Yeah it was pretty hilarious. They wanted more car manufacturers to join, yet kept listening to the already participating brands that wanted to changes that would increase the cost. This prevented other manufacturers to join and also killed many privateers.
@@samuelgarrod8327 no, they showed this in the season opening back then. They took a stock body and sent it to a contractor for the modifications. Unfortunately i forgot the name of said company.
So many seem to love it, there might be a business case to recrate it. Since it never had a real Opel chassis, it could be a ground-up build with replica body. I don't even care is it's an electric car underneath, I just want those looks :) A totally gutten Nissan GTR with Calibra look body might do the trick. Heavier than the real thing, but lighter than a GT3 car. With good boost, modern tyres and suspension...might approach DTM 1995 lap times? :)
what the DTM needs is to move away from GT3. Like V8 Supercar, they're doing their thing for about 25y. bc DTM and Super GT want to compete with each other. they both try to step out of the Super Touring Car class and be a GT3 car, to match both their BOP. they could continue that, im not saying its bad in particular but it isn't the DTM anymore. we need a German "real" Touring Car Championship again.
@@thesunnynationg In fact the GT3 is somehow the new touring car. Back then a street legal car with 300-500 BHP was something special. Today it is the standard. Almost every bread and butter Mercedes, BMW or Audi can reach this output easily. But what is still special is their sports car - as you see in GT3. So it still makes somehow sense. But I have to add: I have seen enough GT3 in the past 10 years and I don´t like the BOP System.
The gps to change the setup of the car on each corner is so crazy, I`ve never heard about anything like that before so thank you for this awesome video B Sport! You`re quickly becoming my favourite yt channel
@@JensEausB Die Quellen sind Fahrer und Journalisten, also keine Techniker. Sie haben von GPS gesprochen, was aber eigentlich nicht sein kann. Ich denke wegstreckenbasiert ist plausibler.
I loved this car in Gran Turismo and I knew she was something special with that super high redline but I had no idea just how advanced it actually was!! Thanks B Sport ^_^
The reduce in viewer interest in germany came after the ITC with the much tamer STW. The difference was hard to swallow. The final Race in Germany in Hockenheim ITC 1996 was packed with Fans and the athmosphere was breathtaking. Today we would give everything for something like STW. Everything is gone.
It's was the best racing until the V8s in Australia picked up in the 2000s. Now, both have gone to the dogs. I know cost spiriling is an issue, but Opel, Alfa, BMW and Mercedes all pumped F1 money into the DTM as it was directly relatable to their road cars. Now all are in F1, spending more money to drive in a fast precession.
Lets go! Im so glad you're covering class 1 touring cars, my all time favourite touring car class! Hopefully you'll make videos on the alfa and merc too :D As a mechanical engineer I am in awe at the IMMENSE engineering effort (and massive costs :D) that went into these monsters Wish they were in more sims tho :(
Whoa! I had no idea it had this level of tech! Definitely ahead of its time and not to mention the gorgeous design. I own a Calibra and I get thumbs up everytime I go out for a drive
Here in germany calibras are really rare people who don't know what this is are walking around my car to see what car it is older people came to me and told me that they had one many years ago my calibra is from 1996 2l 8v in nordcap anthrazit e290 got him 5 years ago for 500€ only rust on the hood it has 277t km
@@venom_-demon-xi102 whoa sounds like a really good base for a project car! Mine is also a 1996 model with nordcap colour but the Z290. As for the engine it's the X20XEV and it has 110k km
The engines were absolutely glorious. I remember the Pilbeam single seat hillclimb cars with the V6 DTM engine from them. Apparently they ran standard mechanical valvegear as the DTM engines had pneumatic valvegear which was a bit too secret/expensive to go on general sale. Still revved to over 11k rpm. And only 85kg. Andy Burton had one in his 306 rally car too. Outstanding piece of engineering
In my opinion, the 1996 ITC season was one of the greatest racing championships of all time. You had great cars, drivers, tracks, the racing was good, much better than what DTM would eventually become in the mid-2000's. If the ITC had to go out, they did it at least with a bang.
THIS is my favourite ever car!!!! My parents had a Vauxhall Calibre at the time and this car looked and sounded amazing! I would love to go visit the ZakSpeed 1997 Calibra!
That Calibra was a dream car. I drove quite a few Opels in my life and my 2 favorites with the Monza 1.6 Gsi and then then Astra 200 CDX. Both sedans and great cards for their time!
