On a TV car show here in germany they interviewed an owner of this car. His father was an Opel dealer back in the 90s and kept the car for himself because it was so much fun. The son said when it was new they took it to the Nürburgring for some hot laps the same day a Ferrari dealer did a sales event where customeres could test drive their latest models. The Lotus Omega with four people on board was quicker around the race track, leaving the Ferraris back in the dust. He said after some laps the Ferrari dealer was furious and demanded that they must leave as the Lotus humiliated his customers 🤣
I dont doubt it, but to be fair comparisons around the nurburgring between normal drivers say very little about the car, it takes quite a bit of training to go fast around there. As an example I have dusted quite a lot of Ferraris there, as well as any other brand you care to name, in my 2 liter diesel hatchback...
@@istvanlorinczi2817 I think his attitude is a bit of an issue as well. Digging into some comments on his YT channel the man has no sense of humor about himself yet he's trying so hard to give that loose vibe on his videos. Sorta American version of Corden.
I'm old enough to remember the outrage the Lotus Carlton caused.. The irony is more the Government and Police screamed the more the public loved it. It was the best free advert the Lotus Carlton could of have gotten.. It elevated the Lotus Carlton to legendary status
Hearing the Lotus Carlt-Omega directly compared to the Charger Hellcats literally made me do the *shocked Pikachu* face. Because it's so mind-blowingly accurate.
@@vuckyabx They are both relatively accessible, garish in appearance, and comedically, OUTRAGEOUSLY powerful vehicles. Cars with a massive sense of humor and no sense of political correctness - a screenshot at 12:59 shows an article questioning how the Carlton fits into a society increasingly concerned with the environment. Different blood, same spirit. Both will be revered as legends when the world of cars goes silent.
@@mitchell-wallisforce7859 We need an inflation calculator for HP like we do USD. I want to know what 170hp in 1982 was in comparison to today's cars. 377hp in 1994 vs 800hp in 2023 seems lopsided in the Carlton's favor when compared to an average of its contemporaries.
@@Tyrael112 Nah, 377 to 800 seem about right for the "competitors". More or less bang on, I would say? BMW M5 1991 to today is almost exactly same ratio/gap.
@@Tyrael112 I've been calculating exactly what you're thinking about, and found out that the easiest way to make fair comparison is by comparing the most readily available car at that time and today. In my case I used the Civic a benchmark. Back in the early 1980s, Civic made 68hp, whereas today the Civic makes (on average, accounting the non turbo 1.5 sold in the rest of the world other than EU and US) ±155hp. That makes them an increase of 2,2 times the power. So theoritically, the 1982 170hp car is the equivalent of a 370hp car today. Which is roughly the power of a Mercedes E450 today, with the 1982 equivalent being the 280E with 172hp. Moving on to the Carlton which was launched in 1990. Back then, the 4th gen Civic on average made 86hp. This translates to Civic today making 1,8 times more power than their 1990 counterpart. The V8 flagship 540i made 282hp, and 1,8 times that is roughly the same number of today's M550i 523hp. Accounting this, if the Carlton is being made today, it'd make 680hp on factory default. Which is still a huge number, especially when the car could handle (think of the M5 CS, but with extra 50hp). The Carlton's contemporaries such as the M5 made 311hp, which equals to 560hp today calculated this way. While the facelift made 335hp or 603hp today. The 500E too would "only" make 590-something hp if made today.
Jason has made an "old top gear" of is own kind. Full credits to him and all of the Hagerty team, it's a really joy when a knew episode comes out: the music's mix, the humor and the content. Keep on the excellent work guys!
@@twatmunroDepends on what you mean by old top gear. Top gear goes all the way back to the 70s, but even when the BBC changed it up in 2002, it was very informative and funny for about 6 or 7 years. They then began scripting a lot of unfunny nonsense, totally agreed. Such a shame because at one point it was the best programme on tv.
I have a friend who has 2 of these 😂😂 one modified one stock. He took me on a ride in the modified one, which at the time had around 700 horsepowers. It was the most frightening 15 minutes. I have ever spent in any car.
