More frame welding, reinforcing, boxing in joints, stuff like that. Here's the forward subframe mount, reusing sheet from the original Lotus frame rails.
Also added new seatbelt mounting points, since the originals were pretty rusty.
Almost ready for primer, but just a few issues to sort out up front. The big one is brakes. I intend to use the Toyota MC and booster, since my Lotus didn't have those. I have the original Lotus pedals, but they were heavily rusted. I think I can save them. The problem here is the pedals are bottom-hinged. To clear under the steering rack, the Lotus MC was mounted as low as possible. This means adding a booster has two problems: any added diameter protrudes below the floor, and even if it didn't, it would hit the steering rack. Lotus got around this by using something called a "remote mounted brake booster" or sometimes called a "remote brake servo" which is essentially a 2nd MC driven by the 1st one at the pedals, which then drives a 3rd MC using a normal vacuum booster. Interesting solution, but not for a Challenge budget. So let's see what we got here.
I plan to build a bellcrank hidden inside the frame box to allow the Toyota booster to mount higher. I can cut a window in the top of the "T" of the frame, where the drop-down hinge and lever will be bolted in. Another solution would have been flipping the pedals to hang-down mounting, but then the pedal hinge would be a few inches above the frame so it would have to mount to fiberglass or require some serious structural mods. I think I need a roughly 4:1 pedal ratio for this booster. I will re-drill the brake pedal for 2:1, which will drive a lever that also has 2:1 advantage, making it 4:1 at the MC. This is very similar to aftermarket retrofit kits for converting classic cars from manual to power brakes.
Any brake experts in the room may also be thinking "But will this even work? He's got stock Lotus brakes up front and Toyota rear brakes out back, driven by a Toyota MC. What about pedal effort and bias?"
The short answer is I think I got lucky with this combo of parts. The Toyota MC is a tandem 7/8". Booster assist - 4:1 probably? Front Lotus calipers are opposing-piston 48mm on 9.1" rotors. Rear calipers are sliding-mount 1.5" pistons but with 10.6" rotors. I plugged it all into this online calculator (link below) with some hand-wavy assumptions about friction, weight, booster assist, etc, and the target optimal MC size for front and rear is pretty darn close to 7/8". Feel free to check my work as usual.
https://brakepower.com/share/180b32866e9