I still have the issue of Racecar Engineering from the mid 1990's with the technical breakdown of this car, Opel absolutely threw the kitchen sink at this car and essentially broke the sport. After the ITC collapsed Mercedes threatened to not join the projected new DTM series unless AWD was banned "it had no plans to produce such cars for road use in the future", which they then did after the ban went through. I still have little respect for Merc after that
I was on a talk with Volker Strycek in Rüsselsheim (Opel homebase) a few weeks ago. In the projekt new DTM a AWD was never a subject. The cars werent based on real cars. Opel had none AWD in their normal cars like Astra. Volker Strycek spoke to Norbert Haug about his plan for new DTM, and he and his crew secretly build an prototyp. Their bosses dont even know about it as he admits on the talk. So did Mercedes and they both presented it on the IAA in Frankfurt. The Opel bosses and the audience echo was very good, so they gave green lights for the new DTM.
@@Superstocker669 ja, als die sportauto die ersten Protortypen Bilder zeigte, das war ein besonderer Moment. Und die Dinger dann am Jahresende in Essen zu sehen erst :) 2000/2001 war so gut wie '96 finde ich, komplett andere Biester, aber genau so ein geiler Mix aus perfektem Sport/Autos/Fahrer. JGTC und Super GT waren in zwei von drei Punkten genau so gut, nur dass man die Fahrer halt nicht so kennt. Bester Motorsport für alle ab '80 geborene..ok, abgesehen von Le Mans zum Ende der Gruppe C und um den Jahrtausendwechsel herum^^ meine absolute Leidenschaft, die Modelle aus den drei Kategorien zu sammeln
Actually Alfa Romeo was the first to go crazy on the class 1 regulations in 1993. Opel joined late into the season, and as shown in the video with the production car engine. Mercedes did update the 190 in 1993 but went full class1 in 1994 with new W202 styled car.
I never knew they worked with Williams all those year's. they were the team to beat in F1. with all that technical and electrical/Computing knowledge its no wonder the Calibra was that Great. all the development and especially money that went in to that project is mind blowing for such a Racing series. I also Loved the Calibra on Gran Turismo. on of my all-time favourites.
Great summary for a great car. I am really glad to have these cars seen racing in 1995 (first Opel win at Hockenheim) and 1996. Still have the sound in my ears, when the come through Nordkurve and accelerate onto the wood (old layout)
I manufactured these Cliff cars in 1995 at the Uusikaupunki car factory in Finland. In the assembly, the car differed from a normal car in that neither bumpers nor a back seat were installed in the car.
I always liked Opel. Back in the 70's and 80's Opel was a top contender next to Mercedes with Admiral's and Diplomats. Definitely above Audi and Volkswagen. Opel did bring milestones and odd balls which made Opel very special. Manta, Commodore, Senator, Monza, Speedster and Bitter making them even more outstanding. Opel was the real "peoples car" all the way up to the rich and famous. Later GM put a noose around Opel's neck and Peugeot made Opel simply mainstream.
This car is so technologically advanced that it could be even released for racing today and still would be too extreme! I mean, GPS based active systems!? Steer by wire in 1997!? This is absolute madness!
The 90's were such a great time for race car engineering. So many people movers transformed into cutthroat monsters, just like Group 5, yet a little more understated.
I love the before and after pictures showing the base car and then race car. Such a beauty. Very impressive at how they teamed up with Cosworth, Williams F1, and others to make the best car possible. Sounds like the succeeded!
Yeah, I had one running 7l intercooler, 2.4 overbore, Stage 3 Courtney head, Emerald ignition, and water injection. Nicely understressed and fairly low boost on a hybrid turbo not much bigger than stock, made 340lb-ft at 1900rpm... None of the peakiness of my friends Cosworths running similar power. It would happily hit the limiter in 6th (171mph), but that super aero bodywork was a big issue at those speeds as it tended to float - if the nose came up at that speed it stayed up. No downforce at all. My god it was fast though. Even standard it was pretty quick car.
