[Spy Shots] New Lotus Type 133 luxury saloon ramps up for 2023 reveal


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Lotus's Taycan rival – and first saloon since the Carlton – surfaces for the first time in new images

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The long-awaited Lotus Type 133 – a sleek luxury saloon to rival the Porsche Taycan – is on track for an official unveiling in 2023, having started testing on public roads in production form.

Pictures published to Chinese social media platform Weibo (below) show what Autocar understands to be an early development mule for the upcoming saloon, giving a first look at its exterior design and interior. Camouflage and cladding leave much to the imagination, but even at this early stage it's clear that the Type 133 will be a close relation to the larger Lotus Eletre SUV.

Lotus's first saloon car since the legendary Carlton – a Vauxhall-based BMW M5 rival from the early 1990s – will be given a name beginning with 'E' when it reaches showrooms, Autocar understands, but this is unlikely to be 'Envya', as has been widely reported.

It will be similar in its conception to sibling brand Polestar's 5 grand tourer, due on sale around a year later, in 2024. But, suggested Lotus managing director Matt Windle, the two cars will be tangibly differentiated, despite their shared Geely Group origins.

Asked if Lotus could benefit from the UK-based development programme for the Polestar 5, Windle told Autocar earlier this year: "Yes and no. The importance is keeping that individuality - and we are different companies."

It is not yet clear whether the two cars will share a modular EV platform from the Geely stable (the Eletre platform is said to be a bespoke architecture), nor whether the Type 133 will be available with the Polestar's range-topping 874bhp four-wheel-drive powertrain, but Windle said: "It will be the Lotus ethos in that car. It's a bit more refined, further towards the luxury end of what we're trying to do with our performance luxury brand."

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Global Lotus dealers have been shown the final design for the Type 133, he confirmed, "so they know what's coming next - and excitement was very high".

Elaborating on how Lotus and Polestar could collaborate in the future, Windle explained: "Geely is flexible and comfortable with us working with our sister companies, or third parties or other suppliers, OEMs, or anything. There's no direct purchasing or design strategy that they imply on us.

"With Lotus being a smaller company, and with us growing up, it makes sense to take technologies from our sister companies.

"If you go to an OEM for their parts, you have to pay for the privilege of going in the shop to see if you want the parts. With Geely and our sister companies, we can go and see if we want the parts, and if we do we then pay for them.

"For a small company, that really helps. But it works the opposite way as well: our sister companies and Geely come to Lotus for powertrain development, EDU development, ride and handling development - it's a really flexible, organic organisation.

"We're stronger as a group, but we're individual enough in that group that you don't all become morphed together. It's a fine balancing act and I think they do it very well."

Gavan Kershaw, Lotus’s director of attributes and product integrity, said dynamic development of the Eletre was “really, benchmarking the platform”, rather than the car itself, with a view to then rolling it out to the Type 133 and a future Type 134 crossover.

Kershaw referenced the suspension technologies – “active roll control, CDC [continuous damping control], air-sprung independent active rear steer and active aero” – as features that most obviously mark the aluminium Electric Premium Architecture out as the more dynamically oriented platform in the Geely Group stable. He also said they have been ‘package-protected’ for “everything we want to do” with future electric cars, suggesting the Type 133 will follow suit with a similar set-up.

“Our type of car – that we want to drive as well as it looks – requires all that technology,” he said, hinting that the ‘lifestyle’ positioning of EVs built by Lotus Technology in Wuhan, China, will not come at the expense of driver engagement.

Further details of the Type 133 remain under wraps, but using the 592bhp twin-motor drivetrain from the launch-spec Eletre would line the saloon neatly up against the Porsche Taycan GTS, leaving ample room above and below for both softer and more hardcore additions to the line-up.

Indeed, Lotus managing director Matt Windle confirmed that 592bhp is “where we’re starting at – there’s more to come” from Lotus EVs.

Lotus senior vice-president of design Peter Horbury was keen to emphasise that while “there has to be some continuity and family identity” across the range of Lotus EVs, “families aren’t made up entirely of triplets or quadruplets. Every member of a family can have their own character.”

Plus~


🙂
 
This, Taycan gen 2, and the Polestar 5 are the most interesting BEV sedans on the horizon imho.

Saloon wise I don't disagree. Porsche and Lotus saloon cars? Electric motored! Unbelievable times.

I remember the Lotus Carlton very very well! Let's trust some of that magic runs off!

The Lotus Eletre R SUV has just short of 900hp! So I'm expecting an R version with said same!🙂
 
Lotus Electric Sedan Spied On Tow Truck After Prototype Breaks Down
It'll be the first Lotus sedan since the Carlton.


What comes after an electric hypercar (Evija), a mid-engined sports car (Emira), and an electric SUV (Eletre)? A sedan that also does away with the combustion engine. Currently known by its "Type 133" codename, the EV has been spotted in prototype guise testing near the Arctic Circle. Our spies caught Lotus' answer to the Porsche Taycan wearing a special livery denoting 2023 represents the Norfolk brand's 75th anniversary.

