Strictly speaking a "mid-engine " car has the engine in front of the rear axle but behind the passenger compartment. But strictlier speaking it's only because that's the way the only 'mid-engine' cars in actual production are laid out. Most of them are two passenger or front seat only sports or at least "sports-type" cars. There are 'experimental,' prototype,concept, and special purpose vehicles with the engine in a more central location, between the front and back seats ( actually more like two separate passenger compartments), some with the engine to one side or the other, so if they ever went into production we could have a right-front- mid-engine car or a mid-mid-engine. But maybe not, things can get complicated.In a rear engine car, like the old Volks 'Bug', the engine is over, or even behind the rear axle. In a front engine car the engine is over or in front of the front axle. In the early 60's Chevrolet sold a Corvair van with an air cooled engine mounted under the cargo compartment behind the front seat. That was the most 'mid' of any arrangement I can think of. But it wasn't called 'mid-engine' it was a 'Forward Control' vehicle. The front seat was over, mostly in front of the front axle. Around the same time the Big 3 came out with full size vans with the axle in front of most of the engine and the passenger seat moved back where it was supposed to be, the engine extended into the passenger compartment, I think Ford was the first and the most extreme with most of the engine actually between the front seats. They weren't called 'mid-engine' or even 'Tween the seats', they were 'Cab Forward' apparently the engine was where it should be for a 'front engine' but the seats had been moved forward to straddle it, but not so far as to become a 'Forward Control.' So if any of the bizarre proto-types go into production, or more likely as "hybrids' and 'alternative' become more common, with electric motors on each axle or even each wheel, or mounted here or there, who knows what they will be called. Or by whom, "official' names given by manufacturers have a way of being replaced by common usage names. That "Forward Control" Corvair became known as a "Bouncing Bobtail. "
That was a huge off topic. I suggest we return to discussing about that modernized Lotus 7.
That was a huge off topic. I suggest we return to discussing about that modernized Lotus 7.