The car knows where it is at all times. It knows this because it knows where it isn't, by subtracting where it is, from where it isn't, or where it isn't, from where it is, whichever is greater, it obtains a difference, or deviation. The guidance sub-system uses deviations to generate corrective commands to drive the car from a position where it is, to a position where it isn't, and arriving at a position where it wasn't, it now is. Consequently, the position where it is, is now the position that it wasn't, and it follows that the position where it was, is now the position that it isn't. In the event of the position that it is in is not the position that it wasn't, the system has required a variation. The variation being the difference between where the car is, and where it wasn't. If variation is considered to be a significant factor, it too, may be corrected by the GEA. However, the car must also know where it was. The car guidance computance scenario works as follows: Because a variation has modified some of the information the car has obtained, it is not sure just where it is, however it is sure where it isn't, within reason, and it knows where it was. It now subracts where it should be, from where it wasn't, or vice versa. By differentiating this from the algebraic sum og where it shouldn't be, and where it was. It is able to obtain a deviation, and a variation, which is called "air"
I owned a Calibra turbo at that time so I was a big fan. Even today the Cliff Calibra in 1:18 is in my living room. Pitty the German press killed Opel. They always made good cars
Impressive! Specialy the gear system to drive front wheels : unique for sure. What is the point of open injection system? To allow for variable trumpets? 🤔
As being too young for having see it race at that time, I wonder how the racing with these cars looked like? It's absolutely mind boggling seeing how advanced this car was. And the shifting really was automatic?
The 1997 Calibra with the full-carbon body would have been a another groundbreaking step! Keep in mind you could have run two F1 teams for the price of one DTM/ITC team at that time. And becaus there was also competition between two tyre companies, but also had no limit in testing they did a different tyre compound for every track. The Opel had a hydraulic system which they used for everything in that car, like the weights, the flaps, everything they figured out that would improve perfomance by moving it during a lap, they put a hydraulic system on it and automated it. Like said in the video, a spin would get the systems off sync with the track, but because the system took the distance as reference to know where the car is on the track and, as far as i know, not realy a GPS. The system was reset everytime it crossed the line by a signal from the box, so if the car had a spin it was off sync just till it crosses the line again.
real shame there wasnt a V6 AWD Calibra released to the public great looking car , shocked by the amount of money each team spent developing these cars 😮 , great post lots of interesting info thnx
They thought about building one. The electronic parts catalogue had a listing for 4x4 V6 exhaust downpipes even though the car was never made. I own a 3.0 V6 4x4 Cavalier (Vectra A) and it would definitely have made a good production car
hey, ich weiß ja nicht wie es Dir geht, aber das ist mein all-time-favourite. Ich hab so ziemlich alle Modelle, inklusive dem 100Jahre Fanfest Cali, und dem Wagen, den Volker einmal in der DTM fuhr, der ist sogar noch seltener, noch dazu signiert. Tatsächlich war das 24h Rennen das erste Rennen das ich besucht habe als Youngster (ich hab noch eine von den kleinen Fahnen, die Volker in der Einführungsrunde aus dem Fenster warf, klar, hängt zusammen mit dem ganzen Rosberg'95Merch und den Autogrammkaten von ebay in einer großen Vitrine). Dass ich damals lieber Ran als Vox geschaut habe, ist eine der Sachen, die ich am meisten bereue in meinem Leben :) Hab Jahre später ein kleines Vermögen führ ein DVD Set bezahlt, wo jemand die Übertragungen von VHS konvertiert hat, und die 3(!) Jahresbücher. Du hast einige Dinge zur technischen Entwicklung genannt, die mir gar nicht bekannt waren. Danke und Respekt! Vielleicht kann man sich ja mal bei der NES treffen
I remember how impressed I was when learned how they solved the issue with driving the front wheels while having the engine so low. My first read about this Calibra DTM was in the late 1990s from the AMS Magazine, and I love the car since then.
Another brilliant video, congrats and thanks. As far as I understand, this racing car used the same street chassis for the mid section, but with (at least) a tubular sub chassis at, supporting the engine and front suspension? It impresses me that, at the end of day, the engine block comes from an ordinary SUV. I always wonder how much of these cars are actually the same that you have if you go and buy a Calibra.
Who manufactured the gearboxes? Xtrac? Martin Schanche (6 times european rallycross champion and cofounder of Xtrac) copied the design of this gearbox in his Ford Escort rallycross car that debuted in 1996, paired with an 10 000 RPM shortstroke YB engine. The 90s was wild!
Opel for some reason never gets the credit they deserved. they are extremely reliable, well handling, kinda well made and really clean. the only thing i dont like is the selection of screws they used. you cannot change any part without having at least one screw head breaking. if they would make some sportscars and stop using shitscrews, they would make a excellent car for everyone who enjoys driving
All factory DTM cars from '93 had V6 engines and the Calibra and 155 were 4WD. Only Mercedes stuck with 2WD. There was also a private BMW E36 and the Foxbody Mustangs of course. What a great time. 😊
DTM needs to reassess its current rules and make them more inline with the early 90s. Even us Brits where hooked on the DTM with some of the most stunning cars ever to race.
