I have a 2.5v6 CD which I've had since 2005. Been retired since 2010 and will be keeping it. Brilliantly reliable, uses no oil or coolant and full history since I bought it. Goes like a train on the motorway too. 147,000 miles and counting. ..
I had a Elite version 2.5V6. Lovely car full of leather ran it to 200,000 miles bought it 3 years old from auction with 30k on it. My dad has it in his apartment in Spain as his daily car he does around 200 miles a year. Everything works air blows cold I still use it when we visit.
My dad used to have a senator 3.0 24v dual ram. What a car. That digital dash was a bit retro but what a noise that makes. Sadly rust got to it, but the engine was still strong. Senators are going for crazy money if you can find one. They have become a modern classic
You should try a manual MV6 with the full-fat 3.0 or 3.2 litre. It's a very, very different car from the posher end of the Omega range. These cars are incredible value at the moment, you can buy a nice one for £500, if you're very selective and do your research thoroughly. But don't buy a V6 after the road tax rules changed in 2001 or you'll be paying £325-£525 a year to tax it. And if you can find a nice example with the fantastic BMW 2.5 turbo-diesel engine (yes, the same one used in the P38 Range-Rover) then you'll have a car that could be almost functionally immortal as that engine cured a lot of the expensive Omega issues, though rust can still be a problem. As well as having had an MV6 estate as a company car, I had a civilian model MV6 3.0 with the manual box and all the toys (pretty rare on an MV6 as a lot were rather basic, like the police cars) and that was a real beast with lovely leather proper Recaro front seats. I really should have kept that one...
I had the pleasure of having 4 of these brand new through my company 2 3litre elites, a 2.5 cdx, and a 2 litre estate which i think was 138 bhp i think. The 3 litre 211 bhp elites I absolutely loved back then, fully loaded with every option including full leather and capable of 150 mph. Loved watching this review it was great 👍🏻
Comfortable cars are all gone all sports seats and suspension Seems Citroen are the only ones at the moment going back to make more comfortable cars hopefully others follow
Jurassic Coast Comics You do my dad actually brought one as he wanted more luxury over sporty he got the elite model but found it still came with 18 or 19 inch alloys He went 18 as he hates rubber band tyres
In the 90s everyone took the piss out of boy racers for lowering cars, low profile tires and racing seats. Now car manufacturers are doing it to every car. In the UK with the state of the roads and a pot hole every metre we could really do with cars being like this... Soft suspension and big tyre walls. The only thing old cars lack is a modern auto box.
Jamie: The Only way others will follow is If Citroën Sells Enough of them. The Question is, Is there enough people out there that wants them, In order to make Citroën Profitable at Doing it?
I once owned a 2.5 CDX V6. It was a superb car, provided you were handy with a spanner. They had a number of inherent issues that did not cost a huge amount to fix, parts wise, but, took up a lot of time. A good example was plug. I tended to replace the HT leads, at the same time, given the faff getting to the plugs. I also performed a few upgrades, such as aluminium Vectra B V6 cam covers, stainless oil cooler, and a few other bits and bobs. The V6 had an unusual, slightly gravelly tone at high rpm, partly due to its unusual V angle, of 54 degrees, rather than the usual 60. Still a firm favourite of mine, given the throttle controllable oversteer and accomplished handling.
I had '97 2.5 V6 with manual, and yea, you needed spanner with it, but it never broke down fatally and was wonderful car. Common issues I had with it were the anti-roll bar ''dog bones'', cabin heater water valve, cam cover seals, notchy and stiff gearchange (might've needed new bushings for the linkage or new grease), fog light switch and auxiliary water pumps. Other than that, it didn't really have any major issues with it, basic wear like in other cars and short lifespan of the cam belt (60tkm, and it was mandatory to replace the water pump everytime).
Brought back memories. I did my police advanced driving course in the 3.2V6 manual Omega & Volvo T5. Rear wheel drive & Front whhel drive. A day in each. 3 weeks of high speed driving heading out from the West Midlands towards Wales & all points in between. Thrashing out to Borth. Quick bit of lunch then thrashing back.
Someone did, a number of years back. They had a crash damaged Lotus Charlton, and a blue Omega 2.0 GLS. All the running gear was transferred across. If you check on the Vauxhall Owners Network forum, some pictures may still exist.
an LS v8 would be an ideal swap candidate for this.. they did in fact make a couple of prototypes with LS1 v8's in them as these share DNA with australian Holdens of the same era.
What do you think the Vauxhall Monaro was? Yes it wasn't Lotus tuned but it was a bastard nutter V8 Omega with two doors. I had a very rare manual transmission facelift Omega 2.5 V6 cdx, the interior was much nicer, I put a stainless exhaust on it with a K&N air filter.
I've had over 20 Omegas in the past and have 3 on my drive at the moment, one is a blue 2002 saloon that has only done 50,000 miles, the earlier cars had a better interior in my opinion. They seem to be going up in value too, at least the ones that aren't rusty or silver! The CDX models were well specced with heated front seats, xenon lights, electric sunroof, etc but the Elite model added rear heated seats and a rear electric blind too. I was listening to the video whilst typing this and will go back and watch it now but did I hear the 'presenter' say he thought the ride was firm? These are one of the most boaty cars on the road!! Omega, the best car Vauxhall never made.
I've always had big cars omegas bmw 7 series jaguar xj Saab 95 Audi a8 Mercedes s class I got to the point being fed up with such large cars I bought a fiat punto 2 months ago now I miss big cars again 🤣
I had a 98 Omega Elite fitted with the rather rare 5 speed manual Gertrag gearbox and an early Philips Carin satellite navigation system with CD in the boot. It had been an ex-Vauxhall management and I believe press car. Hence all of the options fitted. The manual gearbox was unusual in an Elite specked car. What was interesting was that inside the handbook written on the back page was a whole host of Vauxhall telephone numbers of various management and technical departments at Luton. It was a great car.
These big GM cars and the Senators were their finest hours well built and refined bigger inside huge boot and were second hand bargains compared to BMW 5 series whoopees could cruise up to 100 thinking you were doing 70!
Vauxhall also had the latter generation Cavalier, as well as the Senator which was a pretty blingy car for the time. Ford also had the Scorpio and the Granada. Beautiful cars, but I always really liked the Omega for some reason. The Vectra was replaced by the Insignia which is still with us today.
The Senator was beautiful and my mate's dad had one. It was like a luxury Carlton, a big step up from the last generation of the Cavalier. My dad had a standard Carlton and that was also a nice car.
