 lbft |
116 lbft |
Gearbox |
3M |
4M | 4M |
Weight |
373 kg |
432 kg |
571 kg |
Top speed |
80 mph** |
100 mph*** |
103 mph* |
0-60 mph |
16.2 sec** |
7.6 sec*** |
7.1 sec* |
Model |
Caterham 7 1700 Super Sprint |
Caterham 7 JPE |
Caterham 7 Superlight R500 |
Year of production |
1985 |
1992 |
1999 |
No. produced |
? |
? | ? |
Layout |
Front-engined, Rwd |
Front-engined, Rwd | Front-engined, Rwd |
Chassis |
Tubular steel spaceframe | Tubular steel spaceframe | Tubular steel spaceframe |
Body |
Aluminum panels + glass-fiber nose cone and fenders | Aluminum panels + glass-fiber nose cone and fenders | Aluminum panels + carbon-fiber nose cone and fenders |
Engine |
Ford-Cosworth inline-4, dohc, 2v/cyl |
Opel inline-4, dohc, 4v/cyl |
Rover inline-4, dohc, 4v/cyl |
Capacity |
1691 cc |
1991 cc | 1796 cc |
Power |
135 hp |
250 hp |
230 hp |
Torque |
122 lbft |
186 lbft |
155 lbft |
Gearbox |
5M |
5M | 6M |
Weight |
543 kg |
540 kg |
460 kg |
Top speed |
111 mph* |
150 mph |
146 mph |
0-60 mph |
5.6 sec* |
3.5 sec |
3.4 sec* |
0-100 mph |
19.9 sec* |
8.5 sec |
8.1 sec* |