Im an american that grew up in 3 73-74 opel mantas in the 80s and 90s. Those things were little tanks. Each one had over 200k miles. Our last one was still running when my dad junked it around 95-96. I dont think it actually got junked. Everyone at the yard kept asking what was wrong with it lol im pretty sure someone took the whole thing lol. Always have a soft spot for opel even if its just a chevy vauxhall nowadays. Damn good cars in their day. Chugged like a diesel but it was like a gas 1.4l or something lol
the Calibra DTM was a great car - even running to today - only got beaten by the Astra DTM in my Opinion.. Sadly they are slowly getting rarer and rarer and are not often seen on tracks and series like tourenwagen-legenden or drm
The Calibra was a very good looking car. Incredible how much technology was used and the costs exploded.
the true golden era of motorsports
Yeah it was pretty hilarious. They wanted more car manufacturers to join, yet kept listening to the already participating brands that wanted to changes that would increase the cost. This prevented other manufacturers to join and also killed many privateers.
Hope silhouette DTM cars will come back some day, it's what made this series so unique with so many iconic cars
They had to use the body from the road car, but they could do heavy modifications to it.
@@GeeShockerIt had to use panels not a body, it was spaceframed.
@@samuelgarrod8327 no, they showed this in the season opening back then. They took a stock body and sent it to a contractor for the modifications. Unfortunately i forgot the name of said company.
Wont happen, manufacturers are focused on electric suv’s so wont spend the money to promote a sport saloon
@@GeeShocker No, class 1 in the 90s was pure spaceframe. Every body panel was carbon fiber...
Aaaah, the Calibra. My all time dream car. Such a beauty...
So many seem to love it, there might be a business case to recrate it. Since it never had a real Opel chassis, it could be a ground-up build with replica body. I don't even care is it's an electric car underneath, I just want those looks :)
A totally gutten Nissan GTR with Calibra look body might do the trick. Heavier than the real thing, but lighter than a GT3 car. With good boost, modern tyres and suspension...might approach DTM 1995 lap times? :)
Calibra? Dream car? Crikey thought I was the only one. Great video Thanks
I had no idea how advanced this car was. Awesome video man.
I think DTM needs to bring back the rule that the base car needs 4 seats
what the DTM needs is to move away from GT3. Like V8 Supercar, they're doing their thing for about 25y.
bc DTM and Super GT want to compete with each other. they both try to step out of the Super Touring Car class and be a GT3 car, to match both their BOP.
they could continue that, im not saying its bad in particular but it isn't the DTM anymore.
we need a German "real" Touring Car Championship again.
@@thesunnynationgespecially seeing how ADAC also killed GT masters to prop up the new dtm
@@thesunnynationg In fact the GT3 is somehow the new touring car. Back then a street legal car with 300-500 BHP was something special. Today it is the standard. Almost every bread and butter Mercedes, BMW or Audi can reach this output easily. But what is still special is their sports car - as you see in GT3. So it still makes somehow sense. But I have to add: I have seen enough GT3 in the past 10 years and I don´t like the BOP System.
I'd be pretty happy with a high spec touring car class being 4 seaters and GT racing sticking to 2 seats.
@@cmbunit01 Look... the BMW M4 even has 4 Seats...
The gps to change the setup of the car on each corner is so crazy, I`ve never heard about anything like that before so thank you for this awesome video B Sport! You`re quickly becoming my favourite yt channel
Glad you liked it!
I believe that was later also used/trailed in rallying at the height of the active car era.
Currently this is also used in MotoGP for electronics, such as traction controll, anti wheelie and engine brake.
@@BSport320Hast Du eine Quelle für diese GPS Geschichte? Soweit mir bekannt war das damals alles Wegstreckenbasiert.
@@JensEausB Die Quellen sind Fahrer und Journalisten, also keine Techniker. Sie haben von GPS gesprochen, was aber eigentlich nicht sein kann. Ich denke wegstreckenbasiert ist plausibler.
I loved this car in Gran Turismo and I knew she was something special with that super high redline but I had no idea just how advanced it actually was!! Thanks B Sport ^_^
The DTM Calibra will always be one of my favourite Racecars of all time.