Back in 2003, I had a green 2.0 manual CD saloon. Was good fun in the wet; and with liberal use of the handbrake, drifted easily in a largish car park. The local scrappy had a whole black leather interior which I picked up for 80 quid; this included an electric rear blind!! All the wiring for the blind and electric seats was already in the car so it was all plug and play. Pretty pimp for a 21 year old!
Having owned 3 Omega's 1996 Burgundy, 1999 gold SE, & 2000 Silver the last being a Elite Estate model 2.6 Diesel, all I can say is vauxall miss understood the value of this car, my silver Elite model looked stunning, drove wonderfully and stood out from the crowd, I even had Police officers drowling over my Elite......Now the Senator was on a different level!!
The tourer in estate was lovely. The elite was also really good - very well equiped and with a lovely engine. Dad had one in champagne gold - its was so lovely
The V6 engines were made at the Ellesmere Port plant near me. Initially fitted to the mk3 (?) Cavalier till the Vectra replaced it. We rented a house to a German Exec who came to run the engine line. People think that V6s are grunty but actually they are lively and revvy... see Alfa and VW.
I actually owned one of these back in the day. It was a nice, if unexciting, transport. But it was THIRSTY! I swapped it for a 2.6 CDX estate, as I needed to carry some long loads. The Estate was cavernous! It made my daughter's Volvo 740 estate look like a mini in comparison. Unfortunately, it was even thirstier - even gentle driving was unable to get much better than 26 mpg, and it was also very heavy on rear tyres for some reason. Then it suddenly became a money pit, suffering an alternator failure (HOW MUCH???) followed by the heater valve springing a leak. The valve only cost about a fiver, but fitting it cost a couple of hundred - even with a mate doing the job - as half the top end of the engine had to be dismantled to get at it! At the time, unleaded had just hit £1.35 a litre, so the Omega went. I replaced it with a SAAB 9000 Aero in mint condition. Even more comfortable, faster and if you don't push it, capable of well over 40 mpg! (I've seen 46 mpg on a long run). How come Vauxhall are still going and SAAB aren't is a mystery!
My dad had a 2.5 v6 CDX omega back in the 90’s his had cream interior and was a brown/ red colour, seeing this video took me back I used to love the v6 noise now I really want to buy one 😂😂
My first car was Opel Omega. 2.0 engine had 136 hp and it was plently enough to ride sideways in winter. What a fun this car was. At the end I put smoked lights on, painted the hood and rims black. The car itself was bronze. It looked so sexy and badass. The only thing was.. it was literally eaten by rust 😶 I sold it and I still regret it.. damn what a car it was.
I remember going to collect one of these when I worked in an MG/Rover dealer. I was, and still am a huge fan of the 800, so I wasn't that interested in the big Vauxhall. However, after an hour's journey back, I was really rather smitten with the Omega. Very underrated car, and, whisper it, actually slightly better than the 800 if I'm honest. Don't you just have it when your prejudices are shattered.
I had a 2.0 auto and 2.5 V6. Love them and would have another tomorrow. I was only 22 when I had them and didn't appreciate them enough. The v6 just got raced everywhere. My mates all had hit hatches
I had one in 2000 and liked it, it was a 2.6ltr auto, and it was the top of the range, it was a fantastic car, but after a few years it had problems, with head gasket failure, and later in 2014 it failed its MOT royally rotten sills, break pipes, and leaking power steering pump so I scrapped it no doubt it will be now have been made into tin cans, Before I had my omega I had the Senator which was superb, and there was no issues when I sold it no doubt it will be still going today
Great review, although the car was built at Russelsheim (or little Turkey as the Germans called it) the V6 engines were built by Vauxhall in Ellesmere port. The Catera looked fantastic inside & out compared to the Omega and was fitted with the 3.0 V6, but I was told that one problem with this engine in longatudinal mode was the inlet plenum, the air mass meter was mounted on the air filter and then turned into what looked like a Tuba in front of the timing cover, due to it sitting so close to the road there was a noticable flat spot starting off in hot climates. Plus the Americans were not used to high reving overhead cam engines GM were still using Mexican built push rod low power high torque V6's
I'm completely obsessed with this car again, I loved it years and years ago but forgot about it and now you have reminded of this wonderful machine again. *Looks on eBay* lol
I had both a 2.5 V6 CDX (as a company car) and a 2.0 16v CDX as a privately owned and tbh once you got the 2.0 rolling there wasn't much difference in performance between the two. Biggest difference was definitely at the fuel pumps tho, whilst neither weren't exactly economical I could get over 30mpg from the 2.0 but rarely saw.better than 26mpg with the V6. Loved em both tho and would still have another tomorrow if they were still in production.
I had one of these after owning an E34 BMW 5-series and it was as just as good a car, in some areas better, like ride comfort and space, though the BMW did handle sharper. I can see why they were popular with the police: Very comfortable, well balanced handling, spacious (especially the estate model) and with a 3.0/3.2 V6, pretty fast too. Sadly nowadays it seems even the police are not immune from the stupid fad of SUVs....loads of BMW X5s and such like as patrol cars now. When will it end!?
Thanks for another excellent video, used to love the omega, friend of ours back in the day used to have an ex police mv6 and it was 'the car.' I remember an old top gear magazine from 94 or 95 where they drove every mile of the UK motorway system to see if it was any good.
‘The Cops’ in Northern Ireland used these cars for VIP’s. Were literally ‘Bullet Proof’ and Bomb proof. Great sounding and 3.2 V6 goes like a rocket. BOSE surround and all the electrics make it a great car .. even today. If it had USB for iPhone it would be mega !!
My Dad had what I believe was the very first Omega on the road in Northern Ireland in 1994 - it replaced his then 1990 Carlton CD which he had covered 120K miles in. He had three Omegas in total - the last the same colour as this car (Polar Sea Blue). This was replaced in 1997 with a new Calypso Red E39 5-Series (523i SE). Ps The ‘Elite’ was the top model in the range - not this CDX albeit still of high specification.
I had a 24 valve 3.0 Senator back in the day, complete with digi-dash. Absolutely loved it but the 16 mpg commute was difficult to stomach. I sold it and bought a... Rover 214Si !
Makes me feel nostalgic for my '98 3.0 Elite. It had wall to wall leather, sat-nav and a built-in phone. That was "absolute top of the line", unlike the CDX. The CDX was mid-range, the one above the base model CD. Unless I missed something, Saab didn't share this car's gearbox. It wouldn't fit into any of their front-drive cars.
