Letter of the month

9 min read

BUILDING MEMORIES WITH A KIT

Turek and flatmate with competing ’60s sports cars. Below: Elan in build

I really enjoyed your article on the golden era of British sports cars (C&SC, May), because it brought back great memories of my time as a young, car-mad Australian dentist living in London in the early 1970s.

Of the many cars I owned at the time, the 1970 Lotus Elan S4 SE was my favourite. Nothing before or since has been able to replicate the raw mechanical sensitivity and dynamics of Colin Chapman’s masterpiece. I bought it in component form, saving quite a bit on Purchase Tax, so it was delivered as a fully fitted body and interior, requiring an engine and gearbox, the drivetrain, and suspension assembly and fitting. It was advertised as an easy weekend activity, but the reality was far different: several weeks of frustrating trial and error finally resulted in a completed car.

The single A4 sheet of simple instructions that came with the car included steps such as ‘fit diff and rear suspension’. What it did not tell you was that there were about 10 ways that the rear suspension and diff could almost fit, but only one way that it would fit perfectly. So every combination of ways had to be tried before the correct one was hit upon. This intimate knowledge of the car’s mechanicals was helpful, because every few months you would have to grab your spanners and tighten up all the bits that had come loose.

My Elan had the original rubber-doughnut rear driveshafts, which required considerable concentration and skill when applying the power – an incompetent driver would soon end up with a very sore neck. I also owned a Lotus Elan +2 and a Sunbeam Tiger 260 – both nice cars, but not in the same league as the ‘baby’ Elan. My flatmate had a Jaguar E-type, which I sometimes drove, but it felt like a truck after the Lotus. Greg Turek Sydney, Australia

Letter of the month wins a beautiful C&SC A4 folio case, worth £295, courtesy of Jordan Bespoke. Since 2005, Simon Jordan has devoted his life to automotive and motorsport-inspired luxury goods, blending the art of British design with the finest Italian craftsmanship.

Call 07920 427430 or see

jordanbespoke.com

Write letters to

alastair.clements@haymarket.com

Family Ferrari

It was nice to see my father’s old Ferrari, 4 DXD, in your article on the 250GTE (C&SC, August) – although it was dark blue with a black interior when Dad owned it.

He bought it in c1970 and came back one winter evening, bursting into my bedroom where I was chatting to a couple of my friends. He beckoned us outside, told us to get in and drove it down to the long, straight road out of the Cotswold village where we

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