Probably Number 2 for me of all times after the Audi 90 quattro IMSA GTO.
The Zakspeed Calibra prototype for the ITC was even more of a monster.
@@TheBlaertanything zakspeed is a monster
For me it's
Alfa 155
Audi 90 imsa
Opel calibra
As my top 3
Edit: almost forgot the Mercedes clk dtm and the Lexus gs dtm
The reduce in viewer interest in germany came after the ITC with the much tamer STW. The difference was hard to swallow. The final Race in Germany in Hockenheim ITC 1996 was packed with Fans and the athmosphere was breathtaking. Today we would give everything for something like STW. Everything is gone.
right. It was a war, germany AGAINST Italy this time ^^ not like in.........................F1 at that time XD
It's was the best racing until the V8s in Australia picked up in the 2000s. Now, both have gone to the dogs. I know cost spiriling is an issue, but Opel, Alfa, BMW and Mercedes all pumped F1 money into the DTM as it was directly relatable to their road cars. Now all are in F1, spending more money to drive in a fast precession.
Dumb electric era... 😢
when i was a teenager in the 1990s the Opel Calibra was by far my fav DTM car, it just looked mega.
Golden age of motorsport. Watching DTM from Norisring right now, no chance to compare both times
Lets go! Im so glad you're covering class 1 touring cars, my all time favourite touring car class! Hopefully you'll make videos on the alfa and merc too :D
As a mechanical engineer I am in awe at the IMMENSE engineering effort (and massive costs :D) that went into these monsters
Wish they were in more sims tho :(
Sounds like a remarkable team to build a car so advanced and reliable.
Whoa! I had no idea it had this level of tech! Definitely ahead of its time and not to mention the gorgeous design. I own a Calibra and I get thumbs up everytime I go out for a drive
Here in germany calibras are really rare people who don't know what this is are walking around my car to see what car it is older people came to me and told me that they had one many years ago my calibra is from 1996 2l 8v in nordcap anthrazit e290 got him 5 years ago for 500€ only rust on the hood it has 277t km
@@venom_-demon-xi102 whoa sounds like a really good base for a project car! Mine is also a 1996 model with nordcap colour but the Z290. As for the engine it's the X20XEV and it has 110k km
The engines were absolutely glorious. I remember the Pilbeam single seat hillclimb cars with the V6 DTM engine from them. Apparently they ran standard mechanical valvegear as the DTM engines had pneumatic valvegear which was a bit too secret/expensive to go on general sale. Still revved to over 11k rpm. And only 85kg. Andy Burton had one in his 306 rally car too. Outstanding piece of engineering
In my opinion, the 1996 ITC season was one of the greatest racing championships of all time. You had great cars, drivers, tracks, the racing was good, much better than what DTM would eventually become in the mid-2000's. If the ITC had to go out, they did it at least with a bang.
Really great video on an even more greater car. For me, the Calibra V6 4x4 DTM remains one of my all time favorites. 🤩
THIS is my favourite ever car!!!! My parents had a Vauxhall Calibre at the time and this car looked and sounded amazing! I would love to go visit the ZakSpeed 1997 Calibra!
Great to see you are broadening your wonderful analysis beyond mainly current racing cars.
More to come!
I always loved this car since I first saw it in early Gran Turismo games, but I had no idea it was this technically advanced! Wow!
What an era. High strung/high revving N/A engines are truly an art form!
Truly the pinnacle of touring cars.
Very interesting, I was aware of the ITC Alfa but not that the Opel was this advanced!
That Calibra was a dream car. I drove quite a few Opels in my life and my 2 favorites with the Monza 1.6 Gsi and then then Astra 200 CDX. Both sedans and great cards for their time!
The golden era of touring cars... You will never be forgotten
I still have the issue of Racecar Engineering from the mid 1990's with the technical breakdown of this car, Opel absolutely threw the kitchen sink at this car and essentially broke the sport. After the ITC collapsed Mercedes threatened to not join the projected new DTM series unless AWD was banned "it had no plans to produce such cars for road use in the future", which they then did after the ban went through. I still have little respect for Merc after that
I was on a talk with Volker Strycek in Rüsselsheim (Opel homebase) a few weeks ago. In the projekt new DTM a AWD was never a subject. The cars werent based on real cars. Opel had none AWD in their normal cars like Astra. Volker Strycek spoke to Norbert Haug about his plan for new DTM, and he and his crew secretly build an prototyp. Their bosses dont even know about it as he admits on the talk. So did Mercedes and they both presented it on the IAA in Frankfurt. The Opel bosses and the audience echo was very good, so they gave green lights for the new DTM.