The fact Ur mate would look at a cousin and went “it’s good…just a lil more speed” is badass. Has he ever done a top speed run? Cos I’m assuming 700hp On an aerodynamic sedan like that would be…chaotic.
I had many Vauxhalls in the 90s from an ex police 3ltr Senator (no traction control) to a 3000Gsi Carlton (only 12v) through to a Mk2 Astra GTE 16v. I remember the press going mental about the Lotus Carlton and i wanted one even more because of it. Still looks perfect even today.
I had the occasional use of one of these back in the ‘90’s. Speed cameras weren’t a thing then except on the M25 near Heathrow airport and everyone knew where they were. I remember seeing off an M5 BMW easily in this beast. He chased me half way across the country trying to prove his worth but to no avail😂. It was and still is, in my opinion, the best car I have driven, better than any of the more exotic cars I have had the privilege of driving.
@@truthinlifewoken6698 a standard sierra cosworth had no chance against a Lotus Carlton. Cossie had 165bhp/ton the Carlton had 228bhp/ton. I’m a Ford guy that hates Vauxhall but even I’d take the Lotus Carlton.
@@truthinlifewoken6698I’m a massive Cossie fan & will fight the corner all day long.. but even I’ll admit nothing comes close to a Lotus Carlton 👌🏻 there’s a reason 40 RA is such a legend 🤣
My dad had a couple Carltons when I was growing up in the early 90s, so I had a lot of childhood memories in that car. I definitely remember it being a comfortable car for our long holiday drives to Scotland, France or Germany. In the early 2000s I found out my dad's friend had both a Carlton GSi 3000, as well as a Lotus Carlton. My dad's friend also used to be a rally driver. I was lucky enough to get two mildly terrifying rides with him: one in the GSi, up in the French Alps, and then another in the Lotus, going down British country lanes. The Lotus was absolutely bonkers, especially when driven close to the limit by someone who really knows how to drive. Ironically I was just thinking about it a few days ago, so funny that you should release this video now! Thanks for featuring this not-so-well-known 4-door supercar of the day!
I was at the Lotus test track at Hethel as a teen and had the privilege of watching one of these take part in an ‘auto test’. A short sprint that goes through a tight set of cones, returning to a square to park in. I swear I have never seen such a large car shift from a stationary start to up to 60 or so mph in such rapid style. It just chewed the track and was gone in a flash. Twin Garrett Turbos kicked it into next century ! This is one of the funniest and best videos I have ever seen from across the pond. Love it You are a legend ! Your grip on UK humour is spot on mate
I can't tell if thats turbo noise or Jason audibly going "woo" after every upshift. These episodes are fantastic. You've successfully scratched a Top Gear itch.
Interestingly enough, I knew two brothers that used to live near me; one had the Ferrari Testarossa and the other Lotus Omega. The main difference was the Omega was actually driven, while the Ferrari spend at least 360 days a year in the garage after some small fender bender resulted in outrageous repair bill.
I actually ordered one of these cars, I had to fly to London to go to the motor show because that was were you could order the car the earliest and I was number 3 on the list and the cars order book was closed at the show. The driving experience was exciting bordering on terrifying it was phenomenally fast and if the turbo started to produce serious boost at the wrong time, let's just say you had to be concentrating or you would be leaving the road most likely backwards, as I said exciting!
You can see this at the end of the video - whoever is driving is having to put in some serious steering input to stay on the road. I've driven a Porsche Panamera Turbo GT with 620HP and the computers in that thing let you slam the pedal down with one finger on the steering wheel. I've also driven an Alfa Romeo 33 Boxster that was FWD and would change lanes at the slightest throttle input. Mad respect to drivers of the Lotus Carlton for not spearing it straight into the nearest ditch.
@gospelofrye6881 my grandad had one and I loved it proper drivers car unfortunately it got scrapped for a v6 omega 😅 bit of a step down the omega was a dog
@@johnk190 Blue collar ≠ broke. A Hellcat RedEye ScatPack Widebody Tire Molester or whatever the latest Challenger is called is not a cheap car by any means, but it is cheaper than almost anything else packing 700hp from the factory. They just attract a wealthier redneck.
