New Member with Big Project

Hi there, I am a new member to this site and need some advise.

My dad has a 1970 elan DHC S4 SE , we have removed it today from a garage where iut hasnt moved since 1980 when he bought a house and had me.
We moved it from The garage where it has stood and it dosnt look to bad. The paint is in very good consdition , only tiny marks here and there.

First things first before we lift the engine out and think about sending it off to QED or somewhere simalar we want to see if it will fire

What do you recomend we do and can you recomend any places to go for bits and engine work,

Thanks

Kieran & Graham

If the engine has not turned since the 1980 I would not attempt to fire it up, I would start by stripping it down first and replacing the valve springs for a start, checking the bores etc.

I think we will get different opinions here, as you are thinking about rebuilding it anyway I would attempt to start it but would do a few things first, take out the plugs and put some oil down the bores, make sure it has oil and water, take off the oilpump and refit priming it, fill and fit a new oil filter, take off the camshaft caps one at a time and lube cam bearings/shaft preferbly with a cam lube.
lube the cam lobes with a cam lube, squirt oil on the cam followers, turn over the engine by hand feeling for any excessive resistance.
Clean out the carbs/jets/pump and generally check for cracked/perished fuel hoses.
If you are happy there is nothing likely to cause damage, disconnect coil and fuel supply and turn engine with starter in short bursts to see if oil pressure will build up.
Do a compression test and acess results of all actions,
Fit new plugs.
HAVE FIRE EXTINGUISHER AT THE READY!
if happy connect fuel and check for leaks, connect electrics and try to start.
Good luck Brian.

I agree with Brian…give it a go but stop if you don’t get oil pressure when cranking with plugs out and coil disconnected.

Whilst you’ve got the carbs off clean up the side of the engine and inner wing with petrol / kitchen roll. It won’t help start it but it will reduce the combustable stuff under there! And really, Brian isn’t kidding, have a decent sized fire extinguiser next to the car…one that you know works, and not a little in-car one.

I would replace the fuel pump to carb pipe no matter what it looks like…it’s at least 25 years old and the most common cause of Elans catching fire…petrol onto the distributor. Even if it looks good, the rubber can de-laminate inside and restrict the petrol flow to the carbs.

Also whilst the carbs are off put a new petrol pump rubber diaphragm in.

And a new set of points / condenser, or at least clean up the old ones.

Obviously drain out old petrol, and crank through the new stuff when you’re checking for oil presure (plugs out; coil disconnected)

If, no, WHEN you find that the clutch is stuck, and you don’t know how to unstick…shout up…I have a foolproof method!

Have fun…Mark

I am nearly through a renovation and I suggest you take a look at the chassis before you go too far.

The upright towers at the front tend to rust - mine were too far gone to repair. I removed the bodyshell and rebuilt the car round a new Spyder chassis.

I don’t want to frighten you but the chassis is a weak point on old Elans.

best of luck

Geoff

Without wishing to deflate you I think you must understand that you may have a great deal of work ahead of you. In my opinion you should forget the engine and concentrate on the rest of the car. All bushes will need replacing the brake servo and master cylinder will probably need sorting along with the calipers. A whole host of other things will need seeing to even if the car was perfect the last time it saw the road. It is pointless getting the engine sorted if the rest of the car is not ready and you may end up having the engine in and out of the car more than needed. I speak from experience as I have had my engine out five times when I could, with hindsight, have done the job once.
Sorry if this is not what you wanted to hear but if you do the job properly you will have a car to be proud of.
I am in Lincolnshire and would be happy to help if I can.
Chris

i know the amount of work ahead , i have read everything about these cars growing up from a youngster. Finally starting this project is what ive been waiting for.

I know the money and the work ahead is large, but its nothing to what getting this car back to A1 condition means to either me or my dad

It will be done Properly and NO areas negelcted

Kieran

Hello Kieran, was the garage heated? And was it really never moved? I’d vote for trying to fire it up, then maybe down the drive and back to see what happens, if the drive is flat. All the old rubber would be my biggest concern, fuel lines and brake wheel cylinders checked/replaced first.

