at the
1962 Dutch Grand Prix. The Lotus 24 made its debut at the 1962 Brussels Grand Prix.
Jim Clark put it in pole position for the first heat, but retired after only one lap. Two weeks later Clark won the
Lombank Trophy race at
Snetterton. Its first World Championship event was the
1962 Dutch Grand Prix, where it finished second with
Trevor Taylor. However, that would be its best Championship finish; the
Lotus 25 had arrived on the scene and was obviously the way ahead, much to the chagrin of those who had paid good money for their 24. Colin Chapman had promised his customers that the team cars would be mechanically identical to the customer cars, leaving himself free to alter what he classified as the cars' "bodywork". The 24 continued to be run by private teams in 1963 and 1964 with limited success, and by 1965 only one World Championship entry was made,
Brian Gubby failing to qualify for the
British Grand Prix.
World Championship results (
key) (results in
bold indicate pole position; results in
italics indicate fastest lap) ==Notes==