RE: Lotus Sport Exige to show at Autosport

RE: Lotus Sport Exige to show at Autosport

Thursday 13th January 2005

Lotus Sport Exige to show at Autosport

470bhp/tonne race-ready Sport Exige debuts at Autosport


Lotus Sport, the performance division of Lotus Cars, has developed the new Lotus Sport Exige, a direct motorsport derivative of the successful Lotus Exige (right).

The Lotus designed and engineered racecar was part manufactured by RTN, the team responsible for the Le Mans winning Bentley, using the latest motorsport techniques and procedures to produce a lightweight yet strong carbon-fibre bodywork structure around the standard road-going Lotus Exige Aluminium extruded and bonded chassis.

The Lotus Sport-designed, fully-adjustable suspension system with double wishbones all round was fabricated and manufactured by Pilbeam. Power is provided by a 400bhp Swindon Racing Engines-tuned GM 3-litre V6 racing engine, linked to a Hewland sequential six-speed gearbox. AP Racing provided the braking system.

This one-off racecar has been built for a South East Asian client and is expected to race in selected sportscar races in Asia. There are no plans as yet to build further examples of the Lotus Sport Exige but the base structure has been carefully designed to comply with key motorsport regulations around the world. Adhering to the key Lotus philosophy of performance through lightweight, the Lotus Sport Exige weighs just 850Kg.

The whole project, conducted in complete secrecy, has taken less than six months and the car will run for the first time at the 2.5-mile Hethel test track in mid-January.

Lotus Sport general manager Chris Arnold explained the philosophy behind the Lotus Sport Exige: "The Lotus Sport Exige is a competition car developed directly from the road going Exige. The racecar uses the existing tub with only minor modifications, and careful design has enabled Lotus Sport to package an upgraded power-train assembly whilst maintaining an equivalent weight to the existing road car. When this package is combined with further improvements to suspension and bodywork, it produces a fantastic looking car with great track potential.

"The car has been taken from concept to reality in only six months and I thank all our engineering partners and the staff at Lotus who have worked so hard on this fantastic project."

As the Lotus Sport Exige is, at present, a one-off racecar, a price cannot be given for the racecar package.

Detailed specifications

Chassis and suspension systems

The Lotus Sport Exige is directly developed from the road-going Lotus Exige that was unveiled at the Geneva Motorshow in 2004. The heart of the Sport Exige is the bonded and extruded aluminium chassis, the technology for which was first introduced in the Lotus Elise in 1995.

The Exige chassis, also used in the Lotus Elise 111R, is the latest development of this award-winning structure. It weighs 68Kg and has a torsional stiffness of 10500 Nm/degree. Made up of 25 separate extrusions, and bonded with an epoxy adhesive, the chassis in the Lotus Sport Exige is an exceptionally stiff, strong and lightweight structure. This Lotus technology is so world-leading that it has been used on other non- Lotus products including high performance production front-engined V12 and V8 GT cars.

An FIA approved eight-point roll cage has been bolted to the chassis, prior to the bodywork being fitted.

Double wishbone front suspension is mounted to the same suspension hard points as the road-going Lotus Exige, whilst the rear suspension picks up to a revised rear subframe. However, being a full racecar, there is adjustment for ride height, camber and castor, as well as adjustable front and rear anti-roll bars.  Coil springs are mounted over Ohlins ST44 three-way adjustable dampers front and rear.

Body

Lightweight "Z-Preg." carbon fibre bodywork was specially manufactured for Lotus by RTN, the team responsible for the Le Mans winning Bentley. These panels (front clam, "A" panel, body side and sill, roof, engine cover and rear clam) have been made using an innovative low temperature curing process. The moulds were taken directly from the Sport Exige styling "clay" and the resulting carbon fibre panels are race-ready without having to rely on the costly tooling process used in current carbon fibre technology. This is thought to be the first time that this technology has been used on such large carbon fibre panels.

An aerodynamically developed front splitter, carbon fibre rear diffuser and an adjustable carbon rear wing provide increased levels of downforce. The interior of the Lotus Sport Exige is similar to the standard Exige, but the standard roadcar wiring harness is replaced with a full Raychem 25 system incorporating Mil-spec connectors from Beru Formula 1 Harnesses. Conventional fuses are replaced with circuit breakers, and a Stack display with integrated data recording is fitted as standard.

A racing bucket seat (driver side only) is mounted as right hand drive to optimise weight balance through right hand corners (most circuits run clockwise). A six-point seat belt, prepared for using HANS Safety System, and a removable steering wheel (with quick-connect coupling) is included in the interior package.

The composite energy absorbing crash structure used on the standard road cars is also carried over to the Lotus Sport Exige. This glass fibre composite structure, around five times more energy absorbing than the equivalent steel component, also houses the larger water radiator and provides efficient cooling and air ducting over the carbon front clamshell.

A 100 litre FT3 safety fuel cell (with quick refuelling system) is mounted behind the driver and in front of the engine (as with the road-going Exige). A fully plumbed in electrical fire extinguishing system completes the body package.

