Talk:Lotus Esprit

Latest comment: 1 year ago by Greglocock in topic Pronunciation

V8 and 3.5L

edit

What were the available displacement numbers in the V8 engines?

I believe the V8 Esprit was available in 3.5 Litres only.

Yes, 3.5L is the only displacement for the V8 engines.

Any purple Lotus Esprit owners out there?

edit

I was playing the Seattle Circuit from Gran Turismo 4, and it hit me: Is there anyone in the Wikipedia community that has seen or owns a purple Lotus Esprit? I saw this page and I don't believe there are any pictures of any purple ones. Is purple often a rare color on a Lotus Esprit?

Purple Esprit: yes, they were made in purple, although it isn't very common (mine is black, very common). Lotus of Scottsdale (Arizona, USA) currently has a 2001 in inventory (http://www.lotusofscottsdale.com/5-040.html). (162.136.192.1 14:38, 26 January 2006 (UTC))Reply

Article to merge into this page

edit

Do you think Lotus Esprit Repair needs its own page? Merge? BMan1113VR 03:21, 4 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

I think it should be merged. It is not extensive enough to have its own article and is more of a parts supplier list. --Mach535 01:03, 5 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

If anything I feel the repair "article" should be deleted, it's not encyclopedic in content, and despite a couple of dozen edits full of incomplete content and spelling errors. Merging followed by a bit of savage editing should suffice! M100 12:00, 5 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

I have to agree, article has no place on Wiki. Adding to this one would change format, you don't get repair sections on ferrari entries on Wikipedia. Just cause its british doesnt mean we need a repair article! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.69.57.227 (talkcontribs)

I've gone ahead and merged the contents anyway. But as I'm not an aficionado of Lts, I'll leave the editing in your hands instead. Ohconfucius 07:06, 6 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

New Esprit

edit

Leftlanenews has an article (http://www.leftlanenews.com/2007/02/07/spied-2010-lotus-esprit/) up with spy shots/news of the rumored 2010 model. Wes902 17:27, 9 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

I can catagorically state that no one has any photos of an impending Esprit replacement because it doesn't exist yet. There are always prototypes, demonstration cars etc testing other technologies in old Esprit-looking bucks and these often get confused as future vehicles when they are not necessarily. LewisR (talk) 16:02, 15 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

And on what do you base this categorical statement? You may well be right... but given Lotus' own actions in the past I don't think you can really rule anything out. Greg Locock (talk) 12:29, 17 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

Proposed new Esprit now cancelled.Mr Tangle (talk) 19:21, 19 October 2014 (UTC)Reply

Discrepancies and questions

edit

I have noticed a few discrepancies between this article and some information I found on http://www.lotusespritworld.com at the page http://www.lotusespritworld.com/models.html.

Wikipedia says:

  • Turbo Esprit HC – 1986–87
  • Turbo Esprit HCi (Bosch Fuel Injected) – 1986–87
  • Esprit GT3 – 1996–99

LotusEspritWorld says:

  • Turbo Esprit HC – 1987
  • Esprit GT3 – 1996–98

I suppose the HCi follows under the HC so they did not list it. The G3 production dates do not match. Can someone confirm the information on one or the other wesbite?

I have seen pictures of Esprits called NA or N/A for normally aspirated so I suppose that means no turbo. There is no model called NA or N/A. I suppose those NA are Peter Stevens's Esprits from 1987–90. I believe they are called like that to distinguish them from Peter Stevens's Esprit Turbos from 1987–90. Correct me if I am wrong.

I have also seen pictures of Esprits called X180. Wikipedia says that "The Stevens styled Esprit is collectively known as the X180". I would like to know if that applies to all the Esprits from the Stevens era or only to the Esprit Turbos from 1987–90.

LotusEspritWorld lists something called X180R but Wikipedia did not list this model so I added it.

ICE77 -- 81.104.129.226 20:08, 8 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

X180 was the internal program name for the Stevens Esprit. NA means naturally aspirated. I don't know why we didn't call them efi. Greglocock 23:26, 8 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Thank you for the information. However, you did not answer my questions. X180 for the Stevens's Esprit but which one of them? NA stands for Naturally Aspirated: does that mean no turbo then? I do not understand what you mean by efi.

ICE77 -- 81.104.129.226 16:57, 9 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

X180 was the name of the whole program, never mind which engine, at least for the two years before launch. NA is how engineers referred to the non turbo cars, I don't know how this spread to the wider community. However I have worked on at least one program called NA, it may be that Lotus used that designation as well - for example the FWD Elan had several different program names over its life. Usually when car manufacturers had NA cars at the time they called them EFI, for electronic fuel injection, in their marketing. I'm surprised Lotus didn't, but I'm pretty sure they didn't. Greglocock 00:51, 10 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Thanks for clarifying the issue, it helped a lot. By the way you wrote it seems to me you've been involved in the development of the Esprit. X180 is used for all Stevens's Esprits and NA is used for non turbo Stevens's Esprits but those are just internal names since no model is officially called like X180 or NA: I got the point now. EFI has never been used by Lotus, probably because the Esprit is something different from other cards ... it is something special!

ICE77 -- 195.212.29.83 12:36, 10 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

edit

So this section has apparently been removed following a general vote ("pop culture and trivia references, unless particularly factually significant, have been vetoed by Wikiproject:Automobiles and are being phased out - thanks for understanding"). Now the forward reference to it is inappropriate. The Seventh Taylor 16:51, 24 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Good point. I've cleaned up that reference, but there is scope for discussion about this section. The WikiProject:Automobiles consensus so far includes the idea that trivia and pop-culture sections are inappropriate to the car's entry if the car was significant to the film, but may be relevant if the film was significant to the car. It could be argued that the Bond appearances significantly upped the recognition of the Lotus. – Kieran T (talk) 16:56, 24 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

V8 Image

edit

Can someone condense the image for the Esprit V8 into a thumbnail as there's no point to having the image in the article. That and I'm likely to break the article if I do it myself... 81.110.245.215 (talk) 12:50, 18 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

edit

We need to come to a decision about these external links. I am for taking them out, and if someone will second me on that, I will take them out. However, if the consensus is that they should stay, I would be fine with that too. Zach4636(Talk) 17:23, 29 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

generally I think one (best,hopefully international) info/resource/forum site is acceptable, but I found that http://www.lotusespritworld.com/ has link to that forum (http://www.lotusespritforum.com/) so maybe that one is enough? --— Typ932T | C  17:33, 29 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
edit

I have a problem with the approach that is being taken on this particular entry regarding external links; looking back over the history for the past couple of weeks there is a clear feeling that the current links are insufficient, but no consistent editorial policy is being applied.

As an anonymous user, I tried to add links to Lotus Esprit World and Lotus Esprit Forum, to complement the existing link to the Esprit Fact File. Subsequent to this, my two additions were removed, then another user added a different site, again there was a partial clean-up, closely follwed by a purge of the entire External Links section. Subsequent users have then reinstated the same external links, only to have them purged again. This is starting to look a little farcical, wouldn't you say?

I'm trying to understand why the links I have posted are verboten, and indeed why some people see the whole concept of external links as irrelevant.

Let me recap on where this particular car is in its product lifecyle: having been produced for the best part of 30 years, it's now been out of production for over 3 years. As a non-current model, whilst Lotus still actively support the vehicle through parts availability and ongoing development, they (understandably) do not devote any of their public, corporate, website to discussion of the Esprit. Having built up an enthusiastic following over the past 30 years as an iconic sportscar, the support and information resources pertinent to the Esprit are, entirely understandably, now provided by clubs and enthusiasts. There is a diverse range of marque-specific and model-specific clubs and informative websites out there, some more useful or complete than others.

Reading the Esprit entry a week or so back, I was frankly astonished to see that two of the three main sources of Esprit information were not linked to, merely being obliquely referenced in the references section. Hence my additions and where this saga began.

Please do not consider the following as 'advertising'. I feel, having been challenged, that I have to justify why the sites I chose are worthy of inclusion, and to do them justice I need to ensure you understand what they are about.

Esprit Fact File and Lotus Esprit World are broadly similar in their origins and ambitions, and are complementary. Both were started by individuals keen to share and expand upon the information they had accumulated when purchasing and maintaining thier own cars. It's fair to say that Lotus Esprit World has grown considerably in size, but the breadth of content is truly remarkable - full specifications for every model variant produced, pictorial 'how to' guides, an archive of contemporary road tests, a regularly updated news page for information of interest to the Esprit owner, and much more. As perhaps the ultimate mark of a quality information resource, the engineers at Lotus publicly acknowledge that they use the site for reference purposes.

