Originally posted by Macca
Did the 900-series chassis numbers and the 370-series chassis numbers (plus the Parnell-built 'P' cars) encompass all the 18s that were built for F1 and F2 in 1960-61?
What was the chassis number series for the FJ cars? Was there a difference between the number series of the 'Team' cars as used by Clark/Taylor and the production cars that were presumably made by Arch Motors?
Paul M
I think it goes thus:
The number part of the chassis numbers is sequential.
e.g. 370 is the 370th Lotus, 900 the 900th.
Early cars just had a number - e.g. 96 could be a Mark 10 and 97 a Mark 6.
Around 1960 they started to prefix this number with the model type.
e.g. 20 - J - 951 was a Lotus 20, Formula Junior and the 951st Lotus.
Since they tended to build cars in batches a lot of models would have sequential numbers, but there could be some jumps in the sequence (hence 18's jumping from 370 to 900 - presumably a lot of numbers were allocated to other (road?) cars in the midst of this).
Later they introduced a different method, numbering each model type seperately - e.g. 49s go from R1 to R13 (49 - R1)
And of course when JPS became less acceptable on TV the cars became JPS-1 etc
Parnell used their own nos. e.g. P1 etc, but UDT continued the Lotus sequence - presumably with some help from Lotus otherwise they could easily have duplicated nos.