Category | Formula Two, Formula One | ||||||||
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Constructor | Lotus | ||||||||
Designer(s) | Colin Chapman | ||||||||
Successor | Lotus 16 | ||||||||
Technical specifications | |||||||||
Chassis | Steel spaceframe | ||||||||
Suspension (front) | Double wishbone | ||||||||
Suspension (rear) | Chapman struts | ||||||||
Engine | Coventry Climax FPF 1,475, 1,964 and 2,207 cc inline 4, gear-driven DOHC normally aspirated. front engined, longitudinally mounted. | ||||||||
Transmission | Ansdale-Mundy transaxle 5-speed, with ZF diff. in bespoke casing | ||||||||
Tyres | Dunlop | ||||||||
Competition history | |||||||||
Notable entrants | Team Lotus | ||||||||
Notable drivers |
Graham Hill Cliff Allison |
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Debut | 1958 Monaco Grand Prix | ||||||||
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n.b. Unless otherwise stated, all data refer to Formula One World Championship Grands Prix only. |
The Lotus 12 was a Formula Two and Formula One racing car.
Colin Chapman's first foray into single-seater racing, the 12 appeared in 1957. It featured a number of important innovations Chapman would use on later models. To better use the power of the Coventry Climax engine, it was designed, as usual, for low weight and low drag, relying on a space frame. It placed the driver as low as possible, reducing the height of transmission tunnel by way of a "conceptually brilliant" five-speed sequential shift transaxle located in the back. This transaxle was designed by Richard Ansdale and Harry Mundy. The car had a (long-undiagnosed) oil starvation problem, thus earned the nickname "Queer Box" for its unreliability.
Although the first two examples of Lotus 12 had De Dion rear suspension, it also introduced a new suspension configuration with what came to be called "Chapman struts" in the rear, essentially a MacPherson strut with a fixed length halfshaft with universal joints on the ends utilised as a suspension arm.
Lotus 12 was the first Lotus to be fitted with the iconic wobbly-web wheels. Reflecting Chapman's emphasis on engineering for lightness, these were cast in magnesium alloy, a kind of crimped cylinder, resulting in minimum material and maximum strength, without the weaknesses induced by slots in conventional designs.
Despite its engineering advances, the 12 was not a success in F1. In F2, the car won the class in the mixed F1/F2 1958 BRDC International Trophy, driven by Cliff Allison, but in spite of a small number of podiums, was usually drowned in a sea of Coopers.