The Lotus Esprit Forum is one of several discussion groups that exist for the model and the marque. What differentiates it and elevates it as a useful resource is the fact that it has over 4,000 members worldwide, amongst them many current Lotus staff, and that it is sub-divided to seperate chat and event talk from technical discussions. It has built up an enviable archive of 'howto' threads which are available for the benfit of all. Mike Kimberley, CEO of Group Lotus, is an occasional but enthusiastic contributor. It is estimated the the Forum accounts for owners of more than a third of all Esprits ever built. This is a resource operated for and by owners and enthusiasts; just two of its achievements in the few short years it has been running were the widely-reported secret rebuilding of an Esprit belonging to a member with a debilitating medical condition, and the organising of the first Esprit-only factory event, which attracted 100 cars and owners from the UK, Europe, and North America.

Reading through wikipedia's guidelines on External Links, I see that any external links should be "restricted to the most relevant and helpful", that sites linked to should be "relevant to the content of the article (useful, helpful, informative, factual, etc.)", and include sites that "cannot be integrated into the Wikipedia article due to ... amount of detail". I believe that both Lotus Esprit World and Lotus Esprit Forum satisfy these criteria.

Both sites could attract criticism: both are supported by either advertising or a paid-membership subsection, and a forum, by its very nature requires a user to register and sign-in to participate. The advertising, where used, is not intrusive, and the paid-membership sectons merely complement the freely-available reference, technical, or 'how-to' information in order to financially support the hosting of these sites. However, weighing these considerations against the wealth of information and appeal that both sites contain, it is clear that they are an invaluable resource for the Esprit enthusiast and owner.

Fundamentally, if Wikipedia is to maintain credibility for its content, shouldn't such useful sites as these be openly acknowledged and linked to? —Preceding unsigned comment added by DanBasterfield (talkcontribs) 17:49, 29 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Read one up --— Typ932T | C  18:08, 29 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
At least one person posting some of those links is directly affiliated with the website in question. See WP:COI. Anyone can find those links with google. Also see [[1]] and the following sections. In particular Links to avoid
    • Any site that does not provide a unique resource beyond what the article would contain if it became a Featured article.
    • Any site that misleads the reader by use of factually inaccurate material or unverifiable research. See Reliable sources for explanations of the terms "factually inaccurate material" or "unverifiable research".
    • Links mainly intended to promote a website.
All the links I checked had errors, either factual or by omission. Greg Locock (talk) 22:04, 29 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Sorry Greg, with the greatest of respect that comes across as an "it's my ball and you're not going to play with it" attitude. Please quantify why you object to the sites, with specific examples of errors.

If we're being nit-picky about technical details, may I respectfully point out that in your own reply above (under 'questions and discrepancies') you said, regarding the naturally aspirated Esprit "I don't know why we didn't call them efi". Since the engines were all built and sold with twin Dell'Orto DHLA45 carburettors, then it would have been misleading the customer to claim that they had Electronic Fuel Injection (EFI). We can all make mistakes, my friend, so I think a little more tolerance and a little less keyboard rattling might be in order.

If you're implying that the links as typed here had errors, let me assure you I double-checked myself that they led to the intended sites - in fact I've just checked again under the edit history. I wouldn't want a typo in the middle of my edit. Or are you saying that you're concerned about the content of the sites I linked to?

I hope you're not applying the "factually inaccurate material or unverifiable research" guidance to a forum; that would be perverse to say the least - it's a place for discussion, after all. The point is it connects interested readers directly with other owners.

I wouldn't have the confidence to stand up and say that the content of Lotus Esprit World does not add to the Esprit article - in any current or future form. To do that would require the whole of LEF to be replicated into Wikipedia. Why go to all that effort when the Wikipedia entry is a comprehensive summary? All it needs is a link to LEF where the interested reader can delve further, should they so wish.

Upon casual checking, I see that the entries for both the Ferrari 355 and Porsche 911 have links to non-manufacturer sites, broadly similar in scope to Lotus Esprit World, and yet they've not been purged. Both entries have a reasonable handful of useful, relevant, external links, which is exactly what I'm aiming for here.

Please either give some examples where the content at Lotus Esprit World is inaccurate, or accept that it is a valid site to be linked from this entry. Your attitude is coming across as unnecessarily dismissive and defensive, please let's discuss this rationally. —Preceding unsigned comment added by DanBasterfield (talkcontribs) 00:19, 30 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

No one is doing anything too you personally so there is no need to get all upset about it. Only those sites which are exceptional are linked. Also, if you have an evident conflict of interest, any of these links WILL be removed because the purpose of Wikipedia is not to promote others websites. Let me give you a personal example: when I joined Wikipedia, the first thing I did was to put in a link to one of my websites. It was immediately removed. I too was rather unhappy about this and I wanted to do everything in my power to get it back in, but I never did because I recognized that I was in the wrong. I hope that this helps you, and please do NOT add these links back in again.
Zach4636 (talk) 01:08, 30 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
Dan, are you affiliated with any of the links that you are defending? I KNOW that lotusespritturbo is being reposted by someone with an email address at that website. You are all tarred with the same brush in my mind. Check the external links that have been posted to this page over the last year and you will see that many do not reach the admittedly high standard of LEworld, and that there is a tendency for people to pile in with their 'favorites'. Since all these sites can be found with google, it is not exactly as if finding out about these cars is difficult. Greg Locock (talk) 01:22, 30 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
Guys - thanks for some rational replies. I'm not developing a victim complex here, neither do I have a connection with any of these sites. My interest is that as an owner of one of these cars, LEW, EFF and LEF are the sources of information and assistance, and that for completeness the Wikipedia article needs to acknowledge this. The EFF link seems to be accepted by some, banned by others, in successive edits. Compared with other car articles, these links are appropriate and in line with current practice. Please tell me what, specifically, offends you about either LEW or LEF? If you've had problems with COI postings in the past then you have my sympathy, but this is not the case now and you are coming across as very heavy-handed. DanBasterfield (talk) 01:37, 30 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
OK, in the absence of any further objections, I'll add back in the link to Lotus Esprit Forum. DanBasterfield (talk) 19:26, 30 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
typ932, please read the above before getting trigger happy with the delete button. The function of LEF is very distinct to that of LEW; yes, they cross-link to each other, but that's because they directly complement each other and support and inform exactly the same target audience. It's called cooperation, i'm sure you guys have heard of it.
I asked the owner of LEF for some stats on its operation. This is the reply: "LEF has 5,000,000 hits per month, around 300,000 page views. We have almost 4,000 members, 1,500 of whom visit at least once every couple of weeks and although almost 1,000 are dormant accounts, that still gives us almost 3,000 active members which is very close to a third of all Esprit's ever produced accounted for and we have had visitors from over 50 different countries this month alone." This is a worldwide user community catering for owners of around one third of all examples of this vehicle ever built, and you remove the link to it simply because another site links to this one? I fail to see how this is aiding the credibility of the information held in wikipedia. Once again, my point in doing this is to ensure that the article is comprehensive, and to be comprehensive it must link to the major external sites providing information and support.
Please tell me - apart from the link on LEW - what is so wrong with LEF that it cannot be referenced within this article for interested readers to pursue further? DanBasterfield (talk) 20:01, 30 January 2008 (UTC)Reply


I will state my interest up front, I am a donator to LEF/LEW so that the forum and website can be run to provide access to esprit technical help, to people like me who have limited mechanical or engineering knowledge. Thishas been invaluable for me with the running and maintenance of my Esprit. When I first decided to choose to get the car I used all three sites Wiki, LEW and LEF to help me and provide me with the knowledge I was after. The fact that all three provided me with the information to make a good choice shows how they compliment each other in their aims. The Like you Dan, I believe that the wiki is both fair and complete with the links to what have to be some of the most informative internet sites covering the esprit being present. Any reader of the wiki article may wish to find even more detailed knowledge of the marque and model by being able to conatct other web based sites and owners of the car. 3 simple links on the wiki provide the reader with the simple and effortless ability to do that. The arguments stated above for removal of these links just seem petty at best. Wiki is full of links to other sites which are often more comprehensive in their information of the stated topic than the wiki and this does not cause problems for the integrity of the encyclopedia. I would suggest that this problem be resolve by the wiki adminstrators for arbitration as a diplomatic resolution does not seem forthcoming. I have read in detail the Wiki 3Rs rule, vandalism rules etc and I believe that this editing is starting to fall foul of those rules.