A testarossa in 1990 was £123,000. (More in America at £140k) that £357,689 in 2023 money so.....yeah, you forgot to add perspective. Same power for a third of the price.....and he wasn't talking about poor people, he was talking about middle class people.
My stepfather once owned one of these extraordinary cars. I remember when we went on vacation to Lake Constance in 1994 and suddenly a Ferrari appeared in the rear-view mirror and thought it was going to casually shake us off. The Ferrari probably didn't know what it was up against and gave up relatively quickly. My childhood memory of this car! My second car was then a normal Opel Omaga. Unfortunately, I wrecked it. Now, in my 40s and a convinced Volvo driver, the Lotus Omega is and will always be my dream car. Alongside the Ferrari F40, it was my legendary car of my childhood.
It's crazy how for such a small company Lotus is, their roots can be found across so many of today's awesome automotive foundational developments across a ton of manufacturers.
As the other two have said - you try buy one, and you'll find out fairly sharpish how well appreciated they are! They are a bona-fide classic - and justifiably so, lusted over by any and every true petrolhead brought up on clapped out hatchbacks in the 80's and 90's!
@@pashkaS54I’ve never seen one listed for 100k and they’ve been on my radar for over two decades. More like 50-75k all day. Most people don’t know what it is, even car people. Obscurity keeps the prices attainable. The last thing true enthusiasts need is another E30 M3 situation.
Started my Vauxhall apprenticeship in 1994, my first introduction to this amazing machine was a stolen recovered one after just a few months of being there. New door locks, new ignition barrel and an amazing test drive later (at 18 years old) I was in love, what a machine, forget your Sierra Cosworths this thing was a world better… I’d give my left testicle or right come to think of it to own one nowadays. Long live the Lotus Carlton.
@@_Area-51they're not that expensive here in the UK at least. There's an abandoned one down the road from me in a junkyard, I have a photo of it aswell
An insanely wealthy acquaintance of mine used to own one of these. He was racing in DTM for an Opel-team at the time and thus the Lotus Omega was a natural choice, I suppose. I caught a ride in this thing and you cannot overstate the impression that car made on me at that time. It was *insanely* fast - and one has to remember Opel's image and state of affairs back then in Germany. They were *mostly* selling cars with laughably outdated tech and stuffy looking interiors that were driven by older men wearing a hat behind the wheel - despite some of their younger fans viewing them as some sort of giant-slaying, fire-breathing monsters. This thing however ... That said: I distinctly remember being much less impressed with the interior and build quality, especially considering the price. It may have been half the price of a Testarossa, but it wasn't cheap by any means. And despite that, it still looked like a not very well put together old man's car - dreary looking interior with cheap plastics and switch-gear everywhere. But perhaps that's exactly what makes it that much cooler.
Opel hated the fact that the car was badged as a lotus so much that they didn't bother homologating the Carlton/Lotus Omega variant for the DTM, instead they used modified version of the c30 of the Omega and called it a day. The body was very much like Carlton though, they had to come up with another homologation name so it was hologated as Omega Evo 500
@@gountzas Weren't turbo engines banned in DTM in any case? There were no Cosworth Sierras or Nissan Skylines either. I thought only NA Group A cars were allowed in DTM.
My jaguar XJR-S V12 6.0 from Jaguarsport was the most expensive Jag in 1990 and was 44,000. This upstart Vauxhall was as expensive (but was even faster, my Jag only does 160mph)
I didn't get that far into the video yet but Lotus history has some darker aspects, Chapman did innovate, he did change motorsport but he also got people killed as his competitive desire to win led to lethal compromises in the designs.
I still drive a Opel Omega but with the smallest 6 cil engine 2.6i with 150hp and also build now from a Omega Station a trailer. I drive a Omega A since 1998 and don´t wont drive any else. I love this car and as long i can fix everything by myself i will keeping drive it! Greeting from the Netherland
What an utterly brilliant video!! I was fortunate to have worked on these things as an apprentice at one of the few Vauxhall dealers that were allowed to sell them. One of our auto electricians invented remote central locking for them, so there were no door locks. (We put back door handles on the front) At one point, we had 10 stolen ones all recovered by the Police lined up in one of the workshops! Epic epic car.
