In no particular order, and for no particular reason, the next three posts are snapshots of cars that elevate my pulse. These pix happen to be Lotuses, save one.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhOzwGePYmPsv4B2MG6yA-JiHq4l0g8cQsYHdvi6HicjHYQisNJI-dE0c_UIQjvpIIgPnf_OrI3zvSf0KK3ZpIDoV-ntVCxnvHfFdjavzqJnrJN04ftySRClbQjk_t-8Mk7erdgm4W_OWYs/s640/DSCN0602.JPG) |
A Lotus Eleven, replica/clone of the 1955 Le Mans 1.5 liter class-winning car. |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhMTYWlOgIBxKgdRV9oGMRU20X-hi7xY_oEQNjsvuVVQOSSd9j_-eTv9hiFE4Lhl3XYYOigEW5cPh5pX3PwD0rQ7kWgnG9cKg0bIzK8VpDHN4sF3UV4fn-0w0tGMn5P3RIWEoemRkTqHq3q/s640/DSCN0619.JPG) |
I call these guys "Team Teal." They call themselves "Puppies Racing." There are two other cars; one is a Mazda RX-3 sedan. All are turned out in teal and silver, numbered 101, 202, 303, and 404. Foreground: a Lotus Eleven clone street car with wire wheels and windshield. Background: a small-block Corvette Singray. |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgaij4jLdrhjbhJseUqkyR5T90p7Yaiv19cKBfc8ntRKw0Mkm6gZktwGsD01S1tKfHD9B6FbNyyQjWyxw0o2ZgFsolpPLUqpYaCyUGkR_N57HkToKZQ_7fZOHgEymsNonFpiMAbc86HjlR8/s640/DSCN0620.JPG) |
Cockpit of the Lotus Eleven clone: "All Mod Cons." I'd drag this one to the Dragon. |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiKtzUzAtRKgb9tTLfJ8-i6dnUJtJS3A_zUntFlnkIw1HpUjlQ-KtF-fgLrxil3NwrWFboe_CAvD4B3yTmzq02NLQwIccrtKbAM48JJEPWM4U7R5ZUC_zh8bOffz_ddsZs4-Z-zlD2537Sp/s640/DSCN0672.JPG) |
The original Lotus Elite. It was a fiberglass monocoque with a metal subframe for the engine and transmission in front and a steel hoop at the A-pillar. This made it extremely light, and also prone to the suspension pulling out at the attachment points. |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyquKygwGPYaWYLjGyt1bPLjnYA_INlPvWZ970OJoeNWKqQ_Kwbx_ehmdMwKvE2XOCwY2f_Yw8f3epJPEZGb8Nufj7_1Btb0c5iqXGdUkbUFUioL9le0gnstlsQRvojXhJj58LsFo2hcUO/s640/DSCN0673.JPG) |
All-aluminum, SOHC Coventry-Climax engine in the Elite above. The stock engine was 1.1 liters, but some cars were built with 1.5 liter race-prepped engines, of which this might be one. Either way, these are the biggest Weber carbs I've seen on an engine this small. Do you need this much carburetion on a non-crossflow head? Purdy, though... |
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