I believe a simple solution to the problem would be to add a little text to each link stating in general terms what useful knowledge they would serve the reader if they accessed them. for example the LEF link could come come with a line saying "A source of real fixes for technical problems for all G and S models esprits (but please be minded also contains non technical unrelated info)"

This to me shows a balanced view of what LEF can offer to the wiki reader. This should not be hard to resolve! Alex1200r (talk) 20:49, 30 January 2008 (UTC)—Preceding unsigned comment added by Alex1200r (talkcontribs) 20:46, 30 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

You do not have a consensus to put those links in, we do not yet have a consensus to take them out. This discussion is not over. I am ambivalent towards LEW, but I do not think that LEF has any encyclopaedic value. If you think it fulfils the criteria of WP:EXT please explain how. Consider the following quotes from that page: "Wikipedia's purpose is not to include a comprehensive list of external links related to each topic." "Avoid linking to multiple pages from the same website unless there is good reason to do so" "Wikipedia is not a mirror or a repository of links" "Avoid... Links to social networking sites (such as MySpace), discussion forums/groups (such as Yahoo! Groups) or USENET. " Unless you can demonstrate that LEF satisfies ALL of those criteria, it goes. I shall be applying similar logic to other links, later. Greg Locock (talk) 22:13, 30 January 2008 (UTC)Reply


In my opnion, LEF does satisfy the following wiki criteria "there is nothing wrong with adding one or more useful content-relevant links to an article" LEF is a content relevant link

"The focus of user pages should not be social networking, but rather providing a foundation for effective collaboration." -LEF has provided and still does provide many effective collaborations on Esprits eg restoration projects, technical discussion, mechanical help info for people geographically separated through out the world. LEF has no interest in using wiki as a source of social networking.

In the end the points you cite are just guidelines, in the same way the ones I have cited are guidelines. Some are easily met, others not so. From the links guideline page " in a nutshell: Adding external links can be helpful to everyone, but they should be restricted to those that are most meritable, accessible and relevant to the article." The wiki guidlines themselve do not state that all have to be met, it is what is a sensible balance. The inclusion is sensible and does not detract from the quality of the article already written.

Does LEF/LEW link merit inclusion? Well it has over 4700 esprit related technical topics. This knowledge and information source merits reference. This knowledge is easily asccessible to all, and the bottom line it is relevant to the General Article on the Lotus Esprit. Alex1200r (talk) 00:54, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Just so everyone is aware: extensive internet research has revealed that these figures stated above are quite inflated. I did quite a bit of digging, and I discovered that the figures quoted were nowhere near the real figures. I am not calling anyone a liar, but this information came from several sites such as Alexa and Compete.com. I think that these links should be taken out and replacements found.
Zach4636 (talk) 01:39, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

I'm sorry, but I can't see any other better sites then LEW or LEF. Realizing that the information isn't absolutely perfect 100% of the time... neither is your information -- you claim the citroen box is not in the stevens esprit... I have one... with a citroen box. This is a hand-built car with many inconsistency's. I've been working on these cars for about a year and in that time i've completely rebuilt everything but the engine in mine and I've done a lot of work to a 1994 S4 and a 2002 V8... they are all very different cars and you can easily tell they are handbuilt... and because they are handbuilt each one is very unique in the way it is put together. The term "fact" with regards to an "Esprit" is almost an oxymoron. So, those who have spent the time to do the research and collect the data should be regarded as the best source of information. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.66.13.157 (talk) 02:40, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply


Glad to see you've taken a breather and come back to this one afresh, Greg. I'm not happy with your assertion that "we do not yet have a consensus to take them out" as you are still prejudging the outcome; in truth we are without a consensus to either include or exclude the link to LEF. Please completely put aside this attitude that "it's your ball" etc. so we can discuss on merit alone. I'm not here to mess up your toy, but neither is it your toy to be messed up.
I'm glad to see that you have mellowed on the subject of LEW, even though I note you're still ambivalent about it. Perhaps it has been expanded and improved from the site you recalled when you last viewed it - I would encourage you to spend more time exploring the site. However I think we're making positive progress from the position we were in a couple of days ago where you clearly saw no purpose for any external links, given your repeated deletion of that entire section. I accept that this could have been brought on by frustration with ill-judged (novice?) posting of links to minor sites, or where you felt there was a clear COI. At least now we can discuss individual links on their merits, rather than flip-flopping between discussing specific links and the general concept of linking externally.


As regards the encyclopaedic value of LEF, let me proceed. I've tried to outline in he exchanges above how it is of tangible value, but this has not convinced you. You repeatedly bounce different quoted sections of policy at me without quantifying your objection. I would like to review the [WP:EXT] policy against LEF. I like your approach of quoting policy verbatim, as it focuses on clear and specific aspects, so will adopt it for the following.
Points to Remember
Links should be restricted to the most relevant and helpful...
Noting the statistics I cited above, LEF has a right to claim to be the most useful site for Esprit owners, in the sense that it directly connects the reader with thousands of other owners worldwide. This is useful in the sense of "I need to find an answer/solution to xxx, please help". No other informational site performs this role, as they are static; no other forum etc. can claim anywhere near the same number of total members; the next largest forum is the turboesprit Yahoo! group, which has 2250 total members (percentage inactive currently unknown) vs. LEF's 4000; turboesprit's audience is largely North American, whilst LEF's is worldwide. Result: positive
External links should typically not be in the body of an article...
Agreed. I don't think we need to debate this one further given that we now accept the principle of an 'External Links' section within the article. Result: positive
Avoid linking to multiple pages from the same website...
The link to LEF is to the front page of the site; no other link within the article refers to either this page or any sub-page of LEF. Result: positive


