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1966 Lotus 23C

The Lotus 23 was a small-bore sports racer with fiberglass coachwork designed by Frank Costin. Designed to compete in a variety of racing classes, the 23 quickly became known as a 'giant killer,' capable of outperforming more powerful competitors. During its production lifespan, around 131 examples were produced in standard 23, 23B and 23C form.

As one of Lotus' best-selling race cars, the Type 23 had several options including a Coventry Climax 750cc engine, an 1100cc engine, or most popular, the 1600cc Lotus / Ford twin cam. The 23C differs from the 23B with an Mk5 gearbox, wider wheels and tires from the Lotus 25, revised suspension geometry, and fender flares.

The Lotus Type 23 holds the distinction of being the last purebred, small-capacity, sports-racing car to be designed from the ground up by Colin Chapman and his team of talented engineers and designers. Introduced in 1962 at the London Racing Car Show, the Lotus 23 was intended for engines of 750cc to 1300cc engines with a Renault 4-speed transaxle. Production versions used a 5-speed Hewland MKIII unit which used the Volkswagen differential gear set and the magnesium alloy transaxle case from Volkswagen in an upside-down configuration, housing bespoke straight-cut gears with dog-rings.

At its May 1962 debut at the Nürburgring, Jim Clark opened up a 27-second lead over the Porsche piloted by Dan Gurney, and may have won had he not retired from the race after being overcome by exhaust fumes from a broken exhaust header. A questionable disqualification of the 23 at Le Mans prompted the famous refusal uttered by Chapman to never again enter the event.

Two Type 23s had been entered in Le Mans in June of 1962 with one equipped with a 742cc aluminum-block DOHC Coventry Climax FWMC and piloted by Les Leston and Tony Shelly. The other example was driven by Jim Clark and Trevor Taylor and powered by a one-liter pushrod Cosworth Mk. III engine. Both cars failed to pass the scrutineering due to the fuel tank capacity being too large, not enough ground clearance or windscreen height, the turning circle being too large, and lacking a spare tire. All but the lack of a spare tire was resolved, including a makeshift tall windscreen.

The Lotus 23 and later 23B used a 4 stud arrangement for the front wheels while the rear had a 6 stud setup. This meant the 23 would need two spare tires for the purpose of changing a flat. To resolve this issue, 4 stud rear hubs were drafted and machined overnight, and flown to Le Mans where they were presented to the scrutineers for approval. To Chapman's dismay, the car was once again rejected. The reason given was that the original 6 stud configuration must have been used by the Lotus Factory as a strength requirement, so the 4 stud configuration must have been unsafe. Even after Lotus engineer Mike Costin produced structural analysis calculations showing the 4 stud rear hub to be safe, it did not change the ruling.

Even though the Lotus 23 was not allowed to compete, a Lotus Elite driven by David Hobbs and Frank Gardner won the 1.3 liter GT class and the Index of Performance prize at the 1962 LeMans race.

ACO officials would later admit they made the wrong decision and that the Lotus 23 should have been allowed to compete, even offered financial compensation. Chapman suggested a very high figure and when it was rejected, he promised 'We will never race again at Le Mans!'

Mechanical Specification

Unlike the previous Lotus 15 and 17, the Lotus 23 FIA Group 4 racer had a mid-engine configuration. Its Lotus 22-sourced space frame chassis with most of the pipes being round steel tubes in various diameters, with the lower side pipes and the width-wise lower pipe behind the cockpit comprised of rectangle tubes. The upper left round pipe was the water feed pipe for the front-mounted radiator, and the lower right side pipe was used as the return path. The upper right side pipe was the oil feed to the oil cooler, and the lower left tube was the return. Arch Motors ('AM' serial number) handled most of the frame construction.

Wider than the 22, it had a 60-inch width for the 23 and 23B, while the 23C was even wider at 65 inches. The wheelbase measured 90 inches and had a length of 139 inches. Much of the suspension was similar to the narrower-frame Lotus 22, with the front using double wishbone arms with outboard coil/damper unit while the rear had radius arms and a top link with a lower reversed wishbone. The steering was a Triumph Herald rack and pinion unit, and the brakes were outboard Girling non-ventilated discs.

