The first time Lotus competed in a Formula 1 race was at the 1958 Monaco Grand Prix. Five-time Monaco GP winner Graham Hill piloted the race car, and while Lotus didn’t bring home the win, the car ...
Before the early 2010s split between two privately-owned Formula 1 teams claiming to be the real Lotus, there was just one racing team that bore the name. This was the real Team Lotus, the one that ...
The first Lotus Formula 1 car will be among the featured lots at a Bonhams auction scheduled for May 10 in Monaco. The original Team Lotus dissolved in the early 1990s (other unrelated teams ...
Lotus is a name inextricably woven into Formula 1 history, going back to 1957. The British marque, a David among Goliaths, has won the title seven times, and its initial foray into the premier race ...
An F1 team hasn’t carried the automaker’s name in nearly a decade now, but it used to be a dominant force in the sport. Between 1963 and 1978, Team Lotus won seven constructors and six driver’s ...
Earlier today, Lotus Cars revealed its idea of an "intelligent performance vehicle." The wedge-shaped concept, called Theory 1, is meant to be Lotus' new design manifesto for all its future cars and ...
Remember the donated car they had you work on in high school auto shop? It was probably a wheezy old Cavalier or, depending on your era, a DeSoto. In any case, it was suitable only for disassembly.
For the first two races of the 2012 Formula 1 season, Team Lotus has received a mixed bag of results. Formula 1 World Champion Kimi Raikkonen finished both races in the points despite mediocre ...
Piloting the car during its heyday was Graham Hill, who would eventually become a five-time Monaco Grand Prix winner and two-time winner of Formula 1’s World Drivers’ Championship. Hill drove for ...