Restrictions on linking
Sites that violate the copyrights of others...
The terms of use of LEF, part of the user sign-up agreement, state "You agree not to post any copyrighted material unless the copyright is owned by you or by this bulletin board.". All posts are reviewed by a select team of moderators for, amongst other issues, copyright infringement wthin postings. I would say this counts as taking reasonable care to prevent copyright infringement on the site. Result: positive
Sites that match the spam blacklist without being whitelisted...
I know of no incident where LEF has been identified as a source of spam. Result: positive
What to link
Is it accessible to the reader?
Yes it is. Through the subdivision of technical, chat, and event discussion threads, users may quickly proceed to an area of interest and disregard irrelevant content. Needless to say there is an effective search function. No charge is made for access to the site, although due to the nature of a forum users need to be able to identify themselves when posting, hence registration is required. As discussions involve enthusiasts, owners, prospective owners, and at times marque specialists and Lotus personnel, discussion proceeds in a down-to-earth fashion. New users are actively encouraged to introduce themselves in the 'Newbies' section, where LEF etiquette ensures they receive a swift and warm welcome. Result: positive
Is it relevant to the content of the article....
As noted in the stats above and in previous answers regarding the nature of contributors and the main topic of discussion, most emphatically so. Result: positive
Is it a functional link, and likely to continue being a functional link?
Yes, it is operated and hosted in a professional fashion. The size of membership would suggest it has mometum and critical mass to continue for a long time. Result: positive
What should be linked
Articles about any organization, person, web site, or other entity should link to the official site if any.
As the acknowledged home site of the Lotus Esprit Forum, this is correct. LEF is acknowledged by Lotus as a valid and valued owners & enthusiasts club. Mike Kimberley, CEO Group Lotus, has told LEF members both in person, when he invited them to the factory, and in posts to LEF, that "You are the most important ambassadors that Lotus has." Result: postive
An article about a book, a musical score, or some other media
Not relevant. Result: neutral
Sites that contain neutral and accurate material that cannot be integrated into the Wikipedia article due to...
I have dealt with the copyright aspects in a previous reply. An additional role of the moderators is to ensure that, within reasonable limits, both the nature and content of discussion remain neutral and open to discussion and diverse opinions. The nature of a technical, single-interest forum does not allow for factual inaccuracies to go un-corrected for any length of time. Result: positive
Sites with other meaningful, relevant content that is not suitable for inclusion in an article...
I hope I have covered this one in previous replies, particularly the value and nature of the content. I would add that to distill the accumulated body of knowledge held within LEF into a WP article (howto or FAQ article section perhaps?) would be both a mammoth task, and a never-ending one due to the site's nature. It would therefore be inappropriate to attempt this, and hence the next logical step is to provide a link to LEF for interested readers to review in more depth. Result: positive
Links to be considered
For albums, movies, books...
Not relevant. Result: neutral
Very large pages should be considered on a case-by-case basis...
LEF is a threaded forum; there is also an option for a 'lo-fi' text-mode interface. Both aspects therefore restrict the size and download time required to view individual LEF pages. Result: positive
Long lists of links are not appropriate...
Agreed. So far I'm trying to increment a list of one link. Two links do not make for a "long list". Result: positive
Sites which fail to meet criteria for reliable sources yet still contain information about the subject of the article from knowledgeable sources.
I've explained above why I feel LEF is reliable (participants, moderation, self-policing of factual inaccuracies, acknowledgement/support by Lotus, etc.). Given the subject matter of the forum and the nature of many of its members (owners of the subject vehicle), I think anyone would have to acknowledge that the majority of contributors would be knowledgeable to a greater or lesser degree. I'm not claiming expert status for each member, but then neither is this a requirement of this policy clause. Result: positive
Links normally to be avoided
Any site that does not provide a unique resource...
See above answers. LEF may be "one of" the discussion groups for the Esprit, but it's unique selling point is that it is the largest and most active such group. Result: positive
Any site that misleads the reader by...
See above answers regarding moderation and peer review. Result: positive
Any site that attempts to surreptitiously install malware...
LEF has never attempted to install malware. Result: positive
Links mainly intended to promote a website
As per the statistics posted above, LEF already has around 5,000,000 hits a month. As you yourself have noted above, LEF can be readily located using Google, etc. I have also declared repeatedly thatI have not COI here, and that my reason for linking to the site is for the completeness and comprehensiveness of the WP article. However, you could argue that any WP external link implicitly promotes some site or other by virtue of bringing it to the reader's attention, and by giving it an amount of credibility by being mentioned on the WP article. We can play semantic ping-pong with this one as it is a poorly-worded requirement, so I'll give it a result of neutral.
Links to sites that primarily exist to sell
No - LEF is a free-to-use service for the majority of content. Result: positive
Links to sites with objectionable amounts of advertising
LEF has discrete acknowledgement of companies or individuals that support it in some way, however this is low-key and could not be described as "objectionable". Result: positive
Links to sites that require payment or registration
I've already covered both the payment question, and the inherent requirement for users to register in order to meaningfully interact with the site. I accept that, to the word of the WP policy, registration is "to be avoided" - note the use of guideline rather than mandatory language, both here and in the subject heading "Links normally to be avoided". I view the meaningful-interaction requirement for registration as a suitable defence, in this instance, of going against advisories, but we're back into the realms of semantics and syntax as much as genuine appraisal. Result: neutral
Sites that are inaccessible...
I have personally accessed the site using various versions of IE, Opera, and Firefox on Windows and Linux platforms; I know of users who access the site solely from Macs. Result: positive
Direct links to documents that require external applications...
No external applications are required to make use of LEF or its immediate content. Result: positive
Links to search engine and aggregated results pages
LEF is neither a (web) search engine nor an aggregated links page. Result: positive
Links to ... discussion forums/groups...
This is where LEF scores its first definite negative. It is a forum. However, refer to one of my early points that the subject vehicle of this article is out of production, and much support is peer-provided through clubs and discussion groups both online and offline. Also the points reqarging scope, nature, value of LEF as pertains to the Lotus Esprit ownership experience. Refer to my overriding consideration that the link is of value to the article to give it completeness and credibility for all interested readers; there will be a significant proportion of readers who have heard the "Lots Of Trouble, Usually Serious" quip, and indeed those that hear the motoring press refer frequently refer to the Esprit as a benchmark for handling, and just want to ask whether it's as good/bad/fragile/expensive/exhilarating as heresay would have it. In the absence of a long discussion of the pros and cons of ownership within the article (which would be very difficult to write in a comprehensive and unbiased manner) or in deed a sporadic Q&A in the talk page (which most WP users are oblivious to, hence will not benefit from peer-correction of inaccuracies) what better resource to direct readers to than the largest online gathering of owners of the subject vehicle? I believe the policy wording is short-sighted in this instance. Result: negative
Links to blogs and personal web pages...
LEF is neither a blog nor a personal web page. Result: positive
Links to open wikis...
LEF is not a Wiki. Result: positive
Sites that are only indirectly related to the article's subject...
I think we've covered this already; LEF is directly linked to the article's subject. Result: positive
Lists of links to...
LEF is not a list of links. Result: positive
Advertising and conflicts of interest
I have covered advertising within LEF above, as have I covered "promotion of websites" and my own lack of COI. Result: positive
In biographies of living people
Not relevant to LEF. Result: neutral
Sites requiring registration
Covered in depth already. Result: neutral
Non-English language content
LEF is almost entirely English language content. The only exceptions I have seen are occasional greetings or phrases where users are either being welcoming to those for whom English is not their first language, or part of a good-natured exchange. Due to the international audience, this helps forge a sense of community. Result: positive
Redirection sites
LEF is not a redirection site. Result: positive
Rich media
LEF is rendered in HTML or rich text, at the user's discretion. Result: positive
Linking to YouTube, Google Video, and similar sites
LEF is not one of these sites. Result: positive
Avoid undue weight on particular points of view
As discussed above, peer-correction and moderation foster a balanced perspective. Result: positive
Longevity of links
Covered already, so I'll tag this as a neutral
What can be done with a dead external link
The link to LEF is not dead. Result: positive
Hijacked and re-registered sites
LEF has not, to my knowledge been hijacked or re-registered, nor is it likely to be. See comments above regarding professional hosting and operation of the site. Result: positive



Well, I would commend you for reading this far! Seriously, I have gone to this length to try to address all the aspects of the External Links policy. By a quick totting up, I make the score:
31 positive
7 neutral
1 negative
I think it would therefore be unreasonable to refuse an external link to LEF based on such a predominantly positive showing, and given the advisory nature of the wording of the policy clause for which it scored negative.


I therefore propose that the link is accepted.

DanBasterfield (talk) 02:44, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Dan... your argument is invalid. The wiki criteria you quoted provides a list of types of links to be avoided. As such, matching one of the criteria on the list means that the link doesn't pass the test: it's irrelevant that the link doesn' match the other criteria. For example, the criteria state that links should not attempt to surreptitiously install malware, *and* that they should not be forums. By your argument, it would be OK to link to a site that surreptitiously installed malware because it only had that one negative. --David Broadfoot (talk) 17:24, 6 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
Hi David - the basis of my argument has consistently been that LEF has value because of its content; this guideline excludes it because of its format - the book has been judged by its cover. If it had have failed due to content rather than presentation - say on the malware point - I would not have felt there was a case to argue. Anyway, thanks for chipping in, and if you see below I have conceded that the consensus of opinion is against its inclusion. DanBasterfield (talk) 09:56, 7 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Zach - please declare the source and method of calculation for the figures you obtained that disagree with mine, and the figures themselves. I declared my figures as coming from the owner of the website being discussed; for instance you can see at the bottom of the LEF home page that membership currently stands at 3816. I'd say that validates the claim of "almost 4000 members". Please provide more detail so I can understand the basis of your disagreement. Thanks! DanBasterfield (talk) 02:51, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

I already told you where I got the information from: Alexa and Compete.com. Also, I want a direct answer as to whether or not you are affiliated with these websites. You may have already said, but I am not sure. I have a feeling though that you are affiliated because no one would be so adamant about having these links in. If that is the case, you have no business trying to put them in because you have a conflict of interest.
Zach4636 (talk) 14:00, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

There's obviously something about owning a Lotus and being prepared to waste inordinate amounts of time, judging from the behaviour of a couple of zealots. First read up on the definition of consensus. It is not a majority (although it can be, typically a 75% majority is the best that can be achieved). It is certainly not last man standing. Thus far we have roughly two agin and two for. That is not consensus. Secondly I said "You do not have a consensus to put those links in, we do not yet have a consensus to take them out." How is that prejudging the issue? Anyway, I would rather hear from other editors, I think Dan has made his point again and again and again. and again and again and again. and will doubrtless be the first to respond to this post. Incidentally this article is of only the slightest interest to myself, I have scarcely contributed to it. Greg Locock (talk) 03:59, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

