The car has the original leather covered steering wheel, the outer layer of leather is peeling off, and while I know it could get recovered I just do not like the thin feel of the wheel and want to replace with a thicker, not overly, wooden wheel, have looked at Nardi, Momo, Grant ETC.
Not looking to change the spoke configuration, or the size necessarily. What is involved?
Current wheel has the black Lotus horn button is there 1 made in the yellow and green?
I've never seen that particular style of steering wheel; it looks like an mash-up of a later wheel (from the hub fitting) with an earlier style horn button glued to the center cap.
(ALL earlier cars had a black/silver Lotus roundel horn button. It's only the nose badge, from what I learned talking to folks who were at the factory in the '68-70 timeframe, that the black was released at the same time that Clark met his demise at Hockenheim...check out some of the photos in early road tests...they are black/silver horn buttons, except for one yellow/black that was featured in a 47 that I saw)
There are three photos of stock parts below, the first is an S1/2/early TC steering wheel. They didn't change the style in the Europa until post '72; early TCs carried over the fitment from the S2. The second is a stock (missing the center plastic hub) TCS steering wheel from 3291R. While it will fit the earlier stems in terms of splines, there is a different cancel mechanism (two pins in the back, same as the later Esprit/Eclat/Elite) and no provision for a horn. The third is the center hub trim (which strangely enough, fits the replacement wheel that was in the car when I bought it; I noticed that the OEM hub and center cap, which I like better, fit the smaller (it's a 13 inch diameter vs stock 14 inch) wheel that I have in the car right now.
It seems to me that what you have, as I said, is a mash-up of unknown parentage; you can see the hole pattern of your example does not match either of the wheels that I know were installed in the TC; in fact, photos you can examine in the Brooklands reprint series bear out the use of the earlier S1/2 wheels in early TCs.
As to how to satisfy your desire for a beefier wheel...you can have yours re-covered with additional padding, or modify/bash together a frankenwheel from a known good hub with an aftermarket that meets your desire...or...
(Just a thought...you may want to shorten your shift lever someday...makes it easier to shift with your arm resting on the center pad than reaching up halfway to the roof...just a thought...lots have done it and it helps shorten the throw without seriously affecting the force needed to row through the gears...)
HTH