Hi Kieran…I think you’re doing the right thing getting to ‘know’ the car’s current state before taking it apart. I’ve done a ground up restoration on 5 cars so far, and each time I try to get it as good as I can without doing work that has to be repeated and doing bits that enable you to better quantify what has to be done. Getting the engine going, freeing the clutch, running it up and down the drive gets the enthusiasm going to sustain you though the rebuild. And an Elan isn’t a daunting car to rebuild…It’s one of the most satisfying when you can roll that chassis out from under the shell, and build the mechanics back into a new chassis. A big Airfix kit! Getting the suspension, brakes and steering sorted is very straightforward…even getting the diff in and out (or rather out and in) and replacing those Rotoflex couplings is simple when the chassis is out.
A lot of folks pull a car apart (the easy and fun bit!) and lose interest after a short while…just look at ebay for the number of abandoned projects. A bit of planning, a lot of photographs and the Parts manual as well as the Workshop manual, will help considerably. Above all, enjoy!!

Thanks, have you got any pictures of elans during restoration i could see.

My email is [email protected]

Kieran

HI there

And enjoy your rebuild…pictures on rebuilds you can watch my own here

http://fullspeed.to/lotuselan and there is some other to on the net http://www.unibrain.org/motorsports/elan

Good luck

Kieran,
Good to see you are keen to get another +2 back on the road.
Good luck and happy to repeat my offer of sharing my hard won experience if it can be of any help!
I am not to far away.
Chris

Thought he said it was an S4? :wink:
Rick

Sorry. Reading to many threads at once!
Good luck anyway.
Chris

I would drop the sump as well and so you have a good indication how dirty or clean the engine is. Just clean the inside of the sump well and if you can not find too many metal flakes etc in the oil just put it back together and fit new plugs , points and filters etc… as mentioned earlier.
An engine job is relatively expensive and not always necessary.
I just fired up an engine after at least 15-20years sitting around and it is running fine with excellent oil pressure and no rattles.
Just make sure you do not overrev the engine at the beginning, just take it easy.
good luck

robin

Kieran & Graham

I just finished a Lotus +2 project similiar to yours.

The 1972 Elan had been parked in a unheated garage since 1975. It had 22k miles. Body and interior were great, the rest was unknown.

After performing many of the recommeded maintance checks listed in this forum I was ready to turn the engine over. Only checking for engine rotation.

The MG motto is “Safety First” and it applies also to Lotus. Fire X should be at hand and ready. :exclamation:

Installed new battery and checked for voltage at the starter sol and with a trusty old screw driver and a quick strike across the sol posts and the engine turned over. Here where the good part starts. I forgot how much Marvin Mystery Oil I had put into the cylinders. Now, my garage ceiling has a nice red taint color. much like a modern painting. Appeared I had struck oil. :open_mouth:

After clean up of what oil I could reach and installing shop rags over the cylinders, I was ready check for oil pressure. Within a few quick turns of the key, oil pressure was at 45psi. :slight_smile:

Installed fresh plugs and with small squeeze bottle of gas to spray down the carb throats I was ready to go. I hooked up my remote starter switch and turned the key to the run position. Couple of sprays down each throat and the Lotus breath life again.

Here is the scary part, no where in any auto shop manual have I read stated check for mice and sunflower shells in the exhaust system. Unknown to myself that the exhaust system clogged. After a minute of run time the pressure was building and 2 explosions occured, one under the car and one at the tail pipe. Smoke, mice guts and sunflower shells were all over the shop. A warm liquid was running down both my pant legs so additional clean was required. :blush:

The Lotus is now running fine and finishing all required repairs.
Hope you have enjoyed the humor and advice of starting a old Lotus. Good luck and be safe.

Regards,
Ty Rodgers
Tiger, Healey, Morgan, Lotus, MGA, MGA

THE BEST FIRST POST OF ALL TIME AWARD GOES TO… rodgerslotus !