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Lotus 43


FieldValue
Car_nameLotus 43
Image[[File:FoS20162016 0624 112938AA (27785376742).jpg260 px]]
CategoryFormula One
ConstructorTeam Lotus
Designer
PredecessorLotus 33
SuccessorLotus 49
TeamTeam Lotus
DriversUK Peter Arundell
UK Jim Clark
UK Graham Hill
Technical ref
ChassisAluminium monocoque
Front suspensiontop rocker arms, lower wishbones, inboard coil springs over dampers
Rear suspensionreverse lower wishbones, twin radius arms, coil springs over dampers, anti-roll bar
Engine nameBRM P75
2996 cc
ConfigurationH16
Turbo/NANaturally aspirated
Gearbox nameBRM T82
Gears6-speed
Typemanual
Weight563 kg
FuelEsso
TyresFirestone
Debut1966 Belgian Grand Prix
Last_event1967 South African Grand Prix
Races5
Wins1
Cons_champ0
Drivers_champ0
Poles0
Fastest_laps0
Podiums1

UK Jim Clark UK Graham Hill 2996 cc | Turbo/NA = Naturally aspirated The Lotus 43 was a Formula One racing car designed by Colin Chapman and Maurice Philippe for the 1966 season. Hampered by its heavy and unreliable BRM engine, it won only one race, the 1966 United States Grand Prix.

Concept

The Lotus 43 was partially based on the Lotus 38 Indycar, designed by Len Terry, due to Lotus's experience at Indy with larger engine capacity and tyre/suspension setup. The car was designed in this way in response to new F1 regulations which came into force in 1966, which increased the engine capacity to 3 litres. Along with newer, wider tyres better able to handle the power of the larger engines, the need for a more robust design was obvious.

Cosworth were developing a new engine for Lotus, the DFV, to be introduced for the 1967 Formula One season, and in the meantime Chapman made a deal for use of the BRM P75 H16 engine. The P75 on paper was technically advanced and powerful, and Chapman had hopes that it would power his cars to another successful season.

The first sign of trouble was when the H16 engine arrived at the Team Lotus factory in Hethel, Norfolk and it required four men to lift it from the truck. The engine proved to be overweight, unreliable and was unable to produce the promised power.

Engine problems aside, the 43 chassis was considered an excellent design and elements of it were used in its 1967 successor, the far more successful Lotus 49, including the use of the engine as a stressed structural member which bore weight and to which the rear suspension was attached.

Racing history

1966

The car was supposed to debut at the 1966 Monaco Grand Prix, driven by Peter Arundell, but it was unavailable. Its first outing at the following Belgian Grand Prix ended during practice, when the engine gave out.

The 43 reappeared at the Italian Grand Prix but retired with gearbox failure. Clark then won the United States Grand Prix at Watkins Glen, the only race win for the P75 engine, using a spare engine loaned by the BRM team. However, gearbox failure again led to the 43's retirement from the final race of the season, the Mexican Grand Prix.

1967

In 1967 the 43 made its final appearance at the South African Grand Prix at the Kyalami circuit, where Clark and new team mate Graham Hill both retired their cars.

Only two cars were built and were later sold to Robert Lamplough and Jock Russell, who fitted them with 4.7 litre Ford V8 engines and competed in Formula 5000 events.

Lotus 43 2014.jpg|Lotus 43 at the BTCC Knockhill 2014 File:Lotus 43 2014 2.jpg|Lotus 43 being demonstrated in 2014

Complete results

Formula One World Championship results

(key)

YearEntrantEngineTyresDrivers1234567891011PointsWCC
Team LotusBRM P75 3.0 H16MONBELFRAGBRNEDGERITAUSAMEX135th
Peter ArundellDNSRet
Jim ClarkRet1Ret
Team LotusBRM P75 3.0 H16RSAMONNEDBELFRAGBRGERCANITAUSAMEX68th
Jim ClarkRet
Graham HillRet

Total points scored by all Lotus-BRM cars, including 4 points scored by drivers of Lotus 33 variants. Total points scored by all Lotus-BRM cars, including 6 points scored by drivers of Lotus 33 variants.

Non-championship Formula One results

(key)

YearEntrantEngineTyresDrivers1234
1966Team LotusBRM P75 3.0 H16RSASYRINTOUL
Jim ClarkDNS

PC simulation

A driveable, detailed reconstruction of the Lotus 43 (with matching car physics) appeared in 2007 in the freely-available '66 Mod' for the PC-based racing simulation Grand Prix Legends.

References

References

  1. "STATS F1 • Lotus 43". Statsf1.com.
  2. "Lotus 43 BRM".
  3. "Lotus 43 BRM".
  4. "The Lotus 43 and its Mighty 16-Cylinders! | HistoricRacingNews.com".
  5. Perkins, Chris. (19 June 2018). "The 1966 Lotus 43 Was a Magnificent Failure With a Bizarre Engine".
  6. Elson, James. (2024-07-12). "Colin Chapman: Formula 1's greatest innovator".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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