I had a 1998 S reg 2.5 V6 manual in silver with black leather seats in 2003/4. It was a great car to drive ... until the cat's, crank and cam sensors went on it !! I love Vauxhall's and have owned many over the years and I still do (Vectra C 1.8 16v). I done the sensors myself but the catalytic converters were expensive at the time so I got rid of the car, boy do I regret it now :(
Very similar to the Holden Commodore VT from that era but in Australia the Omega tag wasn't introduced till the VE range from 2006.with the VT Holden crammed a 3.8 litre engine into the space taken up by your 2.5 litre..would love to see you do a side by side comparison of cars made by Vauxhall and those made by Holden ..,by the way I love your channel.!
Great review of a classic Opel! They were made in Rüsselsheim = Reessels Hyme ... maybe something like that if you'd write that in English hehe. I enjoy your channel a lot cause of the British classics that you feature ... and would LOVE to see another Rover P6 video with better sound :) but i also very much like that you show those great 1980s and 1990s cars!!
I had a 1999 lotus omega 3.0 MV6 quad cams all Carbon fibre dash with lotus two tone low profile wheels and Xeno headlights and it had every spec available including dual climate and even traffic master system magnificent audio system with 6cd interchanger i wish i kept it it was rapid after i sold i found out it only one of 10 in the country and worth double what sold for ! Gutted ! Id like a classic lotus Carlton on day if i could find one !!! That would be worth mega money now !!
Fantastic car, with good alignment and tires goes like a train. If these wouldn't rust, I would have mine for a very long time. Unfortunately the rust is by far the biggest problem.
Thanks, I fell in with the Cadillac Catera version andI always wanted to see the Euro version Omega. Did you know the Omega name came from the Nova based Oldsmobile Omega back in the early 70s, yeah that when GM started to use the Omega name. I always wanted a Cadillac Catera but could never afford one, even now.
I wish this would have been sold as the Pontiac Grand Prix in the United States. The Grand Prix would have been able to compete better with European makes/models if was a mix of Holden Commodore and Opel Omega. I think if it offered every powertrain available in the Commodore and Omega, it would have been able to serve a range of purposes and sold very well. I think the V8 versions would have been the most popular version. The FWD just kills the fun in the Grand Prix GXP.
When I was a kid back in the early 2000s I liked opels like the omega and dreamed I'd drive either an omega or a calibra one day. As it turned out I bought Mercedes E classes instead. Its funny how things never turn out how you imagined as a kid
I often wanted an omega but never had one , had many Vauxhall’s before , novas , cavaliers and two Carlton’s one was 2L auto that was a fab car and 2.3TD estate torque machine last Vauxhall I had was a Vectra it was ok just a spiced up cavalier
GM is still using that same mirror adjustment switch in the US Now. I have it in My 2007 Saturn ION and 2006 Saturn VUE. My mother has it in her Pontiac Grand Prix. I recognize some of the other switch gear also. The Cadillac Catera didn't sell well because it was actual Junk, I know people that bought them and they spent more time at dealers than on the road.
Lovely car. I believe that a limited number of Main Vauxhall Dealers , like Dencourt Motors in Belfast could supply you, in the early 2000s , a Holden Commodore SS . The SS came fitted with the Chevy LS 5.7 engine. Exactly like an Omega but as quick as an M5 V8. Check out men and motors from the time on UA-cam. Nice sounding V6 Matt. Thank you.
Yep the Omega would give any similar size BMW or Mercedes a run for their money. In fact they were probably even better. Executive car for family car prices💪🏻👍
If you can get rust free omega b or bfl and V6 you ll have a very reliable car. This car ages very well. I have a V6, driving around Europe all the time, done over 100k miles, the only major issue was rust. 190k miles on the clock and it still drivers beautiful.
That is a nice example, I had a 2001 V6 estate a few years ago & loved it! A real shame that big estate cars have been replaced by those horrible SUV things (like you, I hate those things) now driving a Volvo 740 estate.
Why does everyone hate SUV's so much? I have a Volvo S80 which is a hugely comfortable saloon car with amazingly comfortable seats, etc. A superb cruiser in every way but we also have a SUV Volvo XC90 which is a hugely more practical car and more of a pleasure to drive long distances as the ride height means I can see where I'm going more clearly at higher speeds and more likely to avoid an accident and if I were involved in n accident, my family is safer in it than a conventional estate car. Its more practical as each second row seat moves individually and the boot space is bigger than the V70 it replaced. Its also more economical than some estate cars to boot - plus 7 seats if I need them. I agree small SUV's are pointless as they are no more practical than hatchback but a proper SUV has their place.
I always liked this generation of Opels (cause back here, they're Opels), the Vectra B, Astra G and the Omega B. They were the cars on the road when I was a kid and in no small numbers. Always liked the look of it, the massive center console and the V6 engine was one of my childhood dreams. I also remember the Omega A, as my granpa's friend had it. He had it in automatic, because he had a damaged left leg so wouldn't be able to press on the clutch pedal. Dunno what engine was in it, but my grandpa always despised it for being too thirsty ( and that really must have been a lot thirsty, because my grandpa used to drive a Volga M21 for 23 years and that surely was thirsty too 😄)
I've been looking for a petrol manual version. I'd particularly like an ex- police variant with the 3.0 (or later 3.2) engine, as seen on the early episodes of road wars from 2003/4! They're very, very quick.
I was thinking that plenty were chauffeur driven, straight to the station. :) Also, something about the way you reviewed the boot made me think of the Italian Job. :)
I had a 2.6. Drove lovely, but it was junk. I didn't even bother to try selling it. I scrapped it after sinking way too much money in to it. Was happy to see it go.
Drove the 3.0 V6 as a police vehicle. The 3.0 motors were a bit lazy in the lower gears and not best suited to some work, but they had a good top end. Very comfortable cars and easy to spend many hours on the road in them.
I had the 1996 2.0 CD version. Cost me a whole £650. I had it for about 5 years, and it cost me about the same in maintenance over those years. It was underpowered in the 2.0 for its size. But that didn't stop it being driven round the whole country. Eventually something undefined happened to the engine and it got condemned. Much like the example here the AC didn't work either, i think that was a Vauxhall feature.
Iv always liked the omega, my grandfather had a 2.5 v6 Cdx and an elite, also a 2.6 v6 elite. The hsv gts which is basically an omega with a 5.7 litre v8 was a very nice car but not as nice as my dream car the vxr8. 6.2 litre ls3 v8.❤️
I'm also 6'4 (193cm) and I drive a Saab 9000. It's sort of annoying when you think about it, there are a lot of interesting and fun small cars but I just couldn't drive them for any length of time.