@@Superstocker669 ja, als die sportauto die ersten Protortypen Bilder zeigte, das war ein besonderer Moment. Und die Dinger dann am Jahresende in Essen zu sehen erst :) 2000/2001 war so gut wie '96 finde ich, komplett andere Biester, aber genau so ein geiler Mix aus perfektem Sport/Autos/Fahrer. JGTC und Super GT waren in zwei von drei Punkten genau so gut, nur dass man die Fahrer halt nicht so kennt. Bester Motorsport für alle ab '80 geborene..ok, abgesehen von Le Mans zum Ende der Gruppe C und um den Jahrtausendwechsel herum^^ meine absolute Leidenschaft, die Modelle aus den drei Kategorien zu sammeln
Actually Alfa Romeo was the first to go crazy on the class 1 regulations in 1993.
Opel joined late into the season, and as shown in the video with the production car engine.
Mercedes did update the 190 in 1993 but went full class1 in 1994 with new W202 styled car.
Merc, just a shower of arrogant arseholes. I don't particularly like their cars either.
I never knew they worked with Williams all those year's. they were the team to beat in F1.
with all that technical and electrical/Computing knowledge its no wonder the Calibra was that Great.
all the development and especially money that went in to that project is mind blowing for such a Racing series.
I also Loved the Calibra on Gran Turismo.
on of my all-time favourites.
Great summary for a great car. I am really glad to have these cars seen racing in 1995 (first Opel win at Hockenheim) and 1996. Still have the sound in my ears, when the come through Nordkurve and accelerate onto the wood (old layout)
I manufactured these Cliff cars in 1995 at the Uusikaupunki car factory in Finland. In the assembly, the car differed from a normal car in that neither bumpers nor a back seat were installed in the car.
I always liked Opel. Back in the 70's and 80's Opel was a top contender next to Mercedes with Admiral's and Diplomats. Definitely above Audi and Volkswagen. Opel did bring milestones and odd balls which made Opel very special. Manta, Commodore, Senator, Monza, Speedster and Bitter making them even more outstanding. Opel was the real "peoples car" all the way up to the rich and famous. Later GM put a noose around Opel's neck and Peugeot made Opel simply mainstream.
Absolute facts 🔥
This car is so technologically advanced that it could be even released for racing today and still would be too extreme! I mean, GPS based active systems!? Steer by wire in 1997!? This is absolute madness!
Ein Meisterwerk !!! ❤
Loved the Calibra and the Alfa DTM! Great video!
Thanks!
I've also loved the Alfa 155 upward exhausts.
The 90's were such a great time for race car engineering. So many people movers transformed into cutthroat monsters, just like Group 5, yet a little more understated.
And to think I've been in a Calibra Turbo 4x4 without knowing any of this, sacrilege! Thank you for the throrough walkthrough!
I love the before and after pictures showing the base car and then race car. Such a beauty. Very impressive at how they teamed up with Cosworth, Williams F1, and others to make the best car possible. Sounds like the succeeded!
I had a 2ltr turbo 4x4 Calibra, god damn thing was a mental sleeper 🥰🥰
Yeah, I had one running 7l intercooler, 2.4 overbore, Stage 3 Courtney head, Emerald ignition, and water injection. Nicely understressed and fairly low boost on a hybrid turbo not much bigger than stock, made 340lb-ft at 1900rpm... None of the peakiness of my friends Cosworths running similar power. It would happily hit the limiter in 6th (171mph), but that super aero bodywork was a big issue at those speeds as it tended to float - if the nose came up at that speed it stayed up. No downforce at all.
My god it was fast though. Even standard it was pretty quick car.
Wow, never knew those cars were so complex! Great video again!!
Der Calibra war der geilste - Da bekomme ich heute noch Gänsehaut
The car knows where it is at all times. It knows this because it knows where it isn't, by subtracting where it is, from where it isn't, or where it isn't, from where it is, whichever is greater, it obtains a difference, or deviation. The guidance sub-system uses deviations to generate corrective commands to drive the car from a position where it is, to a position where it isn't, and arriving at a position where it wasn't, it now is. Consequently, the position where it is, is now the position that it wasn't, and it follows that the position where it was, is now the position that it isn't. In the event of the position that it is in is not the position that it wasn't, the system has required a variation. The variation being the difference between where the car is, and where it wasn't. If variation is considered to be a significant factor, it too, may be corrected by the GEA. However, the car must also know where it was. The car guidance computance scenario works as follows: Because a variation has modified some of the information the car has obtained, it is not sure just where it is, however it is sure where it isn't, within reason, and it knows where it was. It now subracts where it should be, from where it wasn't, or vice versa. By differentiating this from the algebraic sum og where it shouldn't be, and where it was. It is able to obtain a deviation, and a variation, which is called "air"
Thanks for sharing. What is your source for this?