Car paparazzi saw the EV in northern Sweden on a giant frozen lake where a tow truck arrived to rescue the prototype. The first Lotus sedan since the Carlton suffered a mechanical breakdown and had to be towed away. That frequently happens when automakers are testing an unreleased product, and it doesn't mean the subsequent production model will be problematic. Being an EV, it automatically has a better chance of being more reliable than an equivalent car powered by a combustion engine since there are fewer things that could go wrong.
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While the Taycan and E-Tron GT twins have a trunk lid, the Type 133 appears to have a more practical liftback body style judging by the visible outline of the tailgate. It too has a swoopy roofline that not only gives it a sleek profile but also helps lower the drag coefficient to achieve a better range. The brakes are impressively large while the cap for the charging port on the left-front fender is much smaller than the Eletre's.

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The prototype caught with German plates flaunted its unusual split headlight arrangement already in use on the SUV. In fact, the whole front fascia seems to be adapted from the Eletre, along with the side cameras and flush door handles. The back looks a bit odd because of the provisional taillights, which are likely to be replaced by a wide LED bar on the final car. A roof-mounted LIDAR is also noticeable.
From some angles, we can see the test vehicle had a pair of body-hugging Recaro front seats and a full roll cage. Needless to say, the production-ready Type 133 will have a regular cabin. We're expecting a roomy interior courtesy of the dedicated electric car platform, although the front and rear overhangs are quite long for a bespoke EV. We'll remind you the Eletre is 5,103 millimeters (201 inches) long and has a massive 3,019 mm (119 in) wheelbase.

The technical specifications should be rather interesting taking into account that the SUV tops out with an R version offering a colossal 905 horsepower and 985 Newton meters (726 pound-feet) of torque. The Lotus Eletre does 0 to 62 mph (100 km/h) in 2.95 seconds, but chances are the Type 133 will be even quicker by carrying around less weight.

As far as the name is concerned, it'll start with "E" but apparently not "Envya" as rumors have suggested. The wraps will come off later this year, with sales likely to start in 2024.

Source: Automedia

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It's shaping up nicely. But does it have the appeal for customers to break Fromm the establishment?
 
The Taycan has perfect proportions... this on the other hand is barely better than the EQS.

We haven't seen the final specifications car. I don't care about the photographs they could be generation 1 or generation 6 pre production prototype's.

So I'll wait just a little while before making any claims.
 
It looks good but I see many other brands designs in this car, Lucid Air, NIO ET5, etc.
 
We haven't seen the final specifications car. I don't care about the photographs they could be generation 1 or generation 6 pre production prototype's.

So I'll wait just a little while before making any claims.
Nah, don't expect proportions to change one bit.
 
"Faster than a BMW and Porsche!"

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Plus some Lotus Evija News in there. They are all gone? News to me!
 
Lotus is a lot different nowadays compared to the ever-struggling sports car marque of yore. Parent company Geely is funding the transformation from a niche marque to an automaker with an extensive lineup. 2022 saw the introduction of what seemed impossible not that many years ago – an SUV. After the Eletre, another model with rear doors is coming. It doesn't have a name yet, but something different than "Envya" if we were to rely on recent reports.

A prototype carrying the production body has been spotted at and around the Nürburgring. Concomitantly, a new unofficial rendering attempts to peel off the camouflage we've seen in recent months of test vehicles. The exterior design will take after the Eletre SUV but adapted to create a low-slung sedan, although it technically might have a more practical tailgate for a silhouette reminiscent of the Audi A7 Sportback.

Codenamed Type 133, the first Lotus sedan since the Carlton has been filmed and rendered while trying to hide its split headlight design and roof-mounted LIDAR. Even though the prototype didn't seem to have the final taillights, it's easy to see there's a light bar behind the black tape. Footage showing the car's side profile tells us it'll be a big car with long rear doors, perhaps as big as the A7 we mentioned earlier.

The hardware should be largely carried over from the Eletre, so a potential R range-topper could offer a little over 900 horsepower and more than 700 pound-feet (nearly 1,000 Newton-meters) of torque. If our assumption is correct, look for the 0 to 62 mph (100 km/h) sprint to take less than three seconds considering the heavier SUV already does it in 2.95 seconds. The top speed should be similar as well, so expect around 165 mph (265 kph) to echo the Eletre.

Going up against the Porsche Taycan, the new electric sedan from Lotus will have a sister model in the Polestar 5, with the latter focusing more on the grand touring side. The Type 133 is going to be unveiled later this year, with a Type 134 coming in 2024 as a smaller crossover, also without a combustion engine. An electric sports car co-developed with Alpine will follow in 2026.

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Lotus

Lotus Group (also known as Lotus Cars, and doing business as Lotus NYO in China) is a British multinational automotive manufacturer of luxury sports cars and electric lifestyle vehicles. Founded in 1948 by Colin Chapman (1928-1982), it is owned by Chinese multinational Geely.
Official website: Lotus Cars

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