I have the privilege of being a passenger in one of these in the mid 90’s. It was insane how fast it was we topped 150mph on the M6 towards Cumbria. Good times.
The Lotus Carlton sits at that awkward point between when I was a kid, and could dream of any car I wanted, and when I was a young adult and couldn't afford anything fun at all. I was acutely aware that it had dethroned the Cosworth (because my Dad had one of those) and that it was somehow a transgression against the natural order of things. Great episode. As always.
@@promtbeat When done ironically, I imagine the comparable Brit imitation of America to be a dramatic eastern Texas/rural Tennessee accent. It's amazing to me that there are just as many regional accents across the British Isles as there are throughout the entire US/Canada. You seem to be able to tell where someone is from, despite the distance being
Saw one of these in the wild at a local petrol station many years ago. Photos don’t do it justice. It screamed brute power but in a very stealthy way. The colour absolutely suits the character of the car. Loved it and obviously envied the owner to this day.
I remember when the Lotus Carlton came out when I was at school. It was the coolest thing on four wheels. You rarely saw one, but when you did (even though my dad had a 2.0 Vauxhall Carlton), it was like seeing a Ferrari. Sooooo cool 👌👍
Only 950 made, I can bet you rarely saw em! My Hyundai is 1 of 500 and I got lucky enough to see 4 or 5 of them so far. I bet 50% are written off though.
I will never forget the only time I ever held another non-family male’s (my best friend’s) sweaty hand, it was in December 1995, in the backseat of this car. The father of another friend of mine offered a ride home from our uni, it was raining heavily and this man did 150 (non-freedom units) on a sharp bend in a highway divider. I heard he later bought one of the first pagani’s in my country. I will never forget that bend and I still think about that moment of fear and cringe when I drive trough that bend nowadays. This car is sick. You directly notice the exterior as there’s something strange about it you can’t really put your hand on. Until the motor starts…
At 0:23, Jason refers to the Carlton/Omega as the only 4-door sedan to be badged as a Lotus. But I think we shall not forget the Ford Cortina Lotus from the 1960's. Especially because it was heavily modified by Lotus, vastly known as the Lotus Cortina and it has a huge racing pedigree (as a certain Jim Clark (RIP) would agree😉). I enjoyed a lot the longer driving section at the end. Please keep on doing the same for the next cars! 🙏
@@lukebarker594 The Cortina was also available as four door saloon and estate, but the Lotus was officially only available as a two door in both Mk I and Mk II guise.
The Lotus Omega/Lotus Carlton was officially a Lotus, with a SCC VIN code, the Cortina was officially still a Ford, called Ford Cortina Lotus, with a Ford VIN code.
in Brazil the Omega was sold in the 80s and 90s rebranded by gm, this means that there is a LOT of "chevy Omegas" in BR, my boss has one, a CD(comfort diamond) edition, very rare one, but an used one here is kinda cheap if youre talking about dollar conversion, but is kinda hard to find one that is in good shape
Yet another awesome instalment, loved these when I was growing up in the UK. One of the most notorious getaway cars was a Carlton wearing the registration number 40RA
Great show, as always, Jason and Hagerty team. How do you know so much? And how do you find all those priceless period-correct ads, TV shows, and film clips? Amazing and so entertaining. And enlightening!
Revelations are THE BEST car videos ever! In Brazil we had the Chevrolet Omega with many different engines, the most powerfull being a 4.1L straight six, good for 168hp, and it was already a beast on the road. I can only wonder how monstruous the Lotus version is.
One other thing worth noting. The final development work on the engine to get it to behave and be reliable was done by Alpina. Here in Australia a BMW tuning shop in Sydney worked on my 5 and 6 series back in the mid 90’s. Their engine man was a guy called Volker Gunther who had been one of Alpina’s engine gurus. Up on the wall he had a poster of the Alpina B10 Biturbo motor being run on the dyno with exhaust manifold and turbos aglow. On chatting to him, it turns out Volker had done much of the dev work on that engine. It was at that point that he revealed that this was a much better engine than the Lotus Carlton motor, and that he knew this because he was the guy assigned to fix all the problems with it that Lotus could not sort. This was done on a back door contract between GM and Alpina on the understanding that it was never to be made public…
I used to be a big Vauxhall fanatic, these are the Holy Grail for Vauxhall people. Always a rare sight on our roads though I did pass one a couple months back. What a sweet sound from the cockpit, those twin garretts so audible.
