Happy to announce that she is running. Have to give credit to Dan Smith who I meet at a meeting of my local Lotus club - Lotus Corps
www.lotuscorps.org. Turns out Dan lives 10 minutes away and was willing to take a look at the car. Next thing I know we are check compression, ignition, spark plugs, firing order, fuel pump, breaker gap on the distributor, etc… Not finding anything out of sort we decide to try and start her. Dan quickly finds that one of the dash pots doesn’t want to go up, and when you force it up it stays up. On the other carb gas is leaking out of float bowl. So off come the carbs, only to find out that the o-rings have split and allowing a lot of extra air into the fuel mixture. Time to rebuild the carbs. Dan takes them home so that they can soak in carb cleaner while we wait for the carb kits to come in from R&D Engineering. Following weekend we rebuilt the carbs. Interesting to note that the original diaphragms, needles, floats were all in working order. Even before Dan put them in carb cleaner he said the bowl and other internal parts were extremely clean. Put them back on and turned the key. She still wouldn't start. So the next thing was to make sure the distributor is in the right position for 5 degrees BTDC. The other important point was to make sure we were also on the compression stroke. Little trick Dan told me is to open the oil cap and look at the cam lobe. The cam lobe should be point towards the outside of the car. However on this car at BTDC the visible lobe was pointing up or down. Can’t remember, put certainly not out. This was very odd and it led Dan to think that we were not at TDC. So we took a long wooden rod and placed it in cylinder 1. Rotated the rear wheel and could see that when the marking on the flywheel showed TDC the rod was at its lowest point. When I rotated the rear wheel and moved the rod to its highest point there were no markings on the fly wheel to indicate TDC. After a lot of scratching I remember that many years ago the engine did come out after a bad valve job almost destroyed the engine. Best we can figure is that whoever rebuilt the engine put the flywheel back in the wrong position. Crossing our fingers we marked the new TDC on the flywheel and rotated around to 5 degrees BTDC. Made sure everything else was were it was supposed to be, hit the key and after a few turns she fired. Had to give it a few more tries until there was clear flow of gas to the carbs but then she ran at idle and actually sounds rather smooth at higher revs. Dan says we still have some fine tuning but I’m just happy we got her running. Could not have done it without Dan. Wish I could post a video so you could hear her. Sounds pretty good after 20 years.
Well, I guess this means I’m onto the next phase. With someone like Dan, a local Lotus club and an online Europa community I’m confident that she will be heading down the road soon.