It’s time again to have an archaic Commodore PET computer pick a random page from the 2005 book, The World’s Worst Cars, written by Craig Cheetham, and then defend and redeem the car shown on that page, because I maintain that Mr.Cheetham has created a book not of The World’s Worst Cars, as the title claims, but rather of some of the World’s More Interesting Cars. Most of the cars in this book – perhaps all – do not deserve to be trapped in between the covers of this deceitful tome. And I’m going to redeem them, one by one. So let’s do it! We had a little break while I was at Monterey Car Week, but now we’re back! To redeem!
There’s only one right way to do this, of course, and that’s to have my Commodore PET pick a random page, via a small program in BASIC that chooses a random number between 1 and 317.
Let’s see what car the PET commands us to redeem today!
Page 46! And what car lives on page 46?
Oh wow: the Lotus Elite/Eclat. Oh, Craig. What have you done?
I think this may be one of the more unfair entries we’ve seen in this book, and that’s saying something. The Lotus Elite/Eclat was a revolutionary car for Lotus when it came out in 1974. Remember, Lotuses were known for being tiny, light, nimble, two-seat little corner-carving monsters, and now here was Lotus giving everyone, seemingly out of the blue, a roomy four-seater hatchback/almost-shooting-brake vehicle.
You know all the hand-wringing articles wondering if the new Lotus Eletre electric SUV is “really a Lotus?” Well, the uproar was like that, just 50 years earlier.
The Elite was the first “civilized” Lotus; you could drive and hear the radio, you could sit comfortably, with luggage and three friends, all things that would be fantasies in Lotuses that came before. Reviewers of the time appreciated this new kind of Lotus; more GT car than sports car, but much more comfortable and usable than other Lotuses. And, it still handled, drove, and rode wonderfully, thanks in part to a Colin Chapman-designed backbone chassis and lightweight fiberglass bodywork that used a new method known as Vacuum-Assisted Resin Injection (VARI). The end result was a surprisingly roomy car that only weighed 2600 pounds.
The striking, wedge-like design was penned by Oliver Winterbottom I think looks like some of the best of ’70s design, and did not, as our Craig Cheetham called it, “embodie[d] all that was gaudy and uncultured about 1970s fashion.” Really, Craig? I mean, look at it:
That’s just not ugly, I’m sorry. It’s sleek! It’s like what I imagine AMC Gremlin designer Dick Teague imagined the Gremlin would look like in his head, before cruel reality worked it over but good.
The Eclat was similar (and actually used the exact same fiberglass molds from that horizontal character line down) but had a more fastback design:
The interior was really remarkable, designed by Italdesign and having some of the best back seats ever seen in a production vehicle, ever:
On top of that, while it looks like a hatchback sort of design, it wasn’t, not exactly; there was a glass window dividing the cargo area from the passenger compartment, to keep noise and – if you were driving with something big enough it stuck out of the hatch – exhaust fumes from getting in the cabin:
That’s quite a level of refinement for any car, especially a Lotus! Plus, the car was surprisingly safe, incorporating steel beams into the doors even before American safety regulations demanded it, and the Elite actually won an important European safety award, the sort of thing that was usually handed out to Volvos.
Now, it wasn’t the fastest car out there, with a 2.2-liter inline four making around 155 horsepower, not bad for the time, all thimngs considered. This engine also ended up in Jensen-Healeys.
The book’s condemnation of the Elite mostly seems to revolve around reliability issues, especially overheating and cylinder head issues, which very likely were a thing, but we’re talking about a British car from the 1970s – is that kind of unreliability really unique to this car?
Also, Cheetham notes that electrical issues could cause one of the pop-up headlights to stay up, like it’s winking, but he doesn’t note the smart detail about the Elite’s design: when a headlight motor failed, the light failed in the up position, so you still had the ability to use the light! That’s good thinking.
I’m just going to end this with a contemporary video review of the Elite:
… and a quote from a contemporary review of the car:
Why aren’t Camaros like this? And Mustangs? And Monzas? How can Colin Chapman, who is supposed to be a racer and therefore know nothing about passenger-car design, produce a more efficient passenger car than General Motors or Ford?
– Patrick Bedard, Car and Driver Magazine, 1975
Those words alone you’d think would be enough to keep the Elite/Eclat out of a book like this; but, as our boy Craig has shown to us before, actual reason and facts have no place when it comes to what gets flung into the fiery pit of The World’s Worst Cars.
