First EVER Lotus F1 race car driven by double world champion Graham Hill to go on sale for a jaw-dropping price | 7909QXX | 2024-04-10 12:08:01
The long-lasting car accompanied the double world champion throughout his debut in the revered Monte Carlo
THE first ever Lotus F1 race automotive pushed by Graham Hill has gone up for sale with an unimaginable £311,000 price tag.
The long-lasting car accompanied the double world champion throughout his debut in the revered Monte Carlo race.



The F1 Lotus Race Automotive – a legend in Components 1 history – can be on sale at The Bonhams Automobiles Monaco Sale on Might 10.
It's expected to go underneath the hammer for a powerful £311,000 – a steal for such a motorsport icon.
Lotus has hit the monitor of Formulation 1 for the first time on this very car in 1958.
Since then, The British marque has secured the title seven occasions with the model's stars similar to Graham Hill, Jim Clark, Jochen Rindt, Emerson Fittipaldi and Mario Andretti in the cockpit.
All through its time, Lotus gained 74 Components 1 Grand Prix, with notable drivers together with Ayrton Senna, Stirling Moss, and Ronnie Peterson securing more triumphs.
5-times Monaco GP winner and double World Champion Driver, Hill, steered the wheel of this car in Silverstone's 1958 BRDS International Trophy Race and his group Lotus's Components 1 debut.
Lotus sort 12 design was created in late 1956 by the model founder, Colin Chapman.
It was the primary Lotus single-seater he had pushed because the 1954–1956 ultra-lightweight, finely streamlined sports racing automobiles that had made his marquee prestigious.
When he set his sights on Formulation 1, Chapman enlarged the automotive's unique engine from 1500 to 1960cc to suit the standards.
The small engine carried out admirably on winding roads, putting Hill seventh in Lotus' debut.
<!-- End of Brightcove Player --> Off the monitor, the Lotus-Climax Sort 12 chassis "353" is the centre of an unforgettable tale, often known as the "Figgy Pudding Grand Prix."
Motor Spor' journal's famend racing journalist Denis Jenkinson turned desperate to test a single-seater racing automotive on a daily British public street.
Christmas Day 1957 saw the fulfilment of Jenks's dream when he was lent a Lotus Automobiles '353' by Colin Chapman.
Jenks drove the automotive across the abandoned roads of Hampshire until the drive shaft broke near Basingstoke, the place he coasted up a personal driveway to get the automotive out of sight, interrupting an astonished family's Christmas lunch.
After being bought by British personal entrant John Fisher, Lotus "353" was raced in 1959 by Maria Theresa de Filippis – the primary female Formulation 1 competitor.
It was later bought by a succession of Australian house owners, remaining in the down underneath in a remarkably unique situation.
Chassis "353" was finally brought back to its operational order by the present vendor – who has written an aptly titled ebook concerning the automotive.
In the guide – Lotus 12 Chassis No.353: The History – Clive Chapman, head of Class Workforce Lotus, stated: "I wish that each Staff Lotus racing automotive might have such an exquisite report of its life."

With a long-history in F1, it has secured seven titles for the British marque[/caption]
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