At every turn you refuse to consider the matter, simply replying to any reasoned argument with one or more of
Arrogance
Personal attacks
Heavy-handed editing
Parrot-like quoting of phrases from policy with no commentary regarding context
Assertions of gross innacuracy of material without citing any examples
Is it any reason that I have to repeat myself when this is the attitude I'm faced with? Perhaps if you took your fingers out of your ears and stopped chanting "It's my ball and you're not going to play with it" for ten minutes we could resolve this like adults.
Might I suggest you read the WP guide yourself? Start with [WP:AGF], [WP:CIV], [WP:BITE], and [WP:NPA].
A little lesson in semantics, in the following sentence:
"You do not have a consensus to put those links in, we do not yet have a consensus to take them out."
To make this balanced and non-prejudicial, either remove the single 'yet', which implies time-conditionality on only one side of the argument, or place a 'yet' against either possible outcome.
I'll also ask you to consider the fact that you have been "fighting off" edits to the external links section; yes, some have had a degree of self-interest but do you not think that this indicates that external links are both wanted and insufficient in their current form? Oh no, of course in Greg's world, everybody else is just vandalising his precious page. Take a step back and look at your attitude.
"Incidentally this article is of only the slightest interest to myself, I have scarcely contributed to it."
Then with the greatest of respect, go somewhere else and stop obstructing the efforts of those who are interested in it. DanBasterfield (talk) 09:57, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
QED Greg Locock (talk) 09:59, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

It too would be interested to see the details of zach4636 statistics calculations. You seem to quote third party sites as the source of your information. Well here is a question for you - which do you think is the more accurate - third party web sites which may or may not have 100% connectivity to the site in question or the web server log files for the site in question? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.136.1.191 (talk) 13:54, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

If you are saying that respected, well-known websites are wrong, be my guest and go right ahead with that. I made none of this up on my own: I only quoted what I read. Since there is so much controversy regarding these links, I think that ALL of them should be removed. There is nothing saying that there must be external links; and since emotion has replaced reason, I think that they should all go or we get an administrator involved to settle it.
Zach4636 (talk) 16:47, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

To quote one of the sites you use "We have little data for lotusespritforum.com, so these are rough estimates" and the other has no data at all - hardly accurate figures and this refers to the site that you said the figures quoted were "nowhere near the real figures" so I say again where are your facts?

I also ask again which is more accurate - commercial sites trying to sell a service or the actual web server log files for the site in question??

There is no controversy concerning the links - the posters are simply asking for consistency in applying the rules. If these links go then so should the others quoted (Ferrari and Porche links) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.136.1.191 (talk) 17:21, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Zach - if your figures are so at odds with others quoted here, please post them so we can compare. No point us all trawling the web and using the available tools in different manners. At the moment you are not giving us the opportunity to discuss what you see as a primary reason for excluding this link.
I'd like to add that I've maintained a level and conciliatory tone throughout this, despite the obvious frustration that has resulted. I am not the one who has resorted to personal attacks and slurs, and I have declared all my facts and reasoning, and have even declared where my arguments in favour of the links fall short. I do not have a hidden agenda, yet you (Greg, Zach, Typ932) are continually saying "We do not need links on this article, so let's not discuss it further". Clearly this is the most hotly contended topic this article has seen in a long, long time; is that a reason to stonewall any dissent, or rather a reason to have a frank and open discussion?
By the way, who owns this article? I'd like to contact them. DanBasterfield (talk) 17:41, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
Dan, I am not going to address anything of the questions that you asked until I get a "Yes" or "No" answer to the question about whether or not you are affiliated with any of these sites. Also, Wikipedia does not allow you to "own" pages (see Help:Watching pages).
Zach4636 (talk) 19:02, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
He has said he is not affilliated. You probably missed it. Actually Dan I find your tone completely innappropriate. You probably think the same of mine. The difference is that I have thousands of article edits, to hundreds of articles, and have made several from scratch. You have, um, one or two small edits to one article. That is not a priori evidence that I am right, it does however suggest that my perspective may have some weight of experience behind it. I suggest Dan that you spend a month editing other articles, since you appear to have boundless free time and a desire to make a difference. That will give you a better idea of how wiki works (big clue: that long post of yours above was counterproductive to a degree that defies comprehension), after that, come back and decide whether the LEF and LET links really do fit in. I think LEW is redundant, but acceptable. This will be my last post here for two weeks, as you suggest, there are plenty of more interesting articles and problems around, these anorak articles are not my primary focus.Greg Locock (talk) 20:10, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply


Firstly let me set out my position I am an esprit owner and poster on LEF (lotusespritforum), and ocasional user of LEW (lotusespritworld), EFF (espritfactfile) and lotusespritturbo but have no further affiliation to any site.

My opinion on this discussion of links is as follows. My first port of call for any factual information on the esprit is LEW I will then ocasionally expand to other sites for further reading or views to sites that include EFF and lotusespritturbo and even sometimes wikipedia its self. On this basis alone I feel that LEW warrents its place as where else could you turn for factual information and find a site that is endorsed by lotus and for full roundness of information I too would include both EFF and lotusespritturbo in any links section.

On the point of LEF is it possible anywhere else on the web to go and seek help or advice sometimes in near real time from, current owners, past owners, ex and current factory employees and people who make a living working on and caring for these cars 24 hours a day? Add to this the depth of knowledge that is offered for free to anyone in relation to the esprit, and I fail to see how any site, page or article that is aiming to be a repository of information relating to the esprit could fail to aknowledge LEF as a leading resource for said information.

Thanks Glyn —Preceding unsigned comment added by 90.203.248.98 (talk) 20:56, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Zach - As I've said already, I do not have a conflict of interest with the sites that I am attempting to post links to. DanBasterfield (talk) 23:49, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Thanks, that was all that I wanted to know. Zach4636 (talk) 00:14, 1 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Greg - thank you for your comments, and for taking your obstruction elsewhere. I respect your experience, but not your attitude - this whole dispute has been fuelled by your attitude. All I asked was that valid links be added, or a reasonable explanation for their exclusion be given.

I see from your edit history that you are interested in alternative power sources for vehicles. I note with interest that you have contributed heavily in the past fortnight to pages such as:

Compressed Air Car - 31 external links in a sub-divided 'External Links' section, including 3 links direct to discussion forums, and 2 links declared as "Fan site and Portal..."
Compressed Air Energy Storage - 12 external links
Fuel Economy-maximising Behaviours - 6 external links, including one link direct to a discussion forum

I do not therefore understand why you have chosen to apply a 'no external links' policy to this article in particular, nor do I understand your objection to external links to discussion groups, forums, etc. Your position here has consistently relied on two principles, namely that external links are largely unnecessary and that links to discussion groups are excluded by WP policy.

I fail to see how the link to LEW is redundant when every reference cited is held within LEW. In the Compressed Air Car article, for example, there are sites in the external links section which are seperately referenced as citations from within the body of that articles. DanBasterfield (talk) 00:31, 1 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

@ Zach4636 - you replied above to DanBasterfield that "Thanks, that was all I wanted to know". This sounds like you agreed or at least were no longer against having the link. Why are you still removing the link to the forum? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.211.17.50 (talk) 00:44, 5 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

What I meant was that I wanted to know if he was affiliated with the sites in question. I am entirely against LEF, but I have no problem with LEW. Also, I don't care if every page on Wikipedia links to a forum, that doesn't make it right! I suggest that you leave LEF out or I will ask an admin. to decide whether or not it is included.
Zach4636 (talk) 13:40, 5 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
Zach - I think getting an impartial third party involved would be a good idea. I see this debate rumbling on and on. How do we go about this? DanBasterfield (talk) 17:18, 5 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
I would be more than happy to contact an admin. on behalf of all of us. But we must all agree to accept whatever he decides. If you are okay with that, I will get the ball rolling.
Zach4636 (talk) 21:15, 5 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
Of course, Zach, that's why I see this as a good way forwards. Four questions I'd like to see answered to put this to bed are:
Is an 'external links' section appropriate to this article?
Is LEW an appropriate external link?
Is LEF an appropriate external link?
How could the parties involved have better dealt with the dispute?
Cheers! —Preceding unsigned comment added by DanBasterfield (talkcontribs) 13:52, 6 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
I will try to contact someone by mid-afternoon or tomorrow at the latest. Zach4636 (talk) 15:18, 6 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
Geez, It's quite straightforward... Wikipedia is not meant to be a directory of links and Wikipedia:Not#Wikipedia_is_not_a_manual.2C_guidebook.2C_or_textbook Wikipedia is not a guidebook. Remember: GFE (Google F...ing Exists) - the search string "lotus esprit forum" returns the desired website as the first link - even without using the quotes. --David Broadfoot (talk) 17:40, 6 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
Outside opinion Wikipedia articles do not have to have external links sections, period. I don't see any pressing need to include any non-official links on a vehicle's page. (Sometimes, a few review links from major publications are OK, especially as a performance reference). As others have noted, forums are usually discouraged. Wikipedia does not need to do what search engines already do. OhNoitsJamie Talk 22:12, 6 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
Would your suggestion then be to leave the page as it is, to remove all the links, or to add any links? Also, thanks for intervening in this discussion.
Zach4636 (talk) 23:00, 6 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
Jamie - thanks for adding your perspective. I accept that the link to LEF is unwanted. DanBasterfield (talk) 09:56, 7 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Any connection to the Rover 3.5L V8?