‘World’s Worst Cars’ Book Redemption: Maserati Biturbo
‘World’s Worst Cars’ Book Redemption: Toyota Crown
‘World’s Worst Cars’ Book Redemption: Oldsmobile Toronado
It looks like a Lambo Diablo and a Gremlin loved each other very much and had a baby.
It was so ugly that when it was born, they slapped the mother.
Woohoo! Back to putting Mr Cheetham in his place!
I’ve always loved the Eclat. Maybe I was a shooting brake admirer (general shape at least if not the interior plan) even before I knew what they were.
And that hood and front end — like another favorite, the 512bb, but a touch less brutish and more refined while still assertive.
It is a handsome car indeed.
I had my Elite at a cars and coffee last year, and my favourite comment I overheard was a kid exclaiming to his dad about my Elite ” it looks like a Pantera station wagon!”
I hate this version of the Elite. It has almost twice the mass and twice the aero drag of its predecessor, and IMO looks like butt in comparison. But I’m not a fan of wedges.
The original Elite is quite a looker, with its sexy curves, and is delightfully small and nimble. And gets over 40 mpg.
Every time I see the ‘Éclat’ car name in this article, my brain autocorrects to ‘Lotus Éclair’. Now I’m hungry.
Come on Craig, that’s not even the worst Lotus.
The car is gorgeous. Are we all being polite and not mentioning the Sansabelt slacks with the necktie tucked into the waistband? Fab.
I haven’t seen this sort of disdain to CRAIG since the last Dankpods mention. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sFNpbKqK7Fs
Oh, I have some first hand experience! I bought a lawn ornament Elite back in April and have been getting back on the road. It’s definitely not a perfect car, but where’s the fun in that?
A couple of points- the major issue on these is that the early chassis was rust prone so would rot out underneath a perfect looking car. Mine was swapped to an updated galvanised chassis in the late 80s and that’s still in perfect shape. In some ways that’s an advantage over my other fibreglass car (Matra Bagheera) in that the body is a complete fibreglass unit that can be separated from the chassis instead of panels being bonded to a steel frame.
The 907 engine doesn’t seem to be much worse reliability wise than anything else available at the time. The criticism was the lack of low down torque for a GT car. That was fixed with the later 2.2 (most Elites are the earlier 2.0). 155hp from that at the time wasn’t shabby, but cost of the car at the time was at odds with a lowly 4 cylinder. A bigger weakness was the gearbox, a lotus designed five speed using the internals from an Austin Maxi. It wasn’t really strong enough so failures were common. Later 2.2s used a stronger Toyota box.
The headlights are vacuum powered, as was the fashion at the time. Over time that all gets leaky. There’s a conversion kit available to swap to electric powered ones that fixes all of that.
I just love the style of the Elite and can’t wait to be actually able to drive it!
What work does yours need before it’ll be roadworthy?
I have a ’78 Elite, these are absolutely fantastic driving cars. I’ve had mine since the spring of 2022 and it’s honestly been no worse for reliability than any 25+ year old car I’ve owned, in fact better than some.
My car had been sitting for about 20 years following a stalled restoration, but was then rescued by my local independent Lotus mechanic. It’s unrestored, but he got it into good driver state before selling it.
Parts have been surprisingly easy to find from a few major suppliers for these in the UK (I’m on the west coast of Canada).
It was much the same as yours- had been sat for 20 years, for at least some of the time outside under a tarp with no windows so the interior needs everything. I’m in the UK so parts are reasonably easy to get though I’ve been doing a lot of travelling to get a set of seats ( that still need reupholstering).
I’ve got it running, so going through everything mechanical before it’s on the road. What has delayed it was deciding to repaint- it had been painted in the past but I’ve gone back to a not quite original turquoise.
Always fun to see them further afield!
Correcting my comment- the later gearbox was a Getrag, but the Supra box is a popular swap.
Nice to see actual Elitists here! I’ve once sat at the driver’s seat of a Lotus Elite and it was just a lovely place to sit in.
The back seats are pretty awesome too, surprisingly comfortable. Not the easiest to get back out of though.
Oh man I love these
There’s a screaming deal on one of these right now on eBay, 5000 bucks!
If I weren’t in the middle of dealing with some family obligations this week, it would be mine already
https://www.ebay.com/itm/395609995925
From the listing..BIN now $3,999
Relisted….lost my storage
BUY NOW PRICE LOWERED TODAY !!!
