1995 Lotus Esprit S4 GT Commemorative

0 Comments 17 Bids Winner - racingdriver
8:08 PM, 31 Aug 2021Vehicle sold
Sold for

£34,000

Winner - racingdriver

Vehicle Story

I’d love to say that Ursula Andress emerging goddess like from the Caribbean sea, dripping wet in a white bikini is my over-riding early memory of James Bond films, but it’s actually a white car. We didn’t get to the cinema much when I was a kid (we made our own entertainment in those days) but for my 12th birthday treat my dad took me to see The Spy Who Loved Me where I fell in love both Bond girl Barbara Bach, and the Lotus Esprit.

It’s dramatic chiselled wedge profile is still striking today, but in late 70s depression ravaged Britain it was a revelation. I remember thinking it must have been built specially for the movie, but of course it had actually been released by Lotus a year earlier, as a replacement for the Europa. The usual Lotus construction method of a steel backbone chassis with glassfibre bodywork was retained from the previous model – but that was about all that was, which was entirely intentional.

Lotus boss Colin Chapman knew that producing low volume kit cars was a tenuous existence, as the likes of TVR, Marcos and AC proved by lurching from one financial crisis to another. Always a man with unlimited aspirations, Chapman wanted to launch Lotus into the luxury performance car market and compete with the likes of Porsche and Ferrari. It was a heady dream, and one that few thought realistic, but that wasn’t going to stop him trying.

In order to transform Lotus from specialist sports car producer to one with showrooms in London’s West End, he needed a car with arresting looks, neck snapping performance and impeccable handling, and for the first of these ingredients he turned to Giorgetto Giugiaro, whose folded paper designs had already attracted the likes of Maserati and Volkswagen, for whom he went on to design the Boomerang and Golf.

The second two ingredients of Chapman’s signature dish were delivered to Giugiaro’s Ital Design studio in Milan in 1971 – a modified Europa chassis with its dimensions changed to suit the M70 prototype Lotus engineers had designed as the underpinnings for the new supercar. The final part of the dish was a new engine.

The enigmatic Lotus boss knew the company would need to produce something a little more exciting than the Europa’s Renault engine, and that the 1600cc Ford Kent based Lotus Twin Cam wasn’t up to the job of providing the kind of performance he needed from the new car. A 2-litre, double overhead, cam 4-valve per cylinder slant four was in development by Lotus (Chapman envisaged it being the basis of a future 4-litre V8), but with the cylinder head finalised they still had no block designed to fit it to.

GM’s Vauxhall had, however, launched a 1973cc slant four a few years earlier, with an 8-valve iron head. The bore spacings matched the new Lotus head, so the Norfolk firm bought 10 blocks and four engines, and development of the Lotus 907 engine began in earnest. The new powerplant was production ready in 1970 and Chapman did a deal with Jensen to sell it 15,000 907s for the new Jensen Healey sports car, the money from which he ploughed back into the development of the Esprit.

Apart from financial rewards, this deal also meant that any 907 teething problems could be ironed out in the Jensen (warped cylinder liners anyone?) so that by the time the Esprit was ready for unveiling the new engine was debugged and ready for action. The Esprit debuted at the 1975 Paris Motor Show to crowds who marvelled at the new British supercar that looked like it had jumped straight off a Top Trumps card.

With only 160bhp the new Lotus looked, on paper at least, as though it would struggle against German and Italian competition, but with a kerb weight of under 1000kg its power-to-weight ratio gave it a fighting chance, and although most road testers struggled to replicate the factory’s claimed figures of 0-60 in 8secs and 133mph top speed, its superb handling was universally lauded – and it was oh so beautiful.

And for once the 1973 oil price crisis prompted by the war between Israel and Egypt had a positive effect on a car manufacturer, with the 2-litre, lightweight Lotus able to boast impressive economy figures for a car of its type. This, coupled with Lotus PR manager Don McLaughlan’s triumph of getting Roger Moore’s 007 into the driving seat of an Esprit, albeit with a dazzling array of non-factory options, was enough to make the Esprit a success.

The S1 Esprit was made for two years before Lotus addressed a lot of the car’s shortcomings by improving the seating and interior trim, upgrading the instruments and switchgear and fitting a new wraparound front spoiler and custom built alloy wheels, which raised the car’s luxury image considerably. In 1978 Lotus won the Formula 1 Constructors’ Championship and celebrated by releasing a limited edition Esprit trimmed in their sponsor’s JPS livery.

