Having owned a series 1 in 1973, a car which I think is now sadly non existent, I have recently become involved once again in these early cars. I need, please, information with hard evidence in support, where possible please, on the position of the ashtrays in cars of 1963/4 vintage
A friend’s Elan, unit 3088, has the ashtray in the tunnel top but the car no longer has its original door trim so I am unable to establish whether it would originally have had ashtrays in the door arm rests as well, like the later cars did.
My September 1963 Elan, unit 3186, has the same tunnel as unit no 3088, ie with ashtray aperture, but no ashtray. Instead they are fitted into the left hand and right hand door trims. Does anyone else have a car like this?
Soon after unit 3186, we know that Elans began to use the same tunnel top shape albeit in grey ABS - that was to remain the same shape (changing to black ABS - does anyone know when?) until end of production with no ashtray provision at all. The earliest car known to me to use the later shape tunnel top is unit 3234. Does anyone out there have an earlier example?
I really like these discussions around when Lotus changed features in the cars over the years.
We really need a list on the website somewhere of the final conclusions to these threads (as best can be determined) so people can find it easily in the future. The change points this forum determines have got to be the best authority that exists.
'63 S1 - 26/0538 - ashtrays in doors, dark grey tunnel cover, cream door panel inserts.
'65 S2 - 26/4614 - ashtrays in doors, black tunnel cover, black door panel inserts.
The interiors of both of these cars are other wise all black with the exception of the floor mats and other interior (nubbly) panel covering in dark grey which I understand that Colin scoursed from the skins of unborn alligators (its lighter).
Thanks very much for your response. Does your series one have any cut out behind the gearlever for a rectangular ashtray or is the ashtray layout identical on both cars?
Thanks also for the info on the door panels particularly on the series one car. Do you believe them to be original?
The three or so series ones I have run across have all had the ash trays in the doors - If you have the original door trim there is a channel the outside arm rest, this is made out of metal and has a cut out in it to recieve the ashtray - a couple of pictures -neither show the proper covering -
There is no provision for a tunnel ashtray in either of my cars.
The S1 door panels are the origional, they still have the award dash plaques from my competieion wins with the car in the 60’s - 70’s (hillclimbing mainly).
I purchased the car direct from the factory in late 63, no dealers in North America at that time. It was shipped by ship to Vancouver B.C. - western Canada and I received in March 64. I understand it to be the first Elan sold to North America.
I live on Vancouver Island. Inever parted with the car 'cause I couldn’t find another better, I restored it to origional in 96 - 97 and it is currently in the body suop for a flat out and respray after a minor shunt, it was due for a refinish anyway.
If you need any other info i have the origional S1 manuals (shop and parts).
Bill, there can’t be many original owner Elans left, especially early S1. I’m sure we’d all love to see some photos of the car, in its day and now. Well done for keeping the old girl ! (the car that is).
… not many original Elan owners left… Mark, you’re right!
…last year sold new was 1974, (ok, '75) gotta be 16 years old to drive? IF, big IF, GIGANTIC IF, you bought one new when you were 18 ! today you’d be a minimum of 52 years old. (Add ten for S1.)
Bill, I bought my first Elan in 1972 and have also found no better sports car.
How many other original owners do we have out there?
I was 23 years old when Jimmy Clark won the first F1 championship for Lotus so I purchased the car (now approaching my 68th birthday) ,I was an entrepaneurial electrical contractor making a $$$, the car cost about 1400 pnds ($4300.00 at the time - an AH 3000 cost about $3500 at the time). I maintained it thru its life, did a ground off restro in 96 / 97.
It is currently in a restro shop for a body flat out and respray to correct the last 11 years of bleeding / sagging / weeping and wear and tear.
Well, I am only one away from being the original owner of my S1 # 260146. The original owner was an English subject who imported it to the USA while attending Stanford University. He only kept it for about 4 months and put about 6000 miles on it, a lot of them sideways. Talk about stress cracks! I, now an octegnarian, have owned it since purchasing it from him in March of 1964 and have just finished a ground up rebuild. It’s going through a nice gentle running in period now. Can’t wait to turn up the wick. And it does have cut-outs for the ash trays in the door trim forward of the door handles. I still have them in a box, though they are quite rusty. There is no ash tray cut-out in the grey tunnel housing.
Hello,
I’ve got 260520, titled as a '64… Ash trays as you all described and no slot on the black tunnel.
Unit numbers and serial numbers??? What order?
Were kit cars numbered out of sequence?
Has anyone heard of Rallye Ralph Crawford in Cincinnati? He had the first Elan in USA? BRG, I’ve got home movies of it in a gymkhana in a grocery store parking lot.
Eric
I love Rohan’s idea about sequencing changes. …elan.net and a few current comprehensive books will still be the grail a hundred years from now.
My car lives together with an S3 that has an original S1 tunnel top fitted.
The tunnel top has a little moulded chamber that accepts the ashtray - no cut out! I could post a photo next week. Without ashtray its a nice little storage box.
Fitting door ashtrays as well (so three alltogether ) wouldnt be the chapman way would it? (me thinks)
Anna
Sorry for the delay - I just moved office - so no computer where I can dock the camera. I hope I’ll be fully online on monday. Photo is ready - just needs posting.
I am still a sectarian - late 60’s - it looks like you purchased your car in the same month that mine arrived in vancouver from the factory. I have the origional factory invoice for the sale to me.
A dealership did establish in Toronto in the spring of '64 - it took a lot of convinsing the factory to supply me spares direct - they had a problem understanding that altho the Toronto dealer was 4000miles away from me that I shouldn’t go thru them.
I have a 65 S2 to restore as well but I think I will wait 'till I am your age before I tackle that one.
Bill
You had better coat all of the metal parts of your S2 with cosmolene or something so that they don’t rust away before you reach my age.
Rebuilding my Elan seems to go in 20 year cycles. I did a body off rebuild in my sexagenarian days and now again twenty odd years later. The first time was to repair storm damage, it went through hurricane Hugo, and general engine rebuild, and this last time for major engine rebuild and adding stuff like CV joint half shafts, cassette water pump and sleeving the cylinders. So I wonder if I’ll be able to get parts when I’m a centenarian.
Since this is an ash tray thread I’ll just add that, as a non-smoker, I removed the ash trays from the door panels 20 years ago. At that time I built a new instrument panel and replaced the lighter with a cooling fan switch.
I’ll add there’s a terrific potential map/anything cubby space below the ashtray armrest when it’s removed. Mine holds flashlights, sunglasses, and who knows what…