LOTUS
MARK VIII
The aerodynamic sports racer that launched Team Lotus
LOTUS MARK VIII: THE NEXT LEAP FOR LOTUS
With a strikingly different design than the previous Lotus cars, the Mark VIII manifested a new chapter in the evolution of Lotus.
It was the winter of 1953 when Colin Chapman put pencil to paper and devised a chassis for a new car. To go with this lightweight chassis he wanted a new, more streamlined body, compared to the existing Mark VI.
The goal? Reduce drag to improve top speed. Although Chapman wasn’t the biggest fan of the body shape — designed by aerodynamicist Frank Costin — the Mark VIII was exemplary of the Lotus approach to engineering.
LOTUS FIRST TRUE AERODYNAMIC BODY
Frank Costin applied aircraft principles to car design for the first time. The sleek, low body design with extended front wings and twin tailfins gave the Mark VIII remarkable stability at high speed.
AERONAUTICAL ELEGANCE
HUMAN SPEED TESTING
INNOVATION ON EVERY LEVEL
RACING DEBUT FOR THE MARK VIII
The Mark VIII made its racing debut on 10 April 1954 at Oulton Park circuit and was actually involved in a minor crash on the way to the event. More important than the race itself, is the fact that it was the public debut of the ‘Team Lotus’ name. A name that was on its way to stun the world of motorsport in the following decades.
CROWNING GLORY FOR THE MARK VIII
The epitome of success for this Lotus sports racing car came at the 1954 British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Colin Chapman enjoyed the satisfaction of winning the supporting 1500cc race in his Mark VIII, beating Peter Gammon’s Mark VI and Hermann’s Porsche in the process.
MARK VIII AND THE PRIVATEERS
After the start of the 1954 season several privateers expressed their demand for a Mark VIII chassis of their own. Among the first were John Coombs, Nigel Allen, and Dan Margulies.
The ‘production’ Mark VIII cars were different from the prototype in a number of ways, not least the chassis design.
Production body shells were manufactured in 18-swg alloy. They were similar to the prototype, only without the rear outlet in the boot lid. Preferred engine and body details were up to the buyers.
THE WHITE LOTUS
DRIVE THE
NEXT GENERATION