edit

Does the 3.5L V8 in the Lotus have any connection at all to the Rover 3.5L V8? Davez621 (talk) 22:56, 18 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Not so far as I know - the I4 engine was a slant block design so I'm pretty sure they'd have just reflected it across the crank axis. That way they could use the old heads and pistons. Greg Locock (talk) 03:13, 19 May 2008 (UTC)Reply
No connection whatsoever to the Rover/Buick V8, and neither was it a development of the 4 cylinder Lotus 9xx engine. Blank-sheet design to showcase Lotus' engine capabilities. More detail here. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 88.108.17.46 (talk) 23:14, 27 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
Greg, since you are obviously not an Esprit or Lotus expert why are you involved in this article at all? The 3.5L 918 engine was not related to the 907 2.0L or 910 2.2L I4 engines at all. The 918 V8 was a new design. There was a V8 engine that was derived from the I4 907 - 912 engines but it never reached production. It was to be used in the still-born Lotus Etna that also never reached production. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Tevend (talkcontribs) 05:56, 19 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

4th generation designer

edit

In the "designers" section, shouldn't Carr also be listed? I suppose he is considered the 4th designer of the Lotus Esprit (V8 from 2002 to 2004).

ICE77 (talk) 23:11, 28 September 2009 (UTC)Reply

Paris motor show

edit

Here is a picture of a new Esprit shown on Paris motor show: http://www.flickr.com/photos/gcardinal/5094807075/ Gcardinal (talk) 01:02, 19 October 2010 (UTC)Reply


Lotus Designers

edit

I don't like the way it is presented. It implies that these people actually did the engineering. It should be said instead "Lotus stylists"

Agreed, but fanbois and journalists do seem to think that stylists 'design' the cars. Sad but there ya go. Greglocock (talk) 23:42, 20 February 2011 (UTC)Reply

1989 Stevens part of article is not accurate

edit

The article represents that all 1989 cars were chargecooled SE cars. This is not accurate at all. The GM Delco fuel injection was introduced on the 1989 North American cars but many were built without chargecoolers. Particularly the early 1989 cars. I think the article should correctly represent the existance of 1989 Delco EFI non-chargecooled cars. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Tevend (talkcontribs) 06:08, 19 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

File:Lotus Esprit S2 1980.jpg Nominated for Deletion

edit
  An image used in this article, File:Lotus Esprit S2 1980.jpg, has been nominated for deletion at Wikimedia Commons in the following category: Media without a source as of 25 February 2012
What should I do?

Don't panic; a discussion will now take place over on Commons about whether to remove the file. This gives you an opportunity to contest the deletion, although please review Commons guidelines before doing so.

  • If the image is non-free then you may need to upload it to Wikipedia (Commons does not allow fair use)
  • If the image isn't freely licensed and there is no fair use rationale then it cannot be uploaded or used.

To take part in any discussion, or to review a more detailed deletion rationale please visit the relevant image page (File:Lotus Esprit S2 1980.jpg)

This is Bot placed notification, another user has nominated/tagged the image --CommonsNotificationBot (talk) 12:14, 25 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

New Esprit Cancelled

edit

Article updated to reflect cancellation of the Esprit project. Excessive details of the proposed car removed as now irrelevant.Mr Tangle (talk) 19:23, 19 October 2014 (UTC)Reply

Generations, section/image matching and designers

edit

I improved the layout since it didn't look so great. I also placed images in such a way they go with the test chronologically.

1. Since there are at least 5 generations, why not call the main sections "First generation" instead of "S1 (1976)" and so on?

2. Is the "New Esprit" considered a sixth generation Esprit?

3. Section "Essex Turbo Esprit (1980)" does not match the image that labeled "1980 Lotus Esprit Essex Turbo". The naming sequence should be consistent.

4. Finally, the Esprit designers should be followed by their generations. Instead of "Giorgetto Giugiaro", they should say something like "Giorgetto Giugiaro (1st/2nd/3rd generations).

ICE77 (talk) 23:18, 18 September 2015 (UTC)Reply

re 1 and 2 and 4 Maybe because car companies don't generally refer to their models as generations? I'm sure you can find examples in the press, but internally cars have code names, numbers, or MY. If you want to see some hysterically funny/dull editing on the subject look at the Ford Fiesta article. Greglocock (talk) 23:28, 19 September 2015 (UTC)Reply

Models, dates and production discrepancies

edit

I read the article and made improvements. I also spent a considerable amount of time comparing the production table (P), the list of designers (D) and this link: https://www.lotusespritturbo.com/Lotus_Esprit_Models.htm (L). Please note the link does not include GT1 and GT2 models. Also, for some reason, Thomson is not listed along with Giugiaro and Stevens. As I put names of models, dates and production numbers side by side I see tons of discrepancies!

I will use P, D and L for the discussion below.

Giugiaro

1. The "S1" model dates here are given as 1975-1978 (P) and 1976-1978 (D) but I also read 1976-1978 (L). The article states "S1" models started in 1975 but production started in 1976. The box for "Series 1" models says 1976-1978. Dates should be consistent.

2. The "S2" model has dates 1978-1981 (P and D) but I also read 1978-1980 (L). It also has different production numbers: 1061 (P) and 1060 (L). The dates and the numbers should match.

3. The "JPS" model is missing (P) and it's repeated twice under Giugiaro (D). Were there really 2 "JPS" models? Also, the article says 149 "Commemorative Edition" Esprit cars were made (years not stated) but I read the "S2 JPS" model was produced in 1978-1979 with an estimated 147 cars (L).

4. The "Essex Turbo Esprit" model is missing (P). I see 1980 (D) and 1980-1981 with 34+11 units (L).

5. "S3" and "HC" models are not consistently listed which causes a lot of confusion and makes it hard to keep track of them (P and D). "S3" models were built in 1981-1987 (P), 1981-1987 (D - 81-86 for "S3" and 86-87 for "S3 HC") and 1981-1987 (L). "S3" model production was either 732 units (P) or 767 units (L). I read that "HC" models were built in 1980-1987 (P - I believe this should be limited to 86-87 so "HC" and "NA" should be split on two lines), 1986-1987 (D) and 1986-1987 (L). It's hard to tell what's the "HC" production since the "HC" models are lumped with "NA" models with 3155 units (P). The numbers seem to imply that 429 "Turbo Esprit" models were "HC"/"HCi" (L). I infer that "HC"/"HCi" models were built in 1986-1987 (429) and the rest was "NA" models (2726). However, "NA" models are not listed (D) and I don't understand what models are included in the "NA and HC" bundle (P) since "NA" stands for normally aspirated models for 1987-1990 (L). I can only guess "NA" models for 1980-1987 are a combination of "S3" and "S3 HC" models. I find production and designers sections quite out of synch and very confusing.

6. The dates for the "Turbo Esprit" models are not consistent. I read 1981-1987 (P) and 1981-1987 (D - 81-86 for "Turbo Esprit" and 86-87 for "Turbo Esprit HC" and "Turbo Esprit HCi"). In terms of production it seems "Turbo Esprit" numbers are 2909 (P) or 1845 (L) and 429 were "Turbo Esprit HC" and "Turbo Esprit HCi" models (L). I infer that the "Turbo Esprit" was built in 1981-1986 (2909 or 1845) and "Turbo Esprit HC" and "Turbo Esprit HCi" models were built in 1986-1987 (429). I cannot correlate the "Turbo Esprit" numbers (P has 2909 and L has 1845 since I calculate a difference of 1064 - I am comparing apples to apples since "Turbo Esprit HC" and "Turbo Esprit HCi" models are listed separately in both P and L).

Stevens

7. This article lists "Esprit (naturally aspirated) for 1988-1992 with 366 units (P) and "Esprit" for 1987-1990 under Stevens (D). This is certainly the version of the Esprit without turbo. I also read "NA" for 1987-1990 with 290 units (L). Names, dates and production data are inconsistent.

8. My understanding is that "Turbo Esprit" applies to 1981-1987 (Giugiaro) and "Esprit Turbo" applies to 1987-1990 (Stevens). This article shows "Turbo" (Esprit) for 1981-1987 and (Esprit) "Turbo SE" for 1987-1993 (P). This article, under Stevens, also shows "Esprit SE" for 1989-1991 (presumably "Esprit Turbo SE") (D) but I do not see an "(Esprit) Turbo" (just (Esprit) Turbo but not SE) for 1987-1990 period (P). Here's an image of a 1989 Lotus Esprit Turbo: https://img.pistonheads.com/LargeSize/lotus/esprit/lotus-esprit-S3058113-2.jpg. The names and the dates should be consistent.

