RE: Third-to-last Lotus Carlton for sale
RE: Third-to-last Lotus Carlton for sale
Yesterday

Third-to-last Lotus Carlton for sale

Very fast family cars are two-a-penny these days; precisely none of them rival Vauxhall's masterstroke


If you’ve spent any time frequenting less interesting car websites, you may well know that a refreshed Vauxhall Astra is inbound. This is good news for anyone in the market for a worthy and affordable hatchback. Less so for anyone interested in driving for its own sake. There are rumours, of course, of a new electrified GSE variant in the fullness of time, one meant to stave off the Chinese competitors with the kind of ‘emotional appeal’ they find it difficult to replicate. 

Without wishing to preempt its best intentions, we’re inclined to think that this would be like fighting off a marauding grizzly bear with a wet box of tissues. Vauxhall hasn’t made a proper hot hatch in a decade. It has stuck so doggedly to a rational, value-led strategy since then that most people would associate it with performance in the same way they associate a Wetherspoons pub with fine dining. Merely tweaking the formula ain’t going to do it. 

What’s needed is a brick through the conservatory window. Which is pretty much what the Lotus Carlton was. Take one humdrum saloon, effectively throw that away, and return to market with a four-door, rear-drive monster powered by a 3.6-litre turbocharged straight-six that could outrun a Ferrari 348. Even in an era when no amount of doors or boot space is an impediment to straight-line speed, there is something very special about the Imperial Green Carlton that could. 

Three reasons for that. One, there was the scale of the output: 380-odd horsepower is a lively amount now, but in 1990 it seemed preposterous. Two, somehow it looked - and still looks - like the sills and intake and spoiler were integral to the original design, not bolted on later. Which is to say it looks brilliant. Three, it was gold thread spun from the lowliest pig iron. People in general, and the British in particular, love an underdog story. Even if we’re oddly suspicious of anything world-class. 

This means its Vauxhall-ness is very much baked into the mix, though it’s worth recalling (for the umpteenth time) that the manufacturer regularly pulled this club from its bag. Not just in motorsport terms, but also in its fearlessness in launching stuff that was very left of centre - the VX220 and Monaro and VXR8 and Maloo and everything else beside that proved, if nothing else, that the people behind the short-sleeve shirt and tie exterior had blood running through their veins. Along with a sense of humour. 

Now, having put aside performance cars for so long, Vauxhall has done away with decades of goodwill. Not to mention the muscle memory that comes with unforgettable product or the partnerships that get you there. This one is said to be the third-to-last Lotus Carlton ever produced - though more importantly, it’s had a recent bare metal respray and mechanical refresh after nearly two decades in a private collection. With 85k already on the clock, it’s £40k cheaper than the fully restored, low-mile example we spotted last year. Or about the same as an entry-level, rear-drive Porsche Taycan. Or three Astras. We know where our £90k would be headed. 


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Author
Discussion

loudlashadjuster

Original Poster:

6,100 posts

208 months

Yesterday (20:21)
quotequote all
An all-time great cloud9

And while I'm sure there are enough people with the spare cash to spunk £90k on one, it tells me that these are now going to be out of the reach of people who will actually own and drive them out of passion as their only car, and they are destined only to be part of 'a collection'.

And that's a bit sad.

loudlashadjuster

Original Poster:

6,100 posts

208 months

Yesterday (20:22)
quotequote all
The initial message was deleted from this topic on 07 April 2026 at 20:52

The Leaper

5,516 posts

230 months

Yesterday (20:26)
quotequote all
I had fire engine red Carlton GSI 24v manual for five years, did around 130,000 miles. Fab car. I always lusted after the Lotus Carlton. As Tina T sang, "Simply the Best".

R.

Mikebentley

8,329 posts

164 months

Yesterday (20:32)
quotequote all
I had a white 3.0 CDi with the leather and cookie cutter grill. It was epic and looked just like a Police car at the time.

_Rodders_

1,397 posts

43 months

Yesterday (20:36)
quotequote all
Just slightly before my time.

I only really remember the stories of these and Escort Cosworths getting nicked, a lot, and subsequently costing 5 figures to insure for a while.

Augustus Windsock

3,723 posts

179 months

Yesterday (20:39)
quotequote all
Or for another £5k you can have one with a third of the mileage ( urgently advertised on PH)
Depends what this vendor takes to mean a mechanical overhaul of course..