Back in 2015 there was a Lotus Omega for sale in TX for $30,000, I wish I could have bought it. It would have gone stunningly with my 2013 Chevrolet (Holden) Caprice PPV that I bought with only 800 miles in a nice shade of Alto Grey. There was a 1st year silver HSV Commodore GTS for sale in Australia for less than $20,000 that I wish I could have imported as well...could have had a trifecta of ultra rare, fast as heck, 4 doors.
I actually have a original signed owners edition of the bood entitled "Lotus Carlton" by Ian Adcock. Very detailed book showing the history and developmental stages of the Carlton.
No 886 currently for sale in UK for £99,995 on 34k miles. I remember all of the outrage when it launched, which I thought was hilarious!! I still think it's one of the coolest British cars ever 😁
@@SMlFFY85 that's not strictly true because when GM amalgamated Opel and Vauxhall in the seventies, many of the design team at Vauxhall relocated to Opel. Wayne Cherry was the head of design for GM Europe and he came from Vauxhall.
@@demon352003 well the Carlton/Omega was a crap basic car. Lotus could have turned anything into a masterpiece, just like Cosworth turned a p.o.s. Ford Sierra into another legend of the road.
To me, this car is a gem and it always will be. I remember when I first knew of its existense and serious performance when I saw it in Gran Turismo 4 way back in '05.
As a Brit I'd like to say, thanks for a completely honest review of this. They were f*cking fast back in the day. Still quick now. UK benchmark performance is a 0 - 100mph...these could do it in around 10 seconds... back in 1988!
The moment I saw this I saw a 1988 Holden Commodore. The Holden Commodore stock motor was a 3.6L Buick V6 or 5.0L Holden V8. Rear Wheel drive. Either could smoke the tires and very comfortable to drive. Eventually this same Commodore after revisions came with a 6.3 Super charged chev V8 option (R8) was sold as the Vauxhall VRX8 in the UK and the Pontiac VR8 in the USA. It was a GM product that exceeded a BMW M series vehicles in most regards of performance but the base model fittings were designed to be affordable so was not marketed as a luxury vehicle. Today Holden can't be bothered and just resell the Front wheel drive Opel Commodore which is less desirable than a 2010 Camry. I doubt Holden will exist is 5 years. Top Gear did a good review on the insanity of the supercharged VRX8. Amazing car.
@@oddsandwindsocks5905 too few views for the quality he delivers, look at the insane amount of views that other UA-cam channels get, filming just silly things
I could not have been more excited for you to document the Carlton and the ZR-1. Thank you both so much, and bless Lotus for leaving their impression on every decade of my memory!
I worked for Nissan EU technology at the time this was in development testing at Millbrook I remember these running around the high speed circuit sideways/scrubbing tires at 140 to 150 mph amazing
Good god, I LOVE YOU CAMMISA!! Don't you ever stop doing this. Ever. I will not allow it. Your writers need a raise. Your editors and graphics department need a raise. You need a contract that will permanently enshrine the perpetual production and hilarious historical hashing that is REVelations for years to come. I'm sorry if you had other plans. Keep it up, you're doing great!
You're right on the money about the hypocrisy and class ridden nature of so much of our (UK) society. Sadly, things don't seem to be getting any better. At least, today, more of us can enjoy driving well engineered, characterful cars than ever before. Thank you for reminding us of some of these classics
There seems to be this mentality against UK, or claiming that things in UK are worse here than elsewhere, but it's rarely based in facts. Normally spread by people with political agendas. Look at the numbers - USA is, and for the last century has always been, dramatically more divided by class. The poorest in USA are far poorer, and the richest are far richer. Example: Gini coefficient is 30% higher in USA, closer to most countries in Africa than Western Europe.