9. The article lists "Turbo SE" for years 1987-1993 (P) and then "Esprit SE" for years 1989–91 (D). Isn't the proper name "Esprit Turbo SE"? This article has this image for a 1991 Lotus Esprit Turbo SE: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1991_Lotus_Esprit_Turbo_SE_(US_model),_rear_left_at_Greenwich_2018.jpg. I also found an image of an Lotus Esprit Turbo SE (not sure the year): https://www.lotusespritturbo.com/Lotus_Esprit_Turbo_SE_White.jpg. Here's a 1990 Lotus Esprit Turbo SE: https://www.swva.co.uk/wp-content/themes/salient-child/resize.php?src=https://www.swva.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Espirit-2.jpg&w=1240&h=800&q=90&a=c&zc=1&s=1. In this article I read 1987-1993 (P) and 1989-1991 (D) while elsewhere I found 1989-1993 (L). The names and the dates are inconsistent.

10. The "Esprit S" is listed under Stevens (D) but not elsewhere (P and L). What are the production numbers?

11a. I read that the "X180-R" was produced in 1990 with 2+20 units (P) and that the "X180R" was produced in 1991-1992 (D). Elsewhere I read that the "X180-R" was produced in 1991 (L). Spellings and dates do not match.

11b. The article does not say anything about the "X180-R1" model (it actually says "Three more race cars were built for the 1991 season ... The new cars were designated Type 106, but adopted the X180R name as well"). It lists 3 units in 1991 (P) so I can only assume the "X180-R1" from 1991 (P) is lumped with "X180R" from 1990 (P) under "Esprit X180R" in 1991-1992 under Stevens (D). Spellings are inconsistent and dates do not match.

12. This article lists a model called "Esprit SE HighWing" for 1992-1993 which I don't think it even exists (D) and it probably falls under (Esprit) Turbo SE (P). I presume that is a Lotus Esprit Turbo SE that mounts a high rear wing like some of the Esprits from the Thomson generation (Sport 300, S4s or V8). I believe the model in question would be something like this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lotus_Esprit#/media/File:Schaffen_Lotus_Esprit_01.JPG. However, I'm not sure the Esprit in the photo is an "Esprit Turbo". It may be simply an Esprit (NA) model with a high wing.

13a. The "Sport 300" is listed for 1992-1995 (P), "Esprit Sport 300" for 1993 (D) and as "S300" for 1992-1995 (L). Dates do not overlap. Also, production numbers are different. The article says 50 but I read 64 (P and L).

13b. The "Sport 300" is listed under Thomson (D - 1993-1999) but those cars started production in 1992 (L) so I do not understand the discrepancy. The rims for the "Sport 300" models are distinctively different and fairly unique to the Thomson era so I am confused. Also, the article explains the "Sport 300" model in the "X180" section. I can only assume Stevens worked for a short period on the car and Thomson took from there and developed it. However, if that is the case, it should be stated and dates should be adjusted as well as classification under Stevens or Thomson (D).

13c. The "Sport 300" are clearly labeled as such. Is "S300" an unofficial equivalent?

14a. The article lists "S4" for the years 1993-2004 in the top box. I also read "S4" for 1992-1996 (P) and "Esprit S4" for 1993-1996 (D). Elsewhere, I read "S4" for 1992-1996 (L). The dates of production do not match".

14b. The article says "The S4 was succeeded in 1994 by the S4 Sport (S4s)". I then lists "S4s" for years 1994-1997 (P) and "Esprit S4s" for years 1995–96 (D). Elsewhere, I read "S4s" for years 1994-1997 (L). There is clearly an inconsistency with dates. It's either 1994-1997 or 1995-1996.

14c. Calling the "Series 4" "Lotus Esprit V8" is not correct since models like the "S4", "S4s" and "GT3" models have V4 engines.

15. The article lists "V8" for the years 1996-2004 in the top box. I read "V8" in 1994-2004 with 1237 units (P), "Esprit V8" in 1996-1998 (D) and "V8 (GT & SE)" in 1996-2001 with 1231 units (204 "GT" and 1027 "SE") (L). "V8 GT" dates do not match (P: 1997-2001 and D: 1998-2001). "V8" must be "V8 SE" (P) but numbers do not match (P: 1237 / L: 1027 - the difference is 210). I infer that "V8" (P) must include Thomson's "V8 SE" models (1027) and Carr's "V8" models (210). This is because 1237-1027=210 and 204 ("V8 GT") is a common number (P and L). Therefore "V8" (P) is listing two models with similar names ("V8 SE" and "V8") from two generations (Thomson and Carr). This does not sound right since they are different generations of designers and this is confusing. It makes it hard to keep track of the production numbers from a generation to another.

16. The "Sport 350" is listed in 1999-2001 with 42 units (P), 1999 only (D) and 1999-2001 with 54 units (L). The article mentions 50 units which is contradicting. Years and production do not match.

Thomson

17a. The article lists "Esprit V8" for 2002-2004 (D) which I proved it's lumped under "V8" with 210 units (P). Elsewhere, I read there is a model called "02" with 292 units so I assume "Esprit V8" and "02" are the same model. Production numbers are not available (P).

17b. How can you tell a "V8 GT" from a "VT SE"?

18a. The "GT1" section mentions that 3 cars were built and 2 of them were converted to "GT2" models . "GT1" models are not listed under Thomson (D). At a minimum, there should be a note to explain what I just summarized (P and D).

18b. The "GT1" section says "recently dissolved Team Lotus". I assume this is a reference to the Formula 1 team. If that is the case, it should be stated and the year should be added.

19. In the "In film and on television" section what does ".5" mean in "Silver 1989.5 Esprit SE"?

The evolution of the Esprit is truly fascinating. Although it was interesting to review model names, dates of production and production numbers, I struggled to reconcile labels and figures. I proved that several things are not properly aligned and I hope that somebody with knowledge and experience on the Esprit can shed some lights on the things I contested and correct this article accordingly.

ICE77 (talk) 10:05, 10 August 2018 (UTC)Reply


I spent more time doing research and crossmatching several sources. I found these 3 links:

  • X appears to be correct but only to some extent.
  • Y seems to be quite accurate but it does not have a breakdown of models.
  • Z appears to be fairly accurate and it has the breakdown of models.

Reading multiple sources, it appears Lotus built 10675 Esprit models between 1976 and 2004. That appears to be the exact number.

While examining Y I notice that summing the last row the total is 10669 (short by 6) and summing the last column the total is 10676 (over by 1). There is certainly an error somewhere but the number is quite close and I think Y is the best representation for dates and numbers of production.

Z is mostly correct but I noticed these things:

The sum of all the numbers is 11019 (344 extra). Something is not right but it's also clear that the 1988 Esprit Turbo 40th Ann(iversary) and the Esprit V8 "02" are additions that I have not seen tracked anywhere so far. The 1988 Esprit Turbo 40th Ann(iversary) is not mentioned at all in this article. Image: 1988 Lotus Esprit Turbo 40th Anniversary

This article says 2 X180R cars have been built for racing in the SCCA Escort World Challenge series and 20 have been built for the road in 1990 (type 105). It also says 3 X180R were built for racing in 1991 (type 106).

Therefore, this:

  • Esprit Turbo (SCCA) Lotus 910s 4 cyl. 2.2 litre Turbo 105 1990 - 1991 5
  • Esprit Turbo X180R Lotus 910s 4 cyl. 2.2 litre Turbo 106 1991 22

should be replaced by this:

  • Esprit Turbo (SCCA) Lotus 910s 4 cyl. 2.2 litre Turbo 105 1990 2
  • Esprit Turbo X180R Lotus 910s 4 cyl. 2.2 litre Turbo 105 1990 20
  • Esprit Turbo X180R Lotus 910s 4 cyl. 2.2 litre Turbo 106 1991 3

The Esprit S model is not mentioned at all so I wonder where it would fall under.

After crossreferencing I noticed that the sum of the models in the production table (P) would be 13400 (2725 extra). This is clearly wrong and this is likely due to overlap of different categories like HC or N/A and so on.

For P I confirm the numbers for these models: S1, S2.2, Turbo SE, S4, Sport 300, S4s, GT3, V8 GT and GT1.