Earthdweller

17,969 posts

150 months

Yesterday (20:46)
quotequote all
Back in the 90's there were half a dozen of these in the back of the showroom at Brown's of Loughton iirc about £40k

Lovely beasts but I think a hard sell used back then

119

17,379 posts

60 months

Yesterday (20:50)
quotequote all
I guess a lot of the issue will be parts availability to make them viable as a daily?

andrew

10,296 posts

216 months

Yesterday (21:09)
quotequote all
come on pistonheads

maybe just a little more credit to hethel ???

SE2

267 posts

160 months

Yesterday (21:11)
quotequote all
A stripped 'Sport 300' style one in Colman's Yellow with fixed front and rear buckets would be a cool restomod.

N.A.R.T Spyder

187 posts

84 months

Yesterday (21:22)
quotequote all
Yes it's 90k, but when you open the bonnet you're confronted with the words 'LOTUS Charge Cooled' in big red letters. I mean that's gonna put a smile on the face of any true petrol head.

Quhet

2,805 posts

170 months

Yesterday (21:42)
quotequote all
Oh yes, fantastic! These have such presence.

Slightly off topic but the interior shot is so evocative of executive cars of the 80s and early 90s. Swathes of leather and wood lick

B'stard Child

30,815 posts

270 months

Yesterday (22:04)
quotequote all
loudlashadjuster said:
An all-time great cloud9

And while I'm sure there are enough people with the spare cash to spunk £90k on one, it tells me that these are now going to be out of the reach of people who will actually own and drive them out of passion as their only car, and they are destined only to be part of 'a collection'.

And that's a bit sad.
Yeah that is possible - some are just show ponies now kept in garages and occasionally taken to a show field to be exhibited




Not for me wink



Although it does need welding (again)

loudlashadjuster

Original Poster:

6,100 posts

208 months

Yesterday (22:07)
quotequote all
B'stard Child said:
loudlashadjuster said:
An all-time great cloud9

And while I'm sure there are enough people with the spare cash to spunk £90k on one, it tells me that these are now going to be out of the reach of people who will actually own and drive them out of passion as their only car, and they are destined only to be part of 'a collection'.

And that's a bit sad.
Yeah that is possible - some are just show ponies now kept in garages and occasionally taken to a show field to be exhibited




Not for me wink



Although it does need welding (again)
biggrinbow

LotusOmega375D

9,083 posts

177 months

Yesterday (22:14)
quotequote all
Couple of non OEM details for anyone considering this car: awful chrome build number tag added to the dashboard and smoked side repeater lenses. Interior looks a bit tired for £90k IMO.

irish boy

3,879 posts

260 months

Yesterday (22:17)
quotequote all
Fabulous things. Calvin just bought what looks to be a very decent example for £60k.


https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=61WIcDekx_g&pp=y...

B'stard Child

30,815 posts

270 months

Yesterday (22:17)
quotequote all
119 said:
I guess a lot of the issue will be parts availability to make them viable as a daily?
Between 2001 and 2007 I used mine as a daily driver (10 to 15 years old) - It's been occasionally pressed into daily service a few times since then when other cars have been broken but tinworm concerns are the biggest reason not to use one over winter when roads are wet and even worse salted

Parts wise for a "parts bin special" it's pretty good - for a while the body kit was the biggest issue for repair in the event of a small shunt - but the original molds were sourced and new body kit can be sourced.


Mr Tidy

29,705 posts

151 months

Yesterday (22:20)
quotequote all
B'stard Child said:
loudlashadjuster said:
An all-time great cloud9



Although it does need welding (again)
Perfect, that's what it's for. thumbup

I've always loved them, especially after the headlines in the Daily Wail, and they don't look over-priced when you look at what people will pay for a Sierra Cosworth which isn't nearly as special IMHO.

Robertb

3,462 posts

262 months

Yesterday (22:27)
quotequote all
B'stard Child said:
loudlashadjuster said:
An all-time great cloud9

And while I'm sure there are enough people with the spare cash to spunk £90k on one, it tells me that these are now going to be out of the reach of people who will actually own and drive them out of passion as their only car, and they are destined only to be part of 'a collection'.

And that's a bit sad.
Yeah that is possible - some are just show ponies now kept in garages and occasionally taken to a show field to be exhibited




Not for me wink



Although it does need welding (again)
One of my favourite car pics. Wish I d been at Shelsley to see you do that!

Total hero car for me, ever since I read the Russell Bulgin “Rain stopped play” article.

Edited by Robertb on Tuesday 7th April 22:30

B'stard Child

30,815 posts

270 months

Yesterday (22:30)
quotequote all
Robertb said:
One of my favourite car pics. Wish I d been at Shelsley to see you do that!
I wish I'd shut the rear window!!!!