Now it's forcing people into electric cars that won't be able to afford them or able to home charge because they don't live in a house with a garage or driveway
@Gospelofrye I think you misunderstand my point, which had nothing to do either with being smart, nor being rich. It was just pointing out a fact on wealth distribution.
@Gospelofrye P.S. Personally I think wealth division is key for overall wealth production... it just isn't great for an overall happy society - getting the balance right is tough.
As a kid I used to go trough price lists that a car magazine published here in Germany, and I always used to marvel at the Porsches and Ferraris, because they were so expensive and had so much power. But my father was a mechanic and a die-hard Opel guy and tried at every turn to show me that cheaper cars could be awesome too. So one day he told me about the Opel Omega and how a comparatively boring sedan used to beat up Ferraris and Porsches on the Autobahn and from that day onwards that car was burned into my brain.
I’d pick this over the sierra rs cosworth. I lived in a council estate in the UK, a working class relatively poor area. There was an old guy who lived in the house at the top of the road. His son would often pop over on the weekends. He had a spanking lotus Carlton. I’d often admire it. The best you got in my street was a home painted ford escort.
first time watching. these dudes must be extremely rich/wealthy. their understandingn of "working class vs upper class" ive never met somebody "upper class" with a 24/7 live in house butler.
Jason Cammisa IS the BEST automotive JOURNALIST, period! Catchpole and Harris don't even come close to compete with this level of eloquence & heavenly cars reviewing....Even the trio from Top Gear (Clarkson, May & Hammond) are not a match to Cammisa! Thank you a Gazillion times Hagerty for giving Jason a "Carte Blanche" to present to us car enthusiasts the most unknown legends of the automotive world! To Jason, I say: Please keep up the great work and NEVER EVER lower your standards when it comes to content quality! Much love & appreciation from Montreal Canada! PS: can't believe this stuff is free on YT, because in all seriousness, this is "Amazon series" worthy!
*Everyone had Lambos and Ferraris on posters on their bedroom walls. I had THIS!* I remember walking with my dad in Hammersmith one time, on a dull sunday afternoon and saw this car, parked alone. It looked so unassuming. As a 12 year old kid it was easy to pass by without noticing. That was until my dad pointed it out, and spoke about its mythical status. I was hooked, especially when I heard crazy stories about my govt trying to get this thing banned!! Incredible beast and can still go toe-to-toe its VXR8 pretender (another favourite fast saloon.)
@@JohnLawley24v The Commodore was an all-Australian car, bigger than an Opel and with a 6.2 litre Chevrolet V8 in it. The HSV versions had a number of improvements to suspension, brakes and power.
It's a car which reminds me of why I love cars in the first place. I remember when it came out and most car fans were in total awe of it. It certainly didn't do Vauxhall's reputation any harm in the real world. Not to my recollection, anyway.
My dad has an Opel Omega CD 2.0i (115 HP) in the late 80s. It was an amazing car at the time. It had onboard computer, drove nicely, velour interior, sunroof, all the gadgets and extras you could get at the time. And it looked great and futuristic, especially considering what most cars looked like at the time.
Every single video of yours makes me feel like a child watching Top Gear on the living room floor mouth agape but grinning inside. These videos are a treasure Jason. Please keep it coming!
You could buy a 4.0 version, c40se from Irmscher opel/Vauxhall tuning arm. There is also an Opel Omega Evo homologation special for DTM that's more rare than the Lotus Carlton.
1990 in Australia the (Opel based) VN Group A sedan was released. A homologation race special, and V8 powered. Not as quick as this, but about 75% of the price. VN Group A also had brakes and gearbox from ZR1
I still remember seeing one of those Omegas parked in my neighborhood near Toulon in 1993. I had read about them and I was shocked to see it a short walk from our front door! A legend.
Was a big deal back in the 90's in the UK and notorious for some of the reasons outlined in this vid. Absolute freakish monster of a car at the time and still pretty dam quick even now!