I had the quite rare BMW powered 2.5 td Elite (Which was top of the line, CDX was one below), what a machine that was luxury with economy and best of all not an "Ecotec" badge of doom to be seen lurking under the hood! Most surprisingly though everything worked and for a rear wheel drive torquey six cylinder turbo diesel that car was fantastic in the snow...The last Vauxhall I ever had and still wish I did. Wonderful old barge.
I had a 2.5 cdx estate on a 96 plate, was great and the first cold start of the day when the SAI is warming the cats up is a sound you wont forget. I also had a 2.0 gls on a 97 plate and it had 136hp not 114 that was the 2.0 8v carlton. Both cars had the same oyster silver paint The throttle cable needs a slight adjustment to overcome the slack and make it razor sharp also the vacuum accumulators and lines will need to be in tip top condition for the multiram to work and keep the power up
I'm seeing so many small parts that were shared in the GM portfolio. The exterior door handles, mirror button, door locks, interior grab handles, rear map lights and courtesy door lights were all used on the Australian built Holden Commodore from 1997-2007. I knew this was the case, but actually seeing it all rather than just hearing about it is quite interesting.
They are great cars i currently own a ex thames valley police 3.2 v6 manual which is still used daily and has cleared over 200k miles. it is slightly modified with air suspension,bbs wheels and engine mods lol im also in kent if you fancy a go lol
I bought my 2003 omega for 700 euros ( between 500 and 600 pounds i think) I really like it and its got all options.. like electric adjustable seats, leather seats, basicly electric everything and a pricavy screen in the back... dispite its just a 2.2 with 144 hp. That extra 22 hp to the v6 is not something that will turn it into a rocketship as it weights 1650 kg ready to run.. fill ups can be quite expensive as it has a large fueltank.. but if you use cruise controll on the motorway and dont stamp on the throttle to much it can last between 400 miles in the city to 750 miles on the motorway... As far as the story about the policecar goes.. they also came with a locking rear diff as standard for the police..
I had the estate version which I think is even better looking. However when it started going wrong, everything went wrong and became a money pit. I loved it for long trips to Spain. The doors weighed a ton and it was well screwed together- but the running gear was awful.
The VT-Vz Holden Commodore was very loosely based on the Omega. It was considered a family car. A LS V8 of 5.7-6L was an option on nearly the entire range. You could get a base spec with the v8. Police forces loved them. Base engine was the US 3.8l V6 with about 200hp. Later a supercharged 3.8l V6 was offered. Thus is what the Monaro was based on
I valeting these space ships when new.. My mate said..10 years down the line we'll be driving these too...I did get an E reg Cavalier @2000AD. 2.0i GLS (iGl's of niggles) Strong engine. Suspension rotted away. But to this day...The Best car I've ever owned! Had a G' Polo after (rusted out) , then a J' Escort 1.3LX. (ran hot).. Now a 57' Chevy Lacetti (That'll be the Daewoo) 1.4. Runs hot and underpowered/heavy power steering. 94K and still running.. And it's the 1'st with airbags! ;o. Movin' on up! ;)
3.2 v6 with fettling and irmscher bits was my go to for a while... in black..first car with xenons, on an r plate..god I miss that lump. Head gasket failure all too common sadly.
I have a 2.5v6 CD which I've had since 2005. Been retired since 2010 and will be keeping it. Brilliantly reliable, uses no oil or coolant and full history since I bought it. Goes like a train on the motorway too. 147,000 miles and counting. ..
Reminds me of Road Wars, Pat and Carl could keep up with most cars in the Omega.
theirs was a 3.0 24 valve! totally different engine! and they were very quick indeed!
I had a Elite version 2.5V6. Lovely car full of leather ran it to 200,000 miles bought it 3 years old from auction with 30k on it. My dad has it in his apartment in Spain as his daily car he does around 200 miles a year. Everything works air blows cold I still use it when we visit.
Yeh good cars and there built like a tank!
My dad used to have a senator 3.0 24v dual ram. What a car. That digital dash was a bit retro but what a noise that makes. Sadly rust got to it, but the engine was still strong. Senators are going for crazy money if you can find one. They have become a modern classic
This over an SUV any day
Even a Vauxhall Frontera ???
I think Clarkson wrecked the last running one of them about 4 years ago.
yes
John Moruzzi hated the Frontera. Total shit🤮
@@johnmoruzzi7236 drove a nearly new one 25 years ago. Horrible agricultural thing, just didn't get it.
Fr fr
You should try a manual MV6 with the full-fat 3.0 or 3.2 litre. It's a very, very different car from the posher end of the Omega range. These cars are incredible value at the moment, you can buy a nice one for £500, if you're very selective and do your research thoroughly. But don't buy a V6 after the road tax rules changed in 2001 or you'll be paying £325-£525 a year to tax it. And if you can find a nice example with the fantastic BMW 2.5 turbo-diesel engine (yes, the same one used in the P38 Range-Rover) then you'll have a car that could be almost functionally immortal as that engine cured a lot of the expensive Omega issues, though rust can still be a problem. As well as having had an MV6 estate as a company car, I had a civilian model MV6 3.0 with the manual box and all the toys (pretty rare on an MV6 as a lot were rather basic, like the police cars) and that was a real beast with lovely leather proper Recaro front seats. I really should have kept that one...
I had the pleasure of having 4 of these brand new through my company 2 3litre elites, a 2.5 cdx, and a 2 litre estate which i think was 138 bhp i think. The 3 litre 211 bhp elites I absolutely loved back then, fully loaded with every option including full leather and capable of 150 mph. Loved watching this review it was great 👍🏻
I always liked the MK2 Omega, it was quite a looker for its time and a decent drive. I reckon it still looks good today.
Comfortable cars are all gone all sports seats and suspension
Seems Citroen are the only ones at the moment going back to make more comfortable cars hopefully others follow
Jurassic Coast Comics
You do my dad actually brought one as he wanted more luxury over sporty he got the elite model but found it still came with 18 or 19 inch alloys
He went 18 as he hates rubber band tyres
In the 90s everyone took the piss out of boy racers for lowering cars, low profile tires and racing seats.
Now car manufacturers are doing it to every car.
In the UK with the state of the roads and a pot hole every metre we could really do with cars being like this... Soft suspension and big tyre walls.
The only thing old cars lack is a modern auto box.
But Citroen only makes SUV's now so good bye actually good chassis...