@@BSport320it's an adaptation of the "The missile knows where it is" audio segment by USAF
Love these stories. Unlimited racing is always interesting. All that car needed was active aero.
It had active aero, as mentioned in the video
This was so awesome area.. the 155 alfa is very nice aswell or the classics , m3 and 190 E Evo
Were these cars faster than their super gt/jgtc counterparts of the time?
I owned a Calibra turbo at that time so I was a big fan. Even today the Cliff Calibra in 1:18 is in my living room.
Pitty the German press killed Opel. They always made good cars
The calibra is something YT doesn't recommend much! Seen one in real life. Nice car!
oh man my all time favourite touringCAR
Fantastic video and very informative.
1:27 - That header is a work of ART 🤤🤤🤤
The technology put into this car is crazy to hear ... never knew the Calibra DTM had an automatic gearbox
Impressive! Specialy the gear system to drive front wheels : unique for sure.
What is the point of open injection system? To allow for variable trumpets? 🤔
Following f1 engines from the time I suppose yes
That and placing the injector at the end of the intake tract is theoretically the best as the fuel has the longest time possible to atomize with air
Thanks a lot! Very professional explanation, all the key facts.
I owned a Calibra that had the Super Boss motor.A beautiful car and drove amazingly
I am a sucker fot the Calibra so I was happy I saw this in my recommended videos. Subbed!
Awesome video, love it!
As being too young for having see it race at that time, I wonder how the racing with these cars looked like?
It's absolutely mind boggling seeing how advanced this car was. And the shifting really was automatic?
The 1997 Calibra with the full-carbon body would have been a another groundbreaking step!
Keep in mind you could have run two F1 teams for the price of one DTM/ITC team at that time. And becaus there was also competition between two tyre companies, but also had no limit in testing they did a different tyre compound for every track. The Opel had a hydraulic system which they used for everything in that car, like the weights, the flaps, everything they figured out that would improve perfomance by moving it during a lap, they put a hydraulic system on it and automated it.
Like said in the video, a spin would get the systems off sync with the track, but because the system took the distance as reference to know where the car is on the track and, as far as i know, not realy a GPS. The system was reset everytime it crossed the line by a signal from the box, so if the car had a spin it was off sync just till it crosses the line again.
Absolutely fascinating analysis!
Thanks a lot!
I can just see great design that had no limits. Beautiful design & engineering which to me are the same.
knowing Opel build the first rocket powered car this isn't exactly a surprise :D
Yes, I always liked Calibra, especially, the 16-valve and AWD ones.
Could you talk about some of the gt500 cars? I think they dont get enough recognition these days.
real shame there wasnt a V6 AWD Calibra released to the public great looking car , shocked by the amount of money each team spent developing these cars 😮 , great post lots of interesting info thnx
They thought about building one. The electronic parts catalogue had a listing for 4x4 V6 exhaust downpipes even though the car was never made. I own a 3.0 V6 4x4 Cavalier (Vectra A) and it would definitely have made a good production car
Please, more videos on cars from the past💜
More to come!
hey, ich weiß ja nicht wie es Dir geht, aber das ist mein all-time-favourite. Ich hab so ziemlich alle Modelle, inklusive dem 100Jahre Fanfest Cali, und dem Wagen, den Volker einmal in der DTM fuhr, der ist sogar noch seltener, noch dazu signiert.
Tatsächlich war das 24h Rennen das erste Rennen das ich besucht habe als Youngster (ich hab noch eine von den kleinen Fahnen, die Volker in der Einführungsrunde aus dem Fenster warf, klar, hängt zusammen mit dem ganzen Rosberg'95Merch und den Autogrammkaten von ebay in einer großen Vitrine).
Dass ich damals lieber Ran als Vox geschaut habe, ist eine der Sachen, die ich am meisten bereue in meinem Leben :)
Hab Jahre später ein kleines Vermögen führ ein DVD Set bezahlt, wo jemand die Übertragungen von VHS konvertiert hat, und die 3(!) Jahresbücher.