However, the supercar buying public wanted more power. A stop gap 2.2-litre (912) engine powered just 88 cars before Chapman revealed his masterstroke, the 910 turbo engine. Blowing through twin Dell’Orto side draught carbs, the engine now made 210bhp and 200lb-ft, lifting the Esprit’s performance firmly into supercar territory, with a 150mph top speed and the sprint to 60mph now down to a shade over six seconds.

The debut model for this technological tour de force was named the Essex, after Team Lotus sponsors the for 1979-1981 season, Essex Overseas Petroleum Corporation. Just 45 were built, with the rest of the Esprit Turbo production having an identical spec, minus the blue, red and silver colour scheme.

The Esprit’s third incarnation included 2-litre turbo’d and 2.2-litre naturally aspirated options, more headroom and much improved quality control. The Esprit had grown up, but just as it was celebrating its coming of age, Colin Chapman died unexpectedly, leaving the company rudderless and in a perilous financial position.

Lotus limped on until 1986, when General Motors bought it and provided much needed funds to update the Esprit. Peter Stevens, who would go on to style the McLaren F1, softened and flowed Giugiaro’s wedge and the Esprit instantly looked fresh again. Not only that, a new moulding technique patented by Lotus, allowed Kevlar to be incorporated into the bodywork, improving rigidity by 22%. The turbocharged 910 engine was developed further and now managed 280bhp. But more was to come.

The Lotus Esprit Sport 300 employed a Garret T4 turbo with an uprated charge-cooler, and larger inlet valves (the engine was by now fuel-injected). This delivered a staggering 302bhp, so the 300 in the name was well deserved. This slashed the 0-60 dash to just 4.7 seconds, with the top speed now pushing 170mph. Only 64 were built – that rarity making them some of the most desirable Esprits on the collector market.

Despite the previous models never officially receiving the S3 moniker, the next model was indeed the S4, with a Julian Thomson facelift taking the Esprit into the 90s. But it was under the engine cover that the biggest change occurred, when the S4 finally realised Chapman’s V8 dream. Lotus took two of its 4-valve heads and with GM’s help produced a 3-litre turbocharged V8 that was easily capable of 500bhp, but was tuned to make a lazy 350 in the interests of the rest of the drivetrain hanging together – plenty to get to 60mph from a standstill in 4.3 seconds though.

Finally, after a 28 year production run and 10,675 versions of Giugiaro’s iconic wedge, in all its forms, the Esprit was retired, having brilliantly fulfilled its brief of establishing Lotus as a manufacturer of high performance supercar alternatives to Ferraris or Porsches. The agile English company’s next move would take it into a different market sector altogether, but for us the Esprit years remain the most exciting of them all. We like to think 007 would agree.

  • 37,000
  • 2174
  • MANUAL
  • GOODWOOD GREEN MET.
  • BLACK ALCANTARA
  • Right-hand drive
Vehicle location
Bonhams|Cars Online HQ, United Kingdom

Vehicle Story

I’d love to say that Ursula Andress emerging goddess like from the Caribbean sea, dripping wet in a white bikini is my over-riding early memory of James Bond films, but it’s actually a white car. We didn’t get to the cinema much when I was a kid (we made our own entertainment in those days) but for my 12th birthday treat my dad took me to see The Spy Who Loved Me where I fell in love both Bond girl Barbara Bach, and the Lotus Esprit.

It’s dramatic chiselled wedge profile is still striking today, but in late 70s depression ravaged Britain it was a revelation. I remember thinking it must have been built specially for the movie, but of course it had actually been released by Lotus a year earlier, as a replacement for the Europa. The usual Lotus construction method of a steel backbone chassis with glassfibre bodywork was retained from the previous model – but that was about all that was, which was entirely intentional.

Lotus boss Colin Chapman knew that producing low volume kit cars was a tenuous existence, as the likes of TVR, Marcos and AC proved by lurching from one financial crisis to another. Always a man with unlimited aspirations, Chapman wanted to launch Lotus into the luxury performance car market and compete with the likes of Porsche and Ferrari. It was a heady dream, and one that few thought realistic, but that wasn’t going to stop him trying.

In order to transform Lotus from specialist sports car producer to one with showrooms in London’s West End, he needed a car with arresting looks, neck snapping performance and impeccable handling, and for the first of these ingredients he turned to Giorgetto Giugiaro, whose folded paper designs had already attracted the likes of Maserati and Volkswagen, for whom he went on to design the Boomerang and Golf.