Brakes

AP Racing provides the non-ABS braking system, which includes the pedal box (with brake balance bar and cylinders). AP Racing also provides the powerful six piston brake calipers at the front and four piston brake calipers at the rear. These calipers are mated to vented discs (344 mm diameter at the front and 330 mm diameter at the rear).

Rims and Tyres

Ultra lightweight OZ Racing Chrono single-piece cast magnesium rims (8.8J x 17 ET40 at the front and 11.25J x 18 ET50 at the rear) are shod with Yokohama tyres (250/610-17 at the front and 280/650-18 at the rear).

Powertrain: engine and transmission

The narrow angle 3-litre V6 is mounted longitudinally. The naturally aspirated 24-valve engine produces 400bhp at 7,750 rpm and 294 lb-ft of torque at 6,500 rpm with the rev limiter at 8,250 rpm. The power to weight ratio is a phenomenal 470 hp / tonne. The engine weighs 157Kg.

Breathing is via an F1-style airbox and air snorkel from the roof panel of the Sport Exige directly into the six carbon fibre air trumpets.

The dry-sump engine, with a bore of 89.0 mm and stroke of 93.7 mm is water cooled and also uses an oil-water heat exchanger to efficiently cool the oil. The whole engine is controlled by a Motec M600 electronic engine management system fitted inside the cockpit.

The power is transferred from the engine to the rear wheels via a single mass stepped flywheel, AP Racing twin-disc cerametallic race clutch and Hewland NLT sequential six-speed dog type transmission (with in-line shift mechanism). The gearbox itself is cooled through an oil-water heat exchanger. A limited slip differential (separate power and brake ramp angles) completes the powertrain package.

Design

The one-off racecar has been designed by Barney Hatt (Principal Designer for Lotus Design), under the direction of Russell Carr (Chief of Design). Taking the already aerodynamic road going Exige, Hatt designed the Lotus Sport Exige with the requirements to carry the design of the Exige and the brand attributes of Lotus into a competitive racecar.

Russell Carr explained the work needed to design the Lotus Sport Exige, "The objective was to create a dramatic design and to take into account aerodynamic criteria to produce a race car that was not only competitive but also stunningly good looking. General motorsport regulations also had to be adhered to so the fact that the resulting racecar looks like a natural competition evolution of the road going Exige is a testament to the purity and effectiveness of the original design."

Dimensions

The Lotus Sport Exige is slightly longer (350 mm) and wider (100 mm) than the road-going Exige to accommodate the larger engine, wider track, longer wheelbase and to optimise the aerodynamics. The length is mainly from the cockpit rearwards but the short rear overhang design of the road-going Exige is maintained.

Author
Discussion

z_chromozone

Original Poster:

1,436 posts

250 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
Huummm, how much

Z

mudfish

151 posts

247 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
I reckon this could put Lotus back in the £60k+ bracket

dinkel

26,967 posts

259 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
One-off?

With close to 300 hp it would be a serious winner. But I guess the pricetag would be too high.

Looks pretty in that silver outfit. The roof looks heavier and that's a good thing . . .

Pharoah

359 posts

270 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
That is the Original Exige in the picture - the new is below and I want one - badly!!!

[img]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v494/IDG/Exiges/S2Exigesport.jpg[/img]

PetrolTed

34,429 posts

304 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all

PetrolTed

34,429 posts

304 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all

fugatso

563 posts

233 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
Wow!!!!!

boggy

4,603 posts

236 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
That look's absolutely wicked, I wondered what they were up to let's hope we see a road going version

Mr Fix It

466 posts

269 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
The S2 exige is starting to look mean again, like it should have from the start (S1 was so much better...)

shadowninja

76,448 posts

283 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
reminds me of the Elise GT1. not that that is a bad thing!

not keen on the way the car indents behind the front wheel arches though.

guitarman

112 posts

244 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
That is awesome!!!!

S Works

10,166 posts

251 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?t=148776&f=15&h=0

More info and pix in this link on the Exige/Elise/340R forum. What a monster!

RB Will

9,666 posts

241 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
Something to aim for eh Jon?

Stock

1 posts

234 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
very nice technical specification,i hope it does very well and some serious race teams buy a few copies and go GT racing it would give LOTUS fans something interesting to follow through the years ahead.

roxteddy

8 posts

260 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
absolutely stunning... where the S2 exige should have gone already...

GUY JOHNSON

179 posts

265 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
Can you purchase that body kit?



Guy

andy_b

727 posts

252 months

Thursday 13th January 2005
quotequote all
went today. Have to say the car looked bloody stunning, with or without the girl

Have quite a few pics, will upload them somewhere tomorrow

andy_b

727 posts

252 months

Friday 14th January 2005
quotequote all
more pics here:- www.photobox.co.uk/album/1149298

(url updated so you dont have to log in)

>> Edited by andy_b on Friday 14th January 11:55

clanger

1,087 posts

259 months

Friday 14th January 2005
quotequote all
Very very nice

- Put this car into production Lotus its a surefire winner

Martin_S

9,939 posts

246 months

Saturday 15th January 2005
quotequote all
Ditto Andy B and Clanger.

Saw this car today at the show.

BUILD IT NOW, LOTUS!!!