Jamie: The Only way others will follow is If Citroën Sells Enough of them. The Question is, Is there enough people out there that wants them, In order to make Citroën Profitable at Doing it?
Most Citroen's are ugly though. But I do like the DS range. That said, I've never been a fan of French cars personally.
I once owned a 2.5 CDX V6. It was a superb car, provided you were handy with a spanner. They had a number of inherent issues that did not cost a huge amount to fix, parts wise, but, took up a lot of time. A good example was plug. I tended to replace the HT leads, at the same time, given the faff getting to the plugs. I also performed a few upgrades, such as aluminium Vectra B V6 cam covers, stainless oil cooler, and a few other bits and bobs. The V6 had an unusual, slightly gravelly tone at high rpm, partly due to its unusual V angle, of 54 degrees, rather than the usual 60. Still a firm favourite of mine, given the throttle controllable oversteer and accomplished handling.
I had '97 2.5 V6 with manual, and yea, you needed spanner with it, but it never broke down fatally and was wonderful car. Common issues I had with it were the anti-roll bar ''dog bones'', cabin heater water valve, cam cover seals, notchy and stiff gearchange (might've needed new bushings for the linkage or new grease), fog light switch and auxiliary water pumps. Other than that, it didn't really have any major issues with it, basic wear like in other cars and short lifespan of the cam belt (60tkm, and it was mandatory to replace the water pump everytime).
My dad used to have one of these, a 2003 Vauxhall Omega B 3.2 V6 Elite Police special , what a bloody car
I had one too. Picked it up at a car auction for 800 quid. Went like shit off a shovel.
Brought back memories. I did my police advanced driving course in the 3.2V6 manual Omega & Volvo T5. Rear wheel drive & Front whhel drive. A day in each. 3 weeks of high speed driving heading out from the West Midlands towards Wales & all points in between. Thrashing out to Borth. Quick bit of lunch then thrashing back.
That sounds like a fun couple of weeks-you could sell tickets to that!
If only they made a turbo nutter bastard Lotus version of this....
Someone did, a number of years back. They had a crash damaged Lotus Charlton, and a blue Omega 2.0 GLS. All the running gear was transferred across. If you check on the Vauxhall Owners Network forum, some pictures may still exist.
Interesting, I’ll have to see if I can find that then
an LS v8 would be an ideal swap candidate for this.. they did in fact make a couple of prototypes with LS1 v8's in them as these share DNA with australian Holdens of the same era.
I’ve heard about the LS1 versions, nice, but V8s don’t really float my boat.
**gets strung up and slaughtered**
What do you think the Vauxhall Monaro was?
Yes it wasn't Lotus tuned but it was a bastard nutter V8 Omega with two doors.
I had a very rare manual transmission facelift Omega 2.5 V6 cdx, the interior was much nicer, I put a stainless exhaust on it with a K&N air filter.
I've had over 20 Omegas in the past and have 3 on my drive at the moment, one is a blue 2002 saloon that has only done 50,000 miles, the earlier cars had a better interior in my opinion.
They seem to be going up in value too, at least the ones that aren't rusty or silver!
The CDX models were well specced with heated front seats, xenon lights, electric sunroof, etc but the Elite model added rear heated seats and a rear electric blind too.
I was listening to the video whilst typing this and will go back and watch it now but did I hear the 'presenter' say he thought the ride was firm? These are one of the most boaty cars on the road!!
Omega, the best car Vauxhall never made.
I've always had big cars omegas bmw 7 series jaguar xj Saab 95 Audi a8 Mercedes s class I got to the point being fed up with such large cars I bought a fiat punto 2 months ago now I miss big cars again 🤣
I had a 98 Omega Elite fitted with the rather rare 5 speed manual Gertrag gearbox and an early Philips Carin satellite navigation system with CD in the boot. It had been an ex-Vauxhall management and I believe press car. Hence all of the options fitted. The manual gearbox was unusual in an Elite specked car. What was interesting was that inside the handbook written on the back page was a whole host of Vauxhall telephone numbers of various management and technical departments at Luton. It was a great car.
These big GM cars and the Senators were their finest hours well built and refined bigger inside huge
boot and were second hand bargains compared to BMW 5 series whoopees could cruise up to 100 thinking you were doing 70!
Vauxhall also had the latter generation Cavalier, as well as the Senator which was a pretty blingy car for the time.
Ford also had the Scorpio and the Granada. Beautiful cars, but I always really liked the Omega for some reason.
The Vectra was replaced by the Insignia which is still with us today.
Had one of these beasts, so much fun! Now got 2001 Omega B2 2.2 it's in great condition with still only 83.000 on clock. Love my big Vauxhalls.
They were a nice looking car but I thought the 1988 Senator was a bit better looking.
Drove the senator 3.0 24v dual ram a while ago now. Stunning car even with that retro digital dash. Sound from a straight 6 is music.
The Senator was beautiful and my mate's dad had one. It was like a luxury Carlton, a big step up from the last generation of the Cavalier.
My dad had a standard Carlton and that was also a nice car.
Back in 2003, I had a green 2.0 manual CD saloon. Was good fun in the wet; and with liberal use of the handbrake, drifted easily in a largish car park.
The local scrappy had a whole black leather interior which I picked up for 80 quid; this included an electric rear blind!! All the wiring for the blind and electric seats was already in the car so it was all plug and play. Pretty pimp for a 21 year old!
Having owned 3 Omega's 1996 Burgundy, 1999 gold SE, & 2000 Silver the last being a Elite Estate model 2.6 Diesel, all I can say is vauxall miss understood the value of this car, my silver Elite model looked stunning, drove wonderfully and stood out from the crowd, I even had Police officers drowling over my Elite......Now the Senator was on a different level!!
The tourer in estate was lovely. The elite was also really good - very well equiped and with a lovely engine. Dad had one in champagne gold - its was so lovely
We had a 1996 P reg 3.0 V6 Elite Irmscher special edition in the same colour. Beautiful car and always sadly missed.
The V6 engines were made at the Ellesmere Port plant near me. Initially fitted to the mk3 (?) Cavalier till the Vectra replaced it. We rented a house to a German Exec who came to run the engine line.
People think that V6s are grunty but actually they are lively and revvy... see Alfa and VW.
Hi,I remember these as police cars and cars to drive,this one is in good condition for its year,you don't see many now.awesome review.