For Y I confirm the numbers for these categories/models: Turbo, HCPI, INTRCL, S300, S4, S4s, GT3 and V8GT. If GMP4 of Y is the same thing as Esprit Turbo (X180) of Z I also confirm GMP4.

For Z I confirm the numbers for these models: S1, S2 "JPS", S2.2, Turbo Esprit, Essex Turbo Esprit, Turbo Esprit HCPI, Esprit SE, Esprit S300, Esprit S4, Esprit S4s, Esprit GT1, Esprit GT3 and Esprit V8 GT. If Esprit Turbo (X180) of Z is the same thing as GMP4 of Y I also confirm Esprit Turbo (X180).

Comparing P, Y and Z I cannot match numbers for these models: S2, S3, Esprit (NA)/Esprit N/A (X180), V8 and Sport 350. Some models are quite close in number like the S2 (off by 1) and the V8 (off by 6) but the numbers do not match. It is unfortunate that in Z the V8 SE is lumped together with the V8. From what I read, between 1981 and 1987 767 S3 Esprit cars were built (http://www.lotusespritworld.com/EModels/S3.html). That is close to the number provided by Z which has 763. P has 732 which appears off.

Also, summing all the normally aspirated numbers in Z produces 3066 which is 147 units above 2919 which, incidentally, is the number for N/A for Y. I don't know if this is a coincidence but 147 is the number of S2 JPS that maybe are unaccounted in Y. This is hard to tell - I don't have sufficient evidence but I am leaning towards Y being more accurate than Z so some numbers in Z may be overstated.

Note that both Y and Z claim to be official Lotus documents (two Lotus unofficial websites). I believe something is clearly out of sync and things are not properly documented. It is at this stage by all means clear to me that P is messed up and that D is mostly wrong. P and D are out of sync and they should be fixed. However introduced the table with the production numbers (P) should be ashamed of himself/herself because it's garbage.

ICE77 (talk) 09:06, 13 August 2018 (UTC)Reply

Lotus Esprit images

edit

I am trying to understand/confirm the models/years for the following images. If you know, please let me know:


1. https://www.lotusespritturbo.com/Lotus_Esprit_Stevens_Red.jpg

Label: 1991 Lotus Esprit (Stevens)

Comments: From the image I would say it's an Esprit (NA) since it says "ESPRIT", it does not have a hole in the front bumper and it lacks the rear spoiler. However, the 1991 tag does not seem right since the normally aspirated Esprit from Stevens's generation were not made past 1990 (unless it was produced in 1990 and sold in 1991).


2. https://www.aib-insurance.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/Lotus_Esprit_6.jpg

Label: Lotus Turbo Esprit

Comments: Turbo Esprit? Maybe Esprit Turbo? Notice the bottom of the car is black.


3. https://www.lotusespritturbo.com/Lotus_Esprit_Turbo_SE_White.jpg

Label: Lotus Esprit Turbo SE

Comments: What is the year?


4. http://www.lotusespritturbo.com/Lotus_Esprit_S300_NA.JPG

Label: Lotus Esprit Sport 300 NA

Comments: It it correct? It looks to me like an S4s from the Thomson era because of the rims.


5. https://i.pinimg.com/originals/bb/fd/23/bbfd23188ffae7c73f5365a0c481048d.jpg

Label: unavailable

Comments: What is the model? What is the year?


6. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lotus_Esprit#/media/File:Schaffen_Lotus_Esprit_01.JPG

Label: Lotus Esprit (X180 redesign)

Comments: It looks like an Esprit (tag on the side) and and Esprit Turbo SE (hole in front bumper) with a big Thomson era rear spoiler. What is the model? What is the year?


7. https://www.lotusespritturbo.com/SE%202.JPG

Label: Lotus Esprit SE

Comments: Is it a Lotus Esprit Turbo SE?


8. https://i.pinimg.com/originals/02/e8/ee/02e8eed72f979736225bfeb94418668a.jpg

Label: Lotus Esprit V8

Comments: V8 (1996-1998), V8 GT (1998-2001) or V8 SE (1998-2001)? How can you tell them apart from each other?


In addition, I would like to make these comments:

The image at the top right is pretty ugly. I believe we can find a more glorious image for such a legendary car.

The image of the 1991 Lotus Esprit Turbo SE (USA) is pretty ugly. There is plastic under the back of the car … really? Let's replace the image.

ICE77 (talk) 10:33, 10 August 2018 (UTC)Reply

Fires in the engine bay

edit

I see Mr Ludicrous is claiming there is no ventilation in the engine bay. Big clue. Grab a screwdriver, drop it past the engine. Bend down, retrieve it from the floor. Rinse and repeat. That big hole under the engine provides cooling. Greglocock (talk) 06:24, 20 August 2018 (UTC)Reply

But does that one big hole provide cooling? It takes two holes to make airflow, in and out.
I know little of the Esprit (or Lotuses). Some experience with a Jensen-Healey, most with a Lancia Montecarlo, Fiat X1-9s and Toyota MR2s. Those three all have real problems with lack of airflow, despite a "big hole in the floor", and instead need side air inlets for some sort of ram air. The X1-9 in particular (unless modified) had a habit of vapour locking the carb when parked briefly after a run.
So just how much cooling air is there in the Esprit, where does it come from, where does it go, and is it enough? Andy Dingley (talk) 09:32, 20 August 2018 (UTC)Reply
Dunno. As an aside when undertrays were introduced (generally, not specifically on Lotus), primarily to reduce driveby noise, the engine guys predicted all sorts of doom and gloom with respect to cooling. In fact we found that a controlled airflow around the engine was better than the usual chaos. Greglocock (talk) 23:10, 20 August 2018 (UTC)Reply
Yes, but only if some airflow then appeared elsewhere to provide a current. Turbulent random was OK when the was a gaping hole on one side, but cowls don't do U turns. Andy Dingley (talk) 23:17, 20 August 2018 (UTC)Reply

Built in Cape Town

edit

Dunno if this reproduction of a magazine article is a good enough source, but I'm going for yes it is. https://www.thelotusforums.com/forums/topic/95509-esprit-s1s-that-were-assembled-in-south-africa/ Greglocock (talk) 22:28, 17 November 2018 (UTC)Reply

German wiki entry on the assembler https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intermotormakers . Here's a google translation " Company History Gerrie Steenkamp founded the company in Cape Town in 1976. He began assembling automobiles from Lamborghini and Lotus. [1] [3] [4] A change of legal regulations led to the end of this activity. [3] Altogether approximately 24 vehicles of both brands were created. [3] In 1990 a self-developed vehicle was presented. [2] [3] The brand name was Intermotormakers. [1] [3] In the same year the production ended. In 2010, the company was dissolved.

vehicles The company assembled Lamborghini Countach, Lamborghini Espada, Lotus Éclat and Lotus Elite. In addition, a Lamborghini Urraco is known from 1976, wearing an emblem of Intermotormakers. In addition, a lotus esprit is known.

In 1990, the Caracal was presented, designed by Nic de Waal. This was a roadster. A four-cylinder Volkswagen engine with a displacement of 1800 cc was placed behind the mid-engine seats. From this model emerged four prototypes.

"

Greglocock (talk) 22:54, 17 November 2018 (UTC)Reply

please see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Automobiles#Place_of_assembly_-CKD Greglocock (talk) 05:04, 21 November 2018 (UTC)Reply

Lotus Esprit Turbo SE Jim Clark Edition

edit

I found an image of a 1991 Lotus Esprit Turbo SE Jim Clark Edition: https://bringatrailer.com/listing/1991-lotus-esprit-5. I have seen other Lotus Esprit Turbo SE Jim Clark Edition on the Internet. Can anybody confirm that only 20 Jim Clark Edition cars have been built and that they are all 1991 Lotus Esprit Turbo SE? The Lotus Esprit Turbo SE Jim Clark Edition should be mentioned in the article.

ICE77 (talk) 08:42, 13 December 2018 (UTC)Reply

1999-2000 Lotus Esprit V8

edit

I found images of these 1999-2000 Lotus Esprit V8 on the Internet:

According to this article the Thomson generation V8 models go from 1996 to 1998 and this is inconsistent. It should be corrected.

ICE77 (talk) 01:32, 15 August 2021 (UTC)Reply

Pronunciation

edit

Arguments about how to say the name need settling. Is it "espree" or the way its spelled 92.14.181.237 (talk) 09:37, 14 February 2023 (UTC)Reply

"Espree" - it's a french word originally, means spirit. Greglocock (talk) 20:54, 14 February 2023 (UTC)Reply