Same thing happened in Australia with the Falcon XYGT Shaker and the Torona XU-1 Taken down after a campaign led by the Editors of the Sydney Morning Herald one of who's son ended becoming editor of Car UK
I miss seeing these around. One of at least 20 cars I couldn't afford when they hit rock bottom prices because I was 20k in debt in my 20s. Now I'm not broke, all of those cars are trading for 5 times as much and I STILL can't afford them The Carlton was epic. Sit behind one and it was so wide and aggressive
Still remember as a little boy seeing one of these and my dad explaining what it was. We had a Merc 300E-24 at the time which was considered a conventionally pretty quick saloon and my mind was blown. Great content!
I adore these little love stories to the automotive industry. Thank you from the bottom of my heart - these are such feel-good well-produced videos. ❤️
I had the a couple of Chevrolet Omega in Brazil when we're living there between 2001 and 2014. One with 4.1L and second with 3.0L engines, both straight 6. Amazing stable car and fun to drive believe or not. Sweet memories
I live in the UK and have owned two Vauxhalls. Neither I would describe as nice. But man oh man is the Lotus Carlton the nicest looking saloon ever made. Bring back 90s car design. Escort Cosworth lab is delta integralie. Ford RS 200. Just sensational.
He is the perfect mix of whit, culture, and childish behavior. I think my favorite video of his is the one where he makes exhaust noises with his mouth. But everything he outs out is dope.
My Neighbor actually does have a Lotus Omega, which he only takes for a spin at good weather. And the nearest entrypoint to the Autobahn is not far away...
My goodness Jason. I remember this from the car magazines back then and has since been off my radar. Thanks for the reminder that they still exist. Great video once again. Thank you and the production team for research and great work!
I worked at Lotus between 1997 and 2011.. Mike Kimberly came back briefly as CEO, and as a Staff Representative; I had a number of meetings with him. He was a great man, and very knowledgeable
This is a whole other level of automotive journalism, the dude is being accurately informative while giving Hollywood acting performance, this is the next best automotive journalist since Clarkson 👌
These are genius and funny. Turning a topic I didn’t know I was interested in, into 10 minutes of entertainment, education, and social commentary. Well done, sir!
I had this model in a book about the fastest production cars at that time. I think I received it when I was 10. Lotus Carlton was in there alongside Ferraris, Porsche...honestly, I thought it looked cool AF and when I looked at the stats... I wanted one.
On a TV car show here in germany they interviewed an owner of this car. His father was an Opel dealer back in the 90s and kept the car for himself because it was so much fun. The son said when it was new they took it to the Nürburgring for some hot laps the same day a Ferrari dealer did a sales event where customeres could test drive their latest models. The Lotus Omega with four people on board was quicker around the race track, leaving the Ferraris back in the dust. He said after some laps the Ferrari dealer was furious and demanded that they must leave as the Lotus humiliated his customers 🤣
Typical Ferrari arrogance
@@marieaudreyduchamp8839 Sure, though to be fair we are talking about an Opel beating Ferraris.
@@screenPhiles *Ferraris so slow they got dusted by an Opel.
Git gud, Maranello. And to be fair....they did.
I dont doubt it, but to be fair comparisons around the nurburgring between normal drivers say very little about the car, it takes quite a bit of training to go fast around there. As an example I have dusted quite a lot of Ferraris there, as well as any other brand you care to name, in my 2 liter diesel hatchback...
Classic! Wish I could have seen the look on that dealer's face lol!
The wait between new Revelations is difficult but the reward is always worthwhile.
So true
But can this be healthy?
I think Jason had a break to catch up with content, the schedule should be back to normal now
@@istvanlorinczi2817 I think his attitude is a bit of an issue as well. Digging into some comments on his YT channel the man has no sense of humor about himself yet he's trying so hard to give that loose vibe on his videos. Sorta American version of Corden.
Absolutely true
I'm old enough to remember the outrage the Lotus Carlton caused..
The irony is more the Government and Police screamed the more the public loved it.
It was the best free advert the Lotus Carlton could of have gotten..
It elevated the Lotus Carlton to legendary status
Hearing the Lotus Carlt-Omega directly compared to the Charger Hellcats literally made me do the *shocked Pikachu* face.
