Re:
Got the old Lotus going pretty well, or as well as an old Lotus can be expected.
Water pump was noisy though, didn't want to risk driving it too much as the bearings could colapse, send the fan belt into the timing belt and wreck the motor so made the decision to take the car off the road.
A specialist in Devon had a new Lotus pump for £360 or an exchange pump for £90, no brainer really so i removed my pump and sent it off for exchange, trouble is my pump was in too bad a state for exchange (a bit missing from the impeller and the shaft had been welded) so he had to send mine off to be recond, cost an extra £50.
Took three weeks from removing the pump from the car to getting the new one, in that time i removed the radiator, flushed it, made up some new top brackets as these had been lost in the past (only thing stopping the rad from flopping about was the top hose), checked all the hoses, fitted new hose clips, tidied up the wiring, replaced the cam belt and removed the remains of the redundant air conditioning.
Couldn't resist cleaning up some of the removed bits while waiting on the pump.
Built back up, fresh anti-freeze etc,
Scrap air-con parts, surprising amount of weight in this lot alone, pump and other parts were already missing from the car when i got it, not worth restoring the AC system.
So the Elite has been back on the road a few weeks and behaving itself pretty well, been using it most days and leaving it sitting in the street/drive as it's my only working car (Discovery is still off the road), pretty entertaining to drive (i'd say even better than a 3.0 Capri), sounds glorious at full chat and it's reasonably comfortable.
Celibrated my new found roadworthyness by fitting the period GB sticker i bought a while ago.
Still needs work of course, drivers door is sagging due to a worn hinge pin/bushes, rear wheel bearings are needing done (not noisy just play in them) and i'm still wanting a set of fresh tyres for it (Falkens at £340 a set)