1977 Lotus Elite –
Lotus Big Valve Twin Cam – 5 speed
5 Lotus Wheels – as pictured
Privately owned & garaged in Sawyer Michigan. Just north of New Buffalo Michigan or 90 min from Chicago
I purchased it about 15 years ago & I rolled into the garage.
I did have running & drove around back roads when I first bought it
Currently, last time I had it running , the water pump was leaking. I bought a rebuild kit & has a bearing presses in – but still seem to have leakage
Unfortunately the squirrels got into the interior & will need completely redone
All glass is intact –
Body is straight
Solid car for rebuild project
I so much want one of these. The same engine in my sister’s Jensen Healey turned out to be quite reliable. Actually come to think of it other than squirrels finding it to be delicious Jensen Healy worked out really well for her and she still has it.
Also, I understand that there is plenty of room for an LS swap The only thing that is a little dismaying is that the central backbone frame is protected by the drivers backbone in the event of a side impact.
But boy, I love the looks, It’s still looks like it’s from the future or at least a parallel universe, but in a good way.
Thanks for pointing out the 907 in the Jensen Healey, these truly can be reliable engines with just modern and inexpensive upgrades that really let the engine sing. Fortunately, most people are unaware of these fixes and steer away from these cars and the prices stay lower. 😉
That car is screaming for an EV swap to my mind. It would solve the whole “British engine unreliability” issue. Bonus points for using as many Lucas components as possible.
I think the Oldsmobile Toronado is the one begging for an EV swap.
This one? Maybe a Honda K swap.
Actually, the engine it came with can be made to run pretty reliably.
EV is the new LS.
Then you don’t even have to add your own replacement smoke, it will do it for you when it catches fire!
I was disappointed to find that the review following that Thames Television title card was not done by Benny Hill.
This book is like the primordial, ancestral form of a clickbait listicle. I hate it. So much.
Please continue posting.
Google doesn’t tell me much biographical information about this guy, other than he wrote a bunch of these types of books, and he lives in the UK. A quick scan of his other titles tells me that none of his books appear to be well-researched or insightful.
I’m not so sure I’d get along with this Craig Cheetham fella, this Elite is beautiful.
The hood and pop up light fit on that test car is atrocious.
They all do that.
Lotuses or all cars with pop up headlights? It must be the former because I know from personal experience its not the latter.
It’s not an issue on my Toyotas with pop ups, I’ll say that.
It wasn’t an issue on my Fiat either.
Not on my Porsche pop ups either. Since we are speaking on pop up lights, the lights I found incredibly reliable as they were mechanical AND also very interesting were the pop ups (roll overs?) on my father’s Opel GT. Simply a great design!
I’ve seen a couple of other similar books at the used bookstore edited by Craig Cheetham, things like “The worlds greatest sports cars” or “the best cars in the world”, and I’m legitimately beginning to think it’s a made up name to put on these kinds of books.
You’ve done it now! You found the Alan Smithee of automotive journalism!
That’s when someone doesn’t want their name on the film, not when someone writes a book that shouldn’t be written.
Good thing I did a search for Alan Smithee before commenting, but yeah.
“ …beginning to think it’s a made up name to put on…”
I’ve got the sports cars book (someone gave it to me for Christmas).
Given how it’s written, it’d make sense to put a placeholder name on it.
No no, he’s completely legit. He has a famous brother, actually, who is an attorney who works alongside Jonathan Dewey and Eric Howe, esqs.
This is the best “Worst” so far. I was in love with these when they first came out (I was still heading for my teens) and still am. There is not a single gaudy or uncultured feature anywhere on either of them.
Mandela effect, but I swear this was known as the Lotus Eclair.
And Oliver Winterbottom (giggle); cant get any more British than that.
Simon Summersausage might want to discuss that.
Peter Summersausage was teased mercilessly by his schoolmates about his name so he changed it to Simon.
Didn’t he invent heated seats?
…and cricket boxes.
The Citroen XM had the same sort of glass divider arrangement, on a cold and weathery sort of day you could open the hatchback and your passengers did not get all chilly. I wonder if Citroen paid a license fee? Stranger things have happened in the world of both companies.
Thanks Torch.
The want for one of these is still strong after 50 years.
I think this is “the world’s worst cars book” as in the book is the worst. I mean really, most of these examples so far are not terrible cars at all.
So like it’s British, a “cars book”? This would fit with my guess on the big, prestige TV twist, that Craig Cheetham is actually Adrian.
That really is one gorgeous Gremlin!