The second two ingredients of Chapman’s signature dish were delivered to Giugiaro’s Ital Design studio in Milan in 1971 – a modified Europa chassis with its dimensions changed to suit the M70 prototype Lotus engineers had designed as the underpinnings for the new supercar. The final part of the dish was a new engine.

The enigmatic Lotus boss knew the company would need to produce something a little more exciting than the Europa’s Renault engine, and that the 1600cc Ford Kent based Lotus Twin Cam wasn’t up to the job of providing the kind of performance he needed from the new car. A 2-litre, double overhead, cam 4-valve per cylinder slant four was in development by Lotus (Chapman envisaged it being the basis of a future 4-litre V8), but with the cylinder head finalised they still had no block designed to fit it to.

GM’s Vauxhall had, however, launched a 1973cc slant four a few years earlier, with an 8-valve iron head. The bore spacings matched the new Lotus head, so the Norfolk firm bought 10 blocks and four engines, and development of the Lotus 907 engine began in earnest. The new powerplant was production ready in 1970 and Chapman did a deal with Jensen to sell it 15,000 907s for the new Jensen Healey sports car, the money from which he ploughed back into the development of the Esprit.

Apart from financial rewards, this deal also meant that any 907 teething problems could be ironed out in the Jensen (warped cylinder liners anyone?) so that by the time the Esprit was ready for unveiling the new engine was debugged and ready for action. The Esprit debuted at the 1975 Paris Motor Show to crowds who marvelled at the new British supercar that looked like it had jumped straight off a Top Trumps card.

With only 160bhp the new Lotus looked, on paper at least, as though it would struggle against German and Italian competition, but with a kerb weight of under 1000kg its power-to-weight ratio gave it a fighting chance, and although most road testers struggled to replicate the factory’s claimed figures of 0-60 in 8secs and 133mph top speed, its superb handling was universally lauded – and it was oh so beautiful.

And for once the 1973 oil price crisis prompted by the war between Israel and Egypt had a positive effect on a car manufacturer, with the 2-litre, lightweight Lotus able to boast impressive economy figures for a car of its type. This, coupled with Lotus PR manager Don McLaughlan’s triumph of getting Roger Moore’s 007 into the driving seat of an Esprit, albeit with a dazzling array of non-factory options, was enough to make the Esprit a success.

The S1 Esprit was made for two years before Lotus addressed a lot of the car’s shortcomings by improving the seating and interior trim, upgrading the instruments and switchgear and fitting a new wraparound front spoiler and custom built alloy wheels, which raised the car’s luxury image considerably. In 1978 Lotus won the Formula 1 Constructors’ Championship and celebrated by releasing a limited edition Esprit trimmed in their sponsor’s JPS livery.

However, the supercar buying public wanted more power. A stop gap 2.2-litre (912) engine powered just 88 cars before Chapman revealed his masterstroke, the 910 turbo engine. Blowing through twin Dell’Orto side draught carbs, the engine now made 210bhp and 200lb-ft, lifting the Esprit’s performance firmly into supercar territory, with a 150mph top speed and the sprint to 60mph now down to a shade over six seconds.

The debut model for this technological tour de force was named the Essex, after Team Lotus sponsors the for 1979-1981 season, Essex Overseas Petroleum Corporation. Just 45 were built, with the rest of the Esprit Turbo production having an identical spec, minus the blue, red and silver colour scheme.

The Esprit’s third incarnation included 2-litre turbo’d and 2.2-litre naturally aspirated options, more headroom and much improved quality control. The Esprit had grown up, but just as it was celebrating its coming of age, Colin Chapman died unexpectedly, leaving the company rudderless and in a perilous financial position.

Lotus limped on until 1986, when General Motors bought it and provided much needed funds to update the Esprit. Peter Stevens, who would go on to style the McLaren F1, softened and flowed Giugiaro’s wedge and the Esprit instantly looked fresh again. Not only that, a new moulding technique patented by Lotus, allowed Kevlar to be incorporated into the bodywork, improving rigidity by 22%. The turbocharged 910 engine was developed further and now managed 280bhp. But more was to come.

The Lotus Esprit Sport 300 employed a Garret T4 turbo with an uprated charge-cooler, and larger inlet valves (the engine was by now fuel-injected). This delivered a staggering 302bhp, so the 300 in the name was well deserved. This slashed the 0-60 dash to just 4.7 seconds, with the top speed now pushing 170mph. Only 64 were built – that rarity making them some of the most desirable Esprits on the collector market.