I actually owned one of these back in the day. It was a nice, if unexciting, transport. But it was THIRSTY! I swapped it for a 2.6 CDX estate, as I needed to carry some long loads. The Estate was cavernous! It made my daughter's Volvo 740 estate look like a mini in comparison. Unfortunately, it was even thirstier - even gentle driving was unable to get much better than 26 mpg, and it was also very heavy on rear tyres for some reason. Then it suddenly became a money pit, suffering an alternator failure (HOW MUCH???) followed by the heater valve springing a leak. The valve only cost about a fiver, but fitting it cost a couple of hundred - even with a mate doing the job - as half the top end of the engine had to be dismantled to get at it! At the time, unleaded had just hit £1.35 a litre, so the Omega went. I replaced it with a SAAB 9000 Aero in mint condition. Even more comfortable, faster and if you don't push it, capable of well over 40 mpg! (I've seen 46 mpg on a long run). How come Vauxhall are still going and SAAB aren't is a mystery!
My dad had a 2.5 v6 CDX omega back in the 90’s his had cream interior and was a brown/ red colour, seeing this video took me back I used to love the v6 noise now I really want to buy one 😂😂
My first car was Opel Omega.
2.0 engine had 136 hp and it was plently enough to ride sideways in winter. What a fun this car was. At the end I put smoked lights on, painted the hood and rims black. The car itself was bronze. It looked so sexy and badass.
The only thing was.. it was literally eaten by rust 😶 I sold it and I still regret it.. damn what a car it was.
I remember going to collect one of these when I worked in an MG/Rover dealer. I was, and still am a huge fan of the 800, so I wasn't that interested in the big Vauxhall. However, after an hour's journey back, I was really rather smitten with the Omega. Very underrated car, and, whisper it, actually slightly better than the 800 if I'm honest. Don't you just have it when your prejudices are shattered.
I had a 2.0 auto and 2.5 V6. Love them and would have another tomorrow. I was only 22 when I had them and didn't appreciate them enough. The v6 just got raced everywhere. My mates all had hit hatches
I had one in 2000 and liked it, it was a 2.6ltr auto, and it was the top of the range, it was a fantastic car, but after a few years it had problems, with head gasket failure, and later in 2014 it failed its MOT royally rotten sills, break pipes, and leaking power steering pump so I scrapped it no doubt it will be now have been made into tin cans, Before I had my omega I had the Senator which was superb, and there was no issues when I sold it no doubt it will be still going today
So nobody is going to mention the 2.5 BMW straight six turbo diesel
The point is non BMW Merc, Jag e.t.c.
Worst engine to go in the Omega
The comfiest seats I ever had in a car... Did a long European road trip in my Omega estate and it was the most relaxing drive ever.
Great review, although the car was built at Russelsheim (or little Turkey as the Germans called it) the V6 engines were built by Vauxhall in Ellesmere port. The Catera looked fantastic inside & out compared to the Omega and was fitted with the 3.0 V6, but I was told that one problem with this engine in longatudinal mode was the inlet plenum, the air mass meter was mounted on the air filter and then turned into what looked like a Tuba in front of the timing cover, due to it sitting so close to the road there was a noticable flat spot starting off in hot climates. Plus the Americans were not used to high reving overhead cam engines GM were still using Mexican built push rod low power high torque V6's
Why did they call it Little Turkey?
I'm completely obsessed with this car again, I loved it years and years ago but forgot about it and now you have reminded of this wonderful machine again. *Looks on eBay* lol
Great car miss mine dearly :( Lovely to drive and so comfortable aswell as tail happy given half a chance!!
I had both a 2.5 V6 CDX (as a company car) and a 2.0 16v CDX as a privately owned and tbh once you got the 2.0 rolling there wasn't much difference in performance between the two. Biggest difference was definitely at the fuel pumps tho, whilst neither weren't exactly economical I could get over 30mpg from the 2.0 but rarely saw.better than 26mpg with the V6.
Loved em both tho and would still have another tomorrow if they were still in production.
I had one of these after owning an E34 BMW 5-series and it was as just as good a car, in some areas better, like ride comfort and space, though the BMW did handle sharper. I can see why they were popular with the police: Very comfortable, well balanced handling, spacious (especially the estate model) and with a 3.0/3.2 V6, pretty fast too.
Sadly nowadays it seems even the police are not immune from the stupid fad of SUVs....loads of BMW X5s and such like as patrol cars now. When will it end!?
Thanks for another excellent video, used to love the omega, friend of ours back in the day used to have an ex police mv6 and it was 'the car.' I remember an old top gear magazine from 94 or 95 where they drove every mile of the UK motorway system to see if it was any good.
‘The Cops’ in Northern Ireland used these cars for VIP’s. Were literally ‘Bullet Proof’ and Bomb proof. Great sounding and 3.2 V6 goes like a rocket. BOSE surround and all the electrics make it a great car .. even today. If it had USB for iPhone it would be mega !!
Next door neighbour had a purple/ blue 3.0i petrol elite estate on an R reg back in the day.
Always sounded awesome when he started it up.
My Dad had what I believe was the very first Omega on the road in Northern Ireland in 1994 - it replaced his then 1990 Carlton CD which he had covered 120K miles in. He had three Omegas in total - the last the same colour as this car (Polar Sea Blue). This was replaced in 1997 with a new Calypso Red E39 5-Series (523i SE). Ps The ‘Elite’ was the top model in the range - not this CDX albeit still of high specification.
I ve just found this site.. Its brilliant, no nonsense car reviews on cars we know have driven, have loved and not loved.. Great job fella 👍👏👌
Welcome aboard! Glad you liked it!
Great to see a review on one of these.
I drove a few when I worked for Vauxhall.
I had a 24 valve 3.0 Senator back in the day, complete with digi-dash. Absolutely loved it but the 16 mpg commute was difficult to stomach.
I sold it and bought a... Rover 214Si !
some kind of irony there!
I ran an Omega for a couple of years. Loved that car.
Makes me feel nostalgic for my '98 3.0 Elite. It had wall to wall leather, sat-nav and a built-in phone. That was "absolute top of the line", unlike the CDX. The CDX was mid-range, the one above the base model CD.
Unless I missed something, Saab didn't share this car's gearbox. It wouldn't fit into any of their front-drive cars.
Base model was the GLS.
I had a 1998 S reg 2.5 V6 manual in silver with black leather seats in 2003/4. It was a great car to drive ... until the cat's, crank and cam sensors went on it !! I love Vauxhall's and have owned many over the years and I still do (Vectra C 1.8 16v). I done the sensors myself but the catalytic converters were expensive at the time so I got rid of the car, boy do I regret it now :(
We had in North America as the Cadillac Catera it got replaced in 2003 with the Cadillac CTS
Hope it had cup holders.