Because it's so mind-blowingly accurate.
@@vuckyabx They are both relatively accessible, garish in appearance, and comedically, OUTRAGEOUSLY powerful vehicles. Cars with a massive sense of humor and no sense of political correctness - a screenshot at 12:59 shows an article questioning how the Carlton fits into a society increasingly concerned with the environment.
Different blood, same spirit. Both will be revered as legends when the world of cars goes silent.
@@mitchell-wallisforce7859 We need an inflation calculator for HP like we do USD. I want to know what 170hp in 1982 was in comparison to today's cars. 377hp in 1994 vs 800hp in 2023 seems lopsided in the Carlton's favor when compared to an average of its contemporaries.
@@Tyrael112 Nah, 377 to 800 seem about right for the "competitors". More or less bang on, I would say? BMW M5 1991 to today is almost exactly same ratio/gap.
Not really a great comparison because Hellcat is not faster than an M5 and it doesn't handle better, but Omega did handle.
@@Tyrael112 I've been calculating exactly what you're thinking about, and found out that the easiest way to make fair comparison is by comparing the most readily available car at that time and today. In my case I used the Civic a benchmark.
Back in the early 1980s, Civic made 68hp, whereas today the Civic makes (on average, accounting the non turbo 1.5 sold in the rest of the world other than EU and US) ±155hp. That makes them an increase of 2,2 times the power. So theoritically, the 1982 170hp car is the equivalent of a 370hp car today. Which is roughly the power of a Mercedes E450 today, with the 1982 equivalent being the 280E with 172hp.
Moving on to the Carlton which was launched in 1990. Back then, the 4th gen Civic on average made 86hp. This translates to Civic today making 1,8 times more power than their 1990 counterpart. The V8 flagship 540i made 282hp, and 1,8 times that is roughly the same number of today's M550i 523hp. Accounting this, if the Carlton is being made today, it'd make 680hp on factory default. Which is still a huge number, especially when the car could handle (think of the M5 CS, but with extra 50hp). The Carlton's contemporaries such as the M5 made 311hp, which equals to 560hp today calculated this way. While the facelift made 335hp or 603hp today. The 500E too would "only" make 590-something hp if made today.
The Carlton is a mythical beast to us British petrolheads. Awesome video as always!!
I think I've only seen one in the wild around here.
Only the most deadly yield such power
Isn’t this the same car they robbed the booky in, in the movie Snatch
@@frankfrankly8764 nah, I think that's a Rover which Tyrone drives lol
@@gazza_s1413 yeah, probably, same 1 he hit the packet of peanuts in
The turbos sound so disappointed when you let off the gas. I love this thing!!
its because they are!
Sometimes its a Mario "Yahoo"
Jason has made an "old top gear" of is own kind. Full credits to him and all of the Hagerty team, it's a really joy when a knew episode comes out: the music's mix, the humor and the content.
Keep on the excellent work guys!
Nail on the head
Except it's better than Old Top Gear, since it is less staged and more down to earth. ;)
@@marshgatelaneposse except for the humour part .
@@cossied01 -- which, unlike old Top Gear, just wasn't funny.
@@twatmunroDepends on what you mean by old top gear. Top gear goes all the way back to the 70s, but even when the BBC changed it up in 2002, it was very informative and funny for about 6 or 7 years. They then began scripting a lot of unfunny nonsense, totally agreed. Such a shame because at one point it was the best programme on tv.
The sound of a turbocharged straight 6 is just the greatest thing.
No my 3 rotor go brappp...
No lol... A V8 sounds best... turbo 6 sounds good though
Meanwhile a V10 is sitting around the corner just laughing at you all 🤣
NA straight side sounds better
Me as Grandma: "Well, I think they're all very nice." Now, who wants a nice cup of tea?
I have a friend who has 2 of these 😂😂 one modified one stock. He took me on a ride in the modified one, which at the time had around 700 horsepowers. It was the most frightening 15 minutes. I have ever spent in any car.
The fact Ur mate would look at a cousin and went “it’s good…just a lil more speed” is badass. Has he ever done a top speed run? Cