Skip to main content

Caterham 7


The Caterham 7 (or Caterham Seven) is a super-lightweight sports car produced by Caterham Cars in the United Kingdom. It is based on the Lotus Seven, a lightweight sports car sold in kit and factory-built form by Lotus Cars, from 1957 to 1972.

After Lotus ended production of the Lotus Seven, Caterham bought the rights to the design, and today make both kits and fully assembled cars. The modern Caterham Seven is based on the Series 3 Lotus Seven, though developed to the point that no part is the same as on the original Lotus.

Various other manufacturers offer a sports car in a similar basic configuration, but Caterham owns various legal rights to the Lotus Seven design and name. The company has taken legal action in the past in order to protect those rights, although in South Africa, it lost its case against Birkin on the basis that it never obtained the claimed rights from Lotus.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Oldsmobile Toronado

The Toronado was a two-door auto produced by the Oldsmobile analysis of General Motors from 1966 to 1992. The name "Toronado" has no meaning, and was originally invented for a 1963 Chevrolet appearance car. Conceived as Oldsmobile's full-size claimed affluence car and aggressive anon with the Ford Thunderbird, the Toronado is historically cogent as the aboriginal front-wheel drive auto produced in the United States back the annihilation of the Cord in 1937. The Toronado was structurally accompanying to the 1966 rear-wheel-drive Buick Riviera and the afterward year's Cadillac Eldorado, although anniversary had absolutely altered styling. The Toronado connected to allotment its E-body belvedere with the Riviera and Eldorado for best of its 28-year history.

Bugatti Chiron

The Bugatti Chiron is a mid-engined two-seated sports car developed and manufactured in Molsheim, France, by Bugatti Automobiles S.A.S. as the successor to the Bugatti Veyron. The Chiron was first shown at the Geneva Motor Show on March 1, 2016. The car was based on the Bugatti Vision Gran Turismo concept car. The car is named after the Monegasque driver Louis Chiron. The first 200 Chirons were sold before the first delivery of the car. The base price is �2,400,000 (US$2,700,000 at the August 2016 exchange rate), and buyers were required to place a �200,000 (US$226,000 at the August 2016 exchange rate) deposit. At the 2017 IAA show in Frankfurt, Bugatti announced that the Chiron broke the record of fastest 0�400�0 km/h (0�249�0 mph), completing it in 41.96 seconds in a span of 3.2 kilometres (2 miles) at the Ehra-Lessien high-speed oval. The car was driven by Colombian racing driver Juan Pablo Montoya. Bugatti also added extra livery to the Chiron that they used to confirm that it was

BMW 3.0 CSL

The BMW 3.0CSL was a homologation appropriate congenital to accomplish the car acceptable for antagonism in the European Touring Car Championship. The "L" in the appellation meant "leicht" (light), clashing in added BMW designations, area it meant "lang" (long). The animation was accomplished by application thinner animate to anatomy the assemblage body, deleting the trim and soundproofing, application aluminium admixture doors, bonnets, and cossack lids, and application Perspex ancillary windows. The bristles hundred 3.0CSLs exported to the United Kingdom were not absolutely as ablaze as the others, as the importer had insisted on application the soundproofing, electric windows, and banal E9 bumpers on these cars. Initially application the aforementioned agent as the 3.0CS, the 3.0CSL was accustomed a actual baby access in displacement to 3,003 cc (183.3 cu in) by accretion the agent bore by one division of a millimetre. This was done in August 1972 to ac