Skip advert
Advertisement

Talbot Horizon Lotus – dead on arrival

The Sunbeam Lotus successor was mid-engined and turbocharged, but lacked another vital ingredient

Talbot Horizon Lotus

The Talbot Sunbeam Lotus was a mongrel. For starters, it was based upon a stopgap hatchback built on a cut-down Hillman Avenger chassis, hastily confected in just 19 months to give the ill-fated Linwood plant something to make. Even company bosses thought the Sunbeam was an unpromising platform for a rally car and motorsport director Des O’Dell had to use his own money to buy a Lotus engine and fit it to a mule in order to win them over.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Even once it was signed off, no one had great hopes for the little Sunbeam, despite Lotus tweaks to the suspension and shell, and a 2.2-litre version of their twin-cam 900-series engine up front. The way this homologation special was assembled seemed like an unholy mash-up too, with each car emerging from the Scottish factory as an engineless Sunbeam GLS, travelling down to Norfolk so Lotus could fit the engine and gearbox, then shuttling to a Talbot facility in the West Midlands for final checks before being dispatched to a dealership. 

> Volkswagen AE 266 – dead on arrival

Yet despite its bitsa origins, and a production line that was technically about 520 miles long, the Talbot Sunbeam Lotus was a giant killer and won the World Rally Championship in 1981. 

Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

Trouble was, by the time the fat-arched little hatch clinched the title at the RAC Rally in November ’81 the Sunbeam itself was an obsolete model, killed off with the closure of the Linwood plant in May of that year. And despite its victory, the car’s front-engined, rear-drive layout was looking out of date as the world now focused on the new-for-’82 Group B regulations. Talbot’s rally arm anticipated this, of course, and since 1979 had been looking with interest at the mid-engined Renault 5 Turbo that had the silhouette of a shopping car but the soul of a Stratos. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

As they hatched plans for the Sunbeam’s successor they rejected its upcoming replacement, the French-made Samba, and decided to base their next-generation col conqueror on the larger Horizon hatchback, re-engineered to take the Sunbeam Lotus engine mounted longways behind the front seats and driving the rear wheels. As installed in the first prototype it ran the same output as the Sunbeam competition cars, around 250bhp, but Lotus engineers had an ace to play. Like Renault, they’d been early adopters of turbocharging and by fitting a second Horizon prototype with a tweaked-up engine from an Esprit Turbo they had a 300-horsepower rally fighter on their hands. 

Unfortunately, even this wouldn’t be enough. When the mid-engined Horizon went testing in 1981 the Audi Quattro had already started to show the potential of four-wheel drive that would lead to its domination of the 1982 season; the rear-drive Talbot looked technically old hat before it had taken part in its first rally. At the newly formed Peugeot Talbot Sport division in Vélizy-Villacoublay near Paris, boss man Jean Todt ruled out further development of the Lotus-powered Horizon and instead commissioned a project codenamed M24 Rally, a brand new mid-engined, four-wheel-drive Group B machine based on a still-secret supermini from Peugeot. We know it better as the 205 T16 and it went on to become the most successful car of the Group B era, racking up 16 rally wins, two drivers’ titles and two manufacturers’ championships before the series was abruptly cancelled in 1986.

The T16’s doomed forebear didn’t die in vain, however, because early development on the mighty 205 took place in Coventry using lessons learnt from the work undertaken on the mid-engined Horizon Lotus.

This story was first featured in evo issue 291.

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Lamborghini Cheetah – dead on arrival
Lamborghini 4x4
Features

Lamborghini Cheetah – dead on arrival

How the Italian supercar maker once put its name to a 4x4 intended for the American military
8 Apr 2025
Maserati Quattroporte II – dead on arrival
Maserati Quattroporte II
Features

Maserati Quattroporte II – dead on arrival

Progress on this Citroën SM-derived four-door stalled when the French firm faltered in the mid-’70s
27 Feb 2025
Lancia Fulvia Coupé – dead on arrival
Lancia Fulvia Coupe
Features

Lancia Fulvia Coupé – dead on arrival

It could’ve re-ignited a lust for Lancias, but instead this retro two-seater stalled at the concept stage
2 Jan 2025
Panther Solo 1 – dead on arrival
Panther Solo 1
Features

Panther Solo 1 – dead on arrival

This lightweight, mid-engined Brit came achingly close to being an affordable ’80s hero
28 Nov 2024
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Porsche 911 Carrera S 2025 review – a 473bhp BMW M4 CS fighter
Porsche 911 Carrera S – pictures
Reviews

Porsche 911 Carrera S 2025 review – a 473bhp BMW M4 CS fighter

A new Carrera S has arrived with supercar-baiting pace and a £120k starting price – is it the sweet spot of the 992.2 range?
25 Apr 2025
Aston Martin Vantage (1993 - 2000) review – Britain's 550bhp hand-built muscle car
Aston Martin Vantage V550 – front
Reviews

Aston Martin Vantage (1993 - 2000) review – Britain's 550bhp hand-built muscle car

One of Aston Martin's last true hand-built models, the ludicrous twin-supercharged Vantage was a muscle car crossed with a stately home
24 Apr 2025
Used Ford Mustang (S550, 2015 - 2023) review – Ford’s V8 muscle car for £20k
Ford Mustang (S550) front
In-depth reviews

Used Ford Mustang (S550, 2015 - 2023) review – Ford’s V8 muscle car for £20k

The S550 appeared ten years ago as a more sophisticated kind of Mustang, in right-hand drive and with the job of tempting European sports car buyers. …
23 Apr 2025