In compliance with FIA rules, the Lotus 23 had a horn, a windshield wiper, headlights and tail lights, trunk space to the right-rear of the driver, a mounting space for one spare tire under the front body, rear center license plate light, and a wire-operated emergency brake.

The open two-seater body was built from fiberglass.

The Lotus 23B

Into 1963 a Type 23B version was offered with more robust chassis and a standard 1,558cc Lotus-Ford Twin-Cam engine. It was paired with a 'high torque spec' 5-speed Hewland Mk. V transaxle, while smaller displacement engines used a 5-speed Hewland MK. IV unit. Both the Mk.IV and Mk.V transaxles had GKN (Ford Zephyr) differential gears and a forward-facing selector rod on the right side. The gear shifter was now to the right of the driver. The radiator and oil cooler were combined into a single unit, and the intake funnels on the Weber carburetors were within a 'cold air box' that received cooling air from two oval holes cut out on the top side of the rear body behind the driver.

The Lotus 23C

The Lotus 23C improved upon its 23B sibling with much wider Formula Two tires wrapped on wider 6-stud, six-spoke magnesium wheels front and rear. To cover the tires, the bodywork was given wing-extensions.


Roadster
Chassis number: 23-S-129

Lotus created this 900-pound car as a small displacement sports race car. It is a closed-wheeled, two-passenger design, purpose built for racing. The 23 was created by widening the space frame and adapting the suspension of the Lotus 22 Formula Jr open wheel racer. The 23 debuted at the Nurburgring in 1962. Driven by Jim Clark, the car appeared unbeatable until a loose exhaust header misdirected fumes inside, sickening Clark. Later versions, carrying larger engines, are designated as the 23B and 23C.

Imported by Dutchess Auto, this is one of six 23Cs produced. It sports a Hewland five-speed gearbox, a 25-gallon fuel tank and a 1600 cubic centimeter twin cam engine. It was run in an endurance event in Chicago, prior to its 1968 sale to Stefan Rzesnowiecky of Dayton, Ohio. He campaigned it for many years, with family as his crew. It passed to James Wilson in 1984, and was purchased by the current owner in 2001. It has been vintage raced ever since.


In 1962 Lotus introduced their next iteration of the compact, rear-engined sports cars, the Type 23. It was a derivative of the Lotus 19 which had been produced from 1960 through 1961, as well as the Lotus 20, 21, and 22 cars. The Type 23 made its inaugural racing debut at the Nordschleife in May of 1962. The Lotus was fitted with a 100 horsepower engine, but it was enough to propel the car to the front of the pack, ahead of the Porsches, Ferraris, and Aston Martins. At the wheel was the very capable Jim Clark who had brought the car to the front after the first lap, in the wet. Some of the other cars have as much as four times the horsepower. Sadly, on lap 12 Clark was forced to retire when a damaged exhaust manifold leaked exhaust fumes.

The Type 23 raced extensively in national and international races winning many class victories and oftentimes beating the large-engined competition. It quickly became a popular favorite with many racers and one of Lotus's best-selling race cars of all time.

During its production lifespan Louts offered the lightweight car with a variety of options that included the Coventry Climax 750 cc four-cylinder engine and even a 12-cylinder Rotorvic motor for competition at LeMans. In standard form, the Type 23 came equipped with an 1100 cc engine. A popular option was to upgrade to the Type 23B specification which included the 1600cc Lotus/Ford twin-cam engine. The Lotus 23B was given stronger chassis tubes and fitted with a more potent Ford-based 1.5 and 1.6-liter Lotus Twincam engine.

In 1962 a Type 23B driven by Jim Clark easily proved its potential by leading the Ferrari and Jaguar cars at Nurburgring 1000KM before mechanical difficulty led to a crash. The cars dominated many of the races they entered; even in modern times they still provide podium time for their drivers in vintage and historic racing events.

The Type 23 was constructed of fiberglass and outfitted with a Hewland MK gearbox. The suspension was comprised of double wishbones and dual trailing arms. The steering was rack-and-pinion.

by Dan Vaughan