Du hast einige Dinge zur technischen Entwicklung genannt, die mir gar nicht bekannt waren. Danke und Respekt! Vielleicht kann man sich ja mal bei der NES treffen
Vielen Dank, gerne!
I did not know it had all of the systems. Thanks.
I remember how impressed I was when learned how they solved the issue with driving the front wheels while having the engine so low.
My first read about this Calibra DTM was in the late 1990s from the AMS Magazine, and I love the car since then.
Another brilliant video, congrats and thanks. As far as I understand, this racing car used the same street chassis for the mid section, but with (at least) a tubular sub chassis at, supporting the engine and front suspension? It impresses me that, at the end of day, the engine block comes from an ordinary SUV. I always wonder how much of these cars are actually the same that you have if you go and buy a Calibra.
Calibrate was a beautiful car, one of my neighbours had a v6 4x4, standard 204bhp his was tuned to just short of 300. What a machine.
V6 was 2,5liter FWD. 2.0turbo was 4x4 with 204hp (and 2.0 4x4 with 150hp FWD)
I believe the 97 car even had a carbon chassis. Also will you make videos about the other two main Class 1 cars?
It was or is nearly all carbon fibre.
I actually own a plastic model of the black Cliff one. I'm in love with the overall shape of the car.
Another Great video on a Beast of a racing car
Glad you enjoyed it
I've always loved the alfa 155
Nice video, crazy car
An epic project!!!
By far, the best driving cars of Gran Turismo. I can’t tell how many thousands of miles I racked up on my Mercedes.
I’m proud to say I Owen an opel calibrate such a cool car
This car was so much fun in Gran Tourismo 2
i knew the calibra was wild, but doing entire engine swaps between race sessions!? bruh.
Who manufactured the gearboxes? Xtrac? Martin Schanche (6 times european rallycross champion and cofounder of Xtrac) copied the design of this gearbox in his Ford Escort rallycross car that debuted in 1996, paired with an 10 000 RPM shortstroke YB engine. The 90s was wild!
I own Opel Calibra 2.0 16v 4X4 for future project! 😉
Love the 90s rules😎❤️
Opel for some reason never gets the credit they deserved. they are extremely reliable, well handling, kinda well made and really clean. the only thing i dont like is the selection of screws they used. you cannot change any part without having at least one screw head breaking. if they would make some sportscars and stop using shitscrews, they would make a excellent car for everyone who enjoys driving
i heard that the Lexus IS F Racing Concept was built on the Opel Vectra DTM. do you happen to know anything about that?
Great car. Makes you wonder what they will think up next
Absolutely mad, i love it🥰
All factory DTM cars from '93 had V6 engines and the Calibra and 155 were 4WD. Only Mercedes stuck with 2WD. There was also a private BMW E36 and the Foxbody Mustangs of course. What a great time. 😊
The Alfa V6 DTM cars were screamers !
Great video, thanks!!!
Those were the days man
DTM needs to reassess its current rules and make them more inline with the early 90s. Even us Brits where hooked on the DTM with some of the most stunning cars ever to race.
The 155 alfa awd and 190e cosworth and lotus carlton and ford siarrai rs cosworth and volvo wagon was my all time favourite cars
DTM has never been more expensive than F1 running in the same year.
Thx for the insights
Im an american that grew up in 3 73-74 opel mantas in the 80s and 90s. Those things were little tanks. Each one had over 200k miles. Our last one was still running when my dad junked it around 95-96. I dont think it actually got junked. Everyone at the yard kept asking what was wrong with it lol im pretty sure someone took the whole thing lol. Always have a soft spot for opel even if its just a chevy vauxhall nowadays. Damn good cars in their day. Chugged like a diesel but it was like a gas 1.4l or something lol
Amazing. Never new that Americans know Manta, or even had one over there 👍
@@kallo182 we had 3. We were special. Even tho someone else in town had a manta lol
the Calibra DTM was a great car - even running to today - only got beaten by the Astra DTM in my Opinion.. Sadly they are slowly getting rarer and rarer and are not often seen on tracks and series like tourenwagen-legenden or drm
My peaceful 2.0 16V (that I still own) is the base for this monster?
I always loved the Calibra, but didn't knew it was this advanced.
Was a great car to drive in Grand Turismo.
How did the 1995 cars compare to the 2023 GT3 cars used in DTM for lap time?
What a monster!