Despite the previous models never officially receiving the S3 moniker, the next model was indeed the S4, with a Julian Thomson facelift taking the Esprit into the 90s. But it was under the engine cover that the biggest change occurred, when the S4 finally realised Chapman’s V8 dream. Lotus took two of its 4-valve heads and with GM’s help produced a 3-litre turbocharged V8 that was easily capable of 500bhp, but was tuned to make a lazy 350 in the interests of the rest of the drivetrain hanging together – plenty to get to 60mph from a standstill in 4.3 seconds though.

Finally, after a 28 year production run and 10,675 versions of Giugiaro’s iconic wedge, in all its forms, the Esprit was retired, having brilliantly fulfilled its brief of establishing Lotus as a manufacturer of high performance supercar alternatives to Ferraris or Porsches. The agile English company’s next move would take it into a different market sector altogether, but for us the Esprit years remain the most exciting of them all. We like to think 007 would agree.

Gallery

Vehicle Overview

With a highly developed 2.2-litre fuel-injected version of the Lotus slant 4, the S4 carried the Esprit performance curve ever upwards, and in 1994 Lotus marked Thorkild Thyrring’s class win in that year’s BRDC GT Championship with a (very) limited edition S4 GT.

Just 11 were built, of which this is the ninth. The green bodywork and bright yellow wheels are a nod to Lotus single seat race cars going back to the Lotus 18 and 22 and the famous Jim Clark era, and this very limited edition car, clearly signal the car’s motorsport heritage.

Exterior

This colour scheme is to Lotus as the blue and orange of Gulf is to Porsche. It couldn’t be anything other than an iconic model from the Norfolk based specialist car manufacturer, and never did it look as sleek as this.

Apart from some tiny marks around the door handles, the rich Lotus Goodwood Green Metallic paint gleams as though factory fresh, and the contrasting yellow alloys, shod with 2 new rear tyres, are equally immaculate. It’s a striking looking piece of automotive art and, considering it was built to celebrate a motorsport victory it’s more restrained than other limited edition Esprits.

Other than the colours and the fairly small script that reads GT Championship Winner in front of the rear wheel arch, the Commemorative Edition keeps its powder pretty dry (although it lays its cards firmly on the table if you push the accelerator).

The beautifully crafted rear spoiler arcs across the car’s rear like a Norman Foster architectural creation, with none of the clunky bluff and bluster of more crudely implemented aero aids, and at the front the moulded ducting politely invites air to enter and feed the Lotus animal.

The heart of the beast is the turbocharged slant four and it looks immaculate under the engine cover. If you’re a show and shine enthusiast you might want to replace a few tarnished clips and fittings, but other than that you can clunk the cover shut and move on.

Interior

Black leather and Alcantara clothes the cabin space and it’s in lovely condition, fully reflecting the low mileage and stunning exterior. Motorsport nods include the bright red steering wheel and commemorative plaque mounted high at the front of the roof, reminding you that you’re sat in a very rare Lotus.

There’s a small mark on one of the passenger seat bolsters which could probably be removed by a specialist car cleaner, and some slight signs of wear on the handbrake gaiter, but other than that this is the interior of a car that’s clearly been cosseted.

A modern Alpine stereo with USB and Bluetooth connectivity is fitted but the owner assures us the original cassette radio unit comes with the car, should the new owner wish to go for the 100% original look.

The car has had a gearshift improvement kit fitted.

Mechanical

This was built as and remains a driver’s car, and the underside shows it’s been enjoyed as it should be, with minor surface corrosion on suspension parts and the usual signs of use. However, everything is in excellent condition and the car needs no work whatsoever – it’s ready to be enjoyed.

History Highlights

There’s an excellent service history with the car and a mountain of bills and receipts that indicate the car has been maintained with no regard to cost. It’s presented for auction by a serious Lotus collector who only buys the very rarest editions of the marque.

What We Think

How rare do you want your Esprit to be? Only 11 of these were built so you’re pretty unlikely to see another for sale. The car runs and sounds fabulous too, with its stainless sports exhaust – and drives perfectly. And with just 37,000 miles on the clock the chances of finding a better one are on the micron-thin side of very slim indeed.

When it’s gone, it’s gone!

Viewing is always encouraged and as stated this car is located at our Abingdon headquarters; we are open Mon-Fri, 9am-5pm and to arrange an appointment please use the ‘Contact Seller’ button at the top of the listing to make an appointment. Feel free to ask any questions or make observations in the comments section below, or try our ‘Frequently Asked Questions’.

About this auction

Estimated value

£35,000 - £50,000

Seller

Private: bernie18
Buyer’s premium
5% of the winning bid (minimum £500, maximum £5,000), plus 20% VAT on the Premium only.