Enjoyed this .had 2 of these a v6 reflection saloon and a 2.2 CDX estate. V6 was far superior.
I remember my dad picked me up in one of these from primary school in the mid 90s. I was blown away by the dash and interior.
Very similar to the Holden Commodore VT from that era but in Australia the Omega tag wasn't introduced till the VE range from 2006.with the VT Holden crammed a 3.8 litre engine into the space taken up by your 2.5 litre..would love to see you do a side by side comparison of cars made by Vauxhall and those made by Holden ..,by the way I love your channel.!
Yep was about to comment on plenty of similar parts (mirror adjust, doors, petrol cap etc.)
This is what the VT is based on. It's where the 'European styling" comes from.
I believe the centre section is the same as the Holden
I always liked the Omega, especially the pre-facelift examples. Unfortunately there are almost nothing left, went all to the scrap yard.
Great review of a classic Opel! They were made in Rüsselsheim = Reessels Hyme ... maybe something like that if you'd write that in English hehe. I enjoy your channel a lot cause of the British classics that you feature ... and would LOVE to see another Rover P6 video with better sound :) but i also very much like that you show those great 1980s and 1990s cars!!
I had a 3.0 v6 ex police estate manual. Very worn out but still great fun. Would do silly speeds if you had a long enough motorway!
Great review. There's nothing like a big three-box saloon, excellent. (I also quite liked the Signum!) Many thanks.
Love these cars, drove a 3.0 v6 manual once, it was very enjoyable to drive, i do like a big barge
I had a 1999 lotus omega 3.0 MV6 quad cams all Carbon fibre dash with lotus two tone low profile wheels and Xeno headlights and it had every spec available including dual climate and even traffic master system magnificent audio system with 6cd interchanger i wish i kept it it was rapid after i sold i found out it only one of 10 in the country and worth double what sold for ! Gutted ! Id like a classic lotus Carlton on day if i could find one !!! That would be worth mega money now !!
I worked on these as an apprentice at a Vauxhall dealership, they were good cars, very underrated
Fantastic car, with good alignment and tires goes like a train. If these wouldn't rust, I would have mine for a very long time. Unfortunately the rust is by far the biggest problem.
Thanks, I fell in with the Cadillac Catera version andI always wanted to see the Euro version Omega. Did you know the Omega name came from the Nova based Oldsmobile Omega back in the early 70s, yeah that when GM started to use the Omega name. I always wanted a Cadillac Catera but could never afford one, even now.
I didn't know that about the Omega name, glad I could show you something new
I wish this would have been sold as the Pontiac Grand Prix in the United States. The Grand Prix would have been able to compete better with European makes/models if was a mix of Holden Commodore and Opel Omega. I think if it offered every powertrain available in the Commodore and Omega, it would have been able to serve a range of purposes and sold very well. I think the V8 versions would have been the most popular version. The FWD just kills the fun in the Grand Prix GXP.
I subbed cause of this. :)
By the way, those are Opel/ GM switches, that Saab was basically forced to use (their cars being rough copies of Vectra's).
Always thought these were very decent, particularly in V6 guise
I can't believe that you have only 6k subscribers, your content is marvelous, keep it up! Thanks
Thanks, hopefully it will climb soon
When I was a kid back in the early 2000s I liked opels like the omega and dreamed I'd drive either an omega or a calibra one day. As it turned out I bought Mercedes E classes instead. Its funny how things never turn out how you imagined as a kid
I often wanted an omega but never had one , had many Vauxhall’s before , novas , cavaliers and two Carlton’s one was 2L auto that was a fab car and 2.3TD estate torque machine last Vauxhall I had was a Vectra it was ok just a spiced up cavalier
You said CDX was the top of the line… That’s not right… They did a model called elite
Yeah the elite was a lot nicer then the cdx
Yeah 3.0 I think 👍
I think the Elite was only the face lift model, this was not one of the face lifts. This leaves CDX as top spec for pre-face lift.
@@adammcallister2260 No the elite joined the range in 1994
A friend of mine had a pre-facelift elite so they must’ve made one!!
GM is still using that same mirror adjustment switch in the US Now. I have it in My 2007 Saturn ION and 2006 Saturn VUE. My mother has it in her Pontiac Grand Prix. I recognize some of the other switch gear also. The Cadillac Catera didn't sell well because it was actual Junk, I know people that bought them and they spent more time at dealers than on the road.
Lovely car. I believe that a limited number of Main Vauxhall Dealers , like Dencourt Motors in Belfast could supply you, in the early 2000s , a Holden Commodore SS . The SS came fitted with the Chevy LS 5.7 engine. Exactly like an Omega but as quick as an M5 V8. Check out men and motors from the time on UA-cam. Nice sounding V6 Matt. Thank you.
Totally agree about SUVs. I just don't get the point. Ob well, each to their own I suppose.
Same here!
And here!
Yep the Omega would give any similar size BMW or Mercedes a run for their money. In fact they were probably even better. Executive car for family car prices💪🏻👍
If you can get rust free omega b or bfl and V6 you ll have a very reliable car.
This car ages very well. I have a V6, driving around Europe all the time, done over 100k miles, the only major issue was rust. 190k miles on the clock and it still drivers beautiful.
I have one actually, "97 european 3.0 MV6 with manual gearbox. Very comfortable and great equipped car. The biggest problem is rust unfortunately..
Passed my test in a 2.0 manual estate Tourer special edition, in Ceramic Blue back in 1997. Loved this video 😊
That is a nice example, I had a 2001 V6 estate a few years ago & loved it!
A real shame that big estate cars have been replaced by those horrible SUV things (like you, I hate those things) now driving a Volvo 740 estate.
Why does everyone hate SUV's so much? I have a Volvo S80 which is a hugely comfortable saloon car with amazingly comfortable seats, etc. A superb cruiser in every way but we also have a SUV Volvo XC90 which is a hugely more practical car and more of a pleasure to drive long distances as the ride height means I can see where I'm going more clearly at higher speeds and more likely to avoid an accident and if I were involved in n accident, my family is safer in it than a conventional estate car. Its more practical as each second row seat moves individually and the boot space is bigger than the V70 it replaced. Its also more economical than some estate cars to boot - plus 7 seats if I need them. I agree small SUV's are pointless as they are no more practical than hatchback but a proper SUV has their place.
Ps, the Omega's were great cars and hugely underrated. Shame they depreciated so much when new or there would have been far more of them
The executives were driven about in these. Thumbs up.
