RESTORING A LOTUS ELAN OR WHAT TO DO UNTIL
THE PSYCHIATRIST ARRIVES!
Instalment 1 - Chassis
Lester Reader
First of all, I better introduce myself as most of
you won’t know me. My name is Lester Reader
and I have been a member of The Constructors
Car Club for nearly 2 years – I joined on Skite
Day 2001, being introduced by John Hill.
Unfortunately I can very seldom get to a club
meeting as I have other commitments on a
Tuesday night for most of the year. I very much
enjoy reading ‘Spare Parts’ and I thought it was
time I put something back into the club. Whilst
this article isn’t about the construction of a new
car’, it does cover the same sort of basic
engineering.
guard badly repaired and split in two and some
idiot had fitted a sun roof, taking all the strength
out of the shell! The chassis was also in bad
condition with both front towers rotted out at the
bottom and the right one twisted so far out of
line I couldn’t believe it had been driven that way.
Wishbones nearly all bent, rear struts had been
attacked with vice-grips, so damaging the seals
that they had pumped all the oil out, etc. etc.
etc.
My background in electrical and mechanical
engineering and the availability of an excellent
government workshop proved to be of great
benefit! I was forced to stop racing in 1995 due
to a medical problem and this caused a large
gap in my life, which even my wife and family
couldn’t fully fill and that is where this story
begins:
We decided that the Elan body was so bad that
neither of us wanted to tackle it so we enlisted
the help of a fibreglass specialist friend of Kevin’s
in the Manawatu. The body is now almost
complete structurally but will need lots of hours
of finishing work.
It was obvious after a couple of years that Kevin
wasn’t going to get anything started on the car
due to his business and family commitments so
I worked for Civil Aviation for about 30 years as we came to an arrangement whereby I would
a radar and electronics technician before moving do the restoration and co-own the car. Kevin
to the Airways Corporation as a Quality and my daughter Helen live in Feilding so we
Assurance Specialist. In the early 1990’s I set loaded the Elan on to my race car trailer, minus
up my own business as a Quality Systems the body and brought it to Wellington. There
Auditor and consultant. I have had a lifelong wasn’t room in my garage for the LJR and the
interest in sports car racing and spent nearly 40 Elan so the LJR was stripped and the chassis/
years designing, building and racing my LJR body stored outside under a cover. (Poor old
(wasn’t that an original name?) in all its various girl, I think she felt hard done-by after all the
guises. We (the LJR and I) even managed to years of faithful (and unfaithful) service she had
win the SCANZ 2 litre sports-racing title twice in given me. Never mind, she’s now gone to a
the early 1980’s. I may be persuaded to do an good home and is to be restored and raced again
article on the LJR some time in the future.
some time in the future.
My son-in-law Kevin was looking for a project
after giving up racing Formula Fords and rather
unwisely bought (and paid far too much for) a
very tatty Lotus Elan +2, first registered in NZ
in 1968. The car had been driven round the
rough roads in North Auckland for some years
and had suffered a prang or two as well. The
body was terrible – delaminating everywhere,
drivers foot-well nearly non existent, right front
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I started by completely stripping the chassis of
all components and set it up on trestles. The
first job was to get it clean so I could see just
how bad it was. I unstuck the felt blanket from
round the backbone and stupidly hung it over a
joist above our road car. It proved to be so
soaked in gooey oil that it dripped all over the
Telstar and even ran down the windscreen. I was
somewhat unpopular with wife Shirley when she
came to drive it!
Chassis as it was
Left Front as it was
Engine Bay as it was
A water blaster proved to be just the ticket for
getting the muck off the chassis. There was
enough gravel in the backbone part of the
chassis to re-cover the drive to my garage (or
nearly anyway)! Once cleaned and dried I gave
it a good going over and decided that the back
half was not too bad and wasn’t even rusty, the
original oxide paint was still sound and the
mounting points were all correctly aligned. A
few minor modifications to remove, some
welding holes to fill and some straightening
round the back wishbone anchor points where
someone had put a jack in the wrong place.
Right front as it was
The front half was a different matter! As
mentioned earlier, both towers were beyond
repair, there were several cracks in the side rails
of the chassis, the right side was distorted and
some idiot had cut a section out to enable the
exhaust system to be removed, causing another
large crack to develop. I can’t imagine what the
thing must have been like to drive with the front
geometry drastically out of kilter and the chassis
about as stiff as spaghetti soaked in tomato
sauce!
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I decided that we would have
to fabricate two new front
towers
as
well
as
straightening the chassis
rails, welding and reinforcing
the cracks and cut-outs and
realigning the whole fersh
mess.
At this stage I needed to
involve a vehicle repair
certifier as the job was so
major. I was not a member
of the Constructors Club at
the time so I was
recommended a guy from
Naenae who has proved
most helpful and realistic. I
managed to find all the
critical specifications in
various books including a
workshop manual held in the
Wellington Public Library and
the “Authentic Lotus Elan and
Plus 2” by Robinshaw and
Ross plus various other
magazines and restoration
books.
The next job was to make a
set of jigs so that the chassis
could be set up so that all the
pick-up points would be in the
right place when it was
welded back together. I was
lucky here because the left hand tower, although
full of rust, was correctly aligned as measured
by various straight edges, steel rulers and a
clinometer. This gave reference points for setting
up the left side and aligning the whole lot with
the rear of the chassis.
I then removed the right (damaged) tower from
the side rail and cross member and tidied up
the rail and the end of the cross member which
were to remain. I had decided that the top section
of the tower which holds the wishbone pivots
and spring/damper attachment was ok so I cut
off the bottom three quarters and set about
fabricating a new tower round the remains of
the old. This was made of 2mm mild steel sheet
(slightly heavier than the original 1.8mm ms
sheet). I found gas welding the easiest for this
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Right front finished
Front of chassis finished
job and it finished up very strong and quite
professional looking. Next we set up the new
tower in the jig and DC Arc welded it onto the
cross member and side rail. One side was now
structurally complete and straight.
The left side was a repeat of the right and was
less of a problem as there was less damage
and distortion to worry about. The chassis side
rail cracks were then cleaned up and welded
with the aid of John Hill’s Mig Welder and these
were reinforced with a number of beads of weld
stitched across each crack at strategic points.
Finally the whole chassis was checked for
alignment and dimensions and found to be less
than 1.0mm out at any point and the castor angle
correct within 15 minutes of arc – probably better
than new!
LJR at Manfeild
All that remained was to clean it all over with
wire buff, disc sander and hand rubbing before
applying the recommended POR15 treatment
brushed on and followed by a sprayed coat of
POR ‘Tie Coat’ to enable finishing with 3 coats
of Red Oxide Lacquer.
The Repair Certifier inspected it again at this
stage and went away happy – said he didn’t need
to see it again until it was mechanically complete.
Instalment 2: Suspension rebuild (If anyone’s
awake to read it)!
Almac Cars
P.O. Box 40483
Nicolaus Street
ALMAC
CARS
UPPER HUTT
Tel/Fax: 04 528 8680
Contact: Alex McDonald for Brochure
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