Skip advert
Advertisement
Features

Lotus M90 Elan – Dead on arrival

Financial issues, the death of the company founder and a change of drivetrain ethos at a Japanese giant all played their part in the demise of this 1980s concept for a rear-driven Elan

Lotus M90 Elan Dead on arrival

During the 1970s Colin Chapman steered Lotus upmarket, selling the Seven to Caterham and killing the original Elan in order to introduce the upmarket Elite coupe of 1974, briskly followed by its Éclat sister and the mid-engined Esprit. However, these fancier models weren’t enough to run the Hethel factory at capacity, which is why Mike Kimberley, Lotus’s chief engineer and later managing director, asked designer Oliver Winterbottom to start work on a cheaper, 2+2 sports car, based on a cut-down Elite chassis.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The project promptly stalled for lack of finances, only to be re-ignited at the end of the ’70s when Chapman agreed to a new entry-level car if Lotus could persuade a larger manufacturer to provide a cost-effective powertrain. Kimberley set about finding a big fish to whom Lotus could provide know-how from its new engineering consultancy in return for hardware, and in late 1980 sealed a deal with Toyota. Lotus would undertake development work for the Japanese giant (engines initially, though they would later work on the Supra and, according to unconfirmed rumour, the original MR2) in return for which Hethel would receive the 2-litre four and RWD drivetrain from the Celica

With a deal done, the project was assigned the codename M90 and Winterbottom was left alone during 1981 to refine the style and packaging of coupe and roadster versions. Unfortunately, the early ’80s weren’t kind to Lotus and in December 1982, as the company ran dangerously short of money, its problems were compounded when Colin Chapman died of a heart attack. The M90 was the last Lotus project to receive his input.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

> An uncomfortable journey in a Lotus 2-Eleven – evo Archive

In the wake of its founder’s death, Lotus teetered on the brink of collapse until Kimberley persuaded Toyota to take a 22-and-a-half per cent stake, quickly followed by major investment from David Wickens of British Car Auctions, who bought up 29 per cent and became the company’s new chairman. With a fresh start for the company the M90 was given a renewed sense of purpose. The wheelbase was chopped to make it more agile, the Toyota engine was now the 1.6-litre 16-valve unit from the AE86, and the design was refined with a sharper, shorter nose and the slender rear lights from the Aston Martin Lagonda. The first running prototype, a roadster, was completed in March 1984.

Advertisement - Article continues below

On paper M90 was a promising idea, what with a zingy little engine driving the rear wheels and a target weight of just 860kg. Unfortunately, the finished car didn’t live up to this promise, blighted by poor chassis rigidity and a wedgy design that risked looking dated by the time it went on sale. Worse yet, there was a feeling within management that the car was too predictable, at odds with the Lotus spirit of innovation. 

Meanwhile, the Toyota consultancy had allowed senior Lotus engineers to compare the existing rear-drive Corolla to an early example of its front-wheel-drive replacement, and their conclusion, cemented by findings on projects for other car makers, was that the future would be pulled rather than pushed. Without telling the M90 team, Lotus management asked Peter Stevens to work up a new styling theme for a possible front-wheel-drive sports car, and in early 1985 the increasingly unloved M90 was brought together with a full-size model of Stevens’ proposal for a management review. The board voted to proceed with a front-driven car and the rear-wheel-drive M90 was dead.

The lone prototype was stashed in a Hethel warehouse until 1998 when, as part of an auction of unwanted assets, it was sold to an American collector. In what might pass as a happy ending for this doomed one-off, the car was subsequently restored and made road legal, while its usurper would evolve – via a GM takeover, a complete redesign and a switch to Isuzu power – into the M100 Elan of 1989.

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Lotus to bring back petrol power from 2026 with ‘Hyper Hybrid’ tech
Lotus Emeya
News

Lotus to bring back petrol power from 2026 with ‘Hyper Hybrid’ tech

The new ‘Hyper Hybrid’ system will see a petrol motor of some description grafted into Lotus electric cars, serving in a motor generator unit capacity
28 Nov 2024
Panther Solo 1 – dead on arrival
Panther Solo 1
Features

Panther Solo 1 – dead on arrival

This lightweight, mid-engined Brit came achingly close to being an affordable ’80s hero
28 Nov 2024
Alpine GTA USA – dead on arrival
Alpine GTA USA
Features

Alpine GTA USA – dead on arrival

The tale of how a revised ’80s Alpine nearly became a halo car for Renault in America
24 Oct 2024
'Lotus is arguably the most evo automotive marque there's ever been'
Lotus Theory 1 left side
Opinion

'Lotus is arguably the most evo automotive marque there's ever been'

From a fan's perspective, the future of Lotus is uncertain. Can there be light at the end of the tunnel for this champion of lightweight sports cars?
23 Sep 2024
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Cupra Leon 2025 review – the Golf GTI you want wears a Spanish frock
Cupra Leon review front
In-depth reviews

Cupra Leon 2025 review – the Golf GTI you want wears a Spanish frock

The Cupra Leon has a new face and gnarly bucket seats for 2024. There’s more appeal over its German counterpart than ever
19 Dec 2024
BMW 230i 2025 review – a BMW coupe of the old school?
BMW 2-series front
Reviews

BMW 230i 2025 review – a BMW coupe of the old school?

BMW’s 230i has been refreshed. Is it still BMW’s undercover driver’s car?
20 Dec 2024
BMW i8 – the car world's greatest misses
BMW i8
Features

BMW i8 – the car world's greatest misses

A bold concept with a visionary powertrain, but the i8 was too far ahead of the game for its own good
20 Dec 2024