I had that exact car. It was brilliant. written off by being T-boned on a roundabout.
I always liked this generation of Opels (cause back here, they're Opels), the Vectra B, Astra G and the Omega B. They were the cars on the road when I was a kid and in no small numbers. Always liked the look of it, the massive center console and the V6 engine was one of my childhood dreams. I also remember the Omega A, as my granpa's friend had it. He had it in automatic, because he had a damaged left leg so wouldn't be able to press on the clutch pedal. Dunno what engine was in it, but my grandpa always despised it for being too thirsty ( and that really must have been a lot thirsty, because my grandpa used to drive a Volga M21 for 23 years and that surely was thirsty too 😄)
I've been looking for a petrol manual version. I'd particularly like an ex- police variant with the 3.0 (or later 3.2) engine, as seen on the early episodes of road wars from 2003/4! They're very, very quick.
I was thinking that plenty were chauffeur driven, straight to the station. :)
Also, something about the way you reviewed the boot made me think of the Italian Job. :)
I do hate that roundabout at the bottom of bluebell hill - almost as bad as bluebell hill itself really! Great video!
I have a Omega myself, brilliant cars. Mine’s a B2 and the interior upgrades are a must. But you should have adjusted the steering wheel
i miss my v6 2.5 cdx but had the elite spec by the old owner i had the same color de badged would kick the arse out of most cars i would race lol
I had a 2.6. Drove lovely, but it was junk. I didn't even bother to try selling it. I scrapped it after sinking way too much money in to it. Was happy to see it go.
Drove the 3.0 V6 as a police vehicle. The 3.0 motors were a bit lazy in the lower gears and not best suited to some work, but they had a good top end. Very comfortable cars and easy to spend many hours on the road in them.
I had the 1996 2.0 CD version. Cost me a whole £650. I had it for about 5 years, and it cost me about the same in maintenance over those years. It was underpowered in the 2.0 for its size. But that didn't stop it being driven round the whole country. Eventually something undefined happened to the engine and it got condemned. Much like the example here the AC didn't work either, i think that was a Vauxhall feature.
Iv always liked the omega, my grandfather had a 2.5 v6 Cdx and an elite, also a 2.6 v6 elite. The hsv gts which is basically an omega with a 5.7 litre v8 was a very nice car but not as nice as my dream car the vxr8. 6.2 litre ls3 v8.❤️
I'm also 6'4 (193cm) and I drive a Saab 9000. It's sort of annoying when you think about it, there are a lot of interesting and fun small cars but I just couldn't drive them for any length of time.
I had the quite rare BMW powered 2.5 td Elite (Which was top of the line, CDX was one below), what a machine that was luxury with economy and best of all not an "Ecotec" badge of doom to be seen lurking under the hood! Most surprisingly though everything worked and for a rear wheel drive torquey six cylinder turbo diesel that car was fantastic in the snow...The last Vauxhall I ever had and still wish I did. Wonderful old barge.
I had a 2.5 cdx estate on a 96 plate, was great and the first cold start of the day when the SAI is warming the cats up is a sound you wont forget. I also had a 2.0 gls on a 97 plate and it had 136hp not 114 that was the 2.0 8v carlton.
Both cars had the same oyster silver paint
The throttle cable needs a slight adjustment to overcome the slack and make it razor sharp also the vacuum accumulators and lines will need to be in tip top condition for the multiram to work and keep the power up
ill let the owner know to keep an eye on that
I'm seeing so many small parts that were shared in the GM portfolio. The exterior door handles, mirror button, door locks, interior grab handles, rear map lights and courtesy door lights were all used on the Australian built Holden Commodore from 1997-2007. I knew this was the case, but actually seeing it all rather than just hearing about it is quite interesting.
They are great cars i currently own a ex thames valley police 3.2 v6 manual which is still used daily and has cleared over 200k miles. it is slightly modified with air suspension,bbs wheels and engine mods lol im also in kent if you fancy a go lol
that sounds fun! drop me an email please
I bought my 2003 omega for 700 euros ( between 500 and 600 pounds i think)
I really like it and its got all options.. like electric adjustable seats, leather seats, basicly electric everything and a pricavy screen in the back... dispite its just a 2.2 with 144 hp. That extra 22 hp to the v6 is not something that will turn it into a rocketship as it weights 1650 kg ready to run.. fill ups can be quite expensive as it has a large fueltank.. but if you use cruise controll on the motorway and dont stamp on the throttle to much it can last between 400 miles in the city to 750 miles on the motorway...
As far as the story about the policecar goes.. they also came with a locking rear diff as standard for the police..
I can remember this car when I had a vectra or two, would have loved one.
I had the estate version which I think is even better looking. However when it started going wrong, everything went wrong and became a money pit. I loved it for long trips to Spain. The doors weighed a ton and it was well screwed together- but the running gear was awful.
My friend you’ve forgotten the Elite 3.0 v6 24v model which my father owned which was top of the range, the CDX was the next model down.
Christopher Long I’m glad you’ve written this. As soon as I heard it mentioned that the cdx was the top spec I was irrationally irritated!
The VT-Vz Holden Commodore was very loosely based on the Omega. It was considered a family car. A LS V8 of 5.7-6L was an option on nearly the entire range. You could get a base spec with the v8. Police forces loved them. Base engine was the US 3.8l V6 with about 200hp. Later a supercharged 3.8l V6 was offered. Thus is what the Monaro was based on
I valeting these space ships when new.. My mate said..10 years down the line we'll be driving these too...I did get an E reg Cavalier @2000AD. 2.0i GLS (iGl's of niggles)
Strong engine. Suspension rotted away. But to this day...The Best car I've ever owned! Had a G' Polo after (rusted out) , then a J' Escort 1.3LX. (ran hot)..
Now a 57' Chevy Lacetti (That'll be the Daewoo) 1.4. Runs hot and underpowered/heavy power steering. 94K and still running.. And it's the 1'st with airbags! ;o. Movin' on up! ;)
@@lukemallory7832 I like my Daewoo rebrand..If I won a million i'd run around in it till it died..To me it's a cutey cart with weird back lights! ;)
Must have been the first car to have rear heated seats as standard. Well excluding Daimler I guess. Should have demonstrated sunroof controls.
Try SAAB. In the 70s
Many years ago I had an Opel Rekord 2.0S Berlina...beautiful car!
3.2 v6 with fettling and irmscher bits was my go to for a while... in black..first car with xenons, on an r plate..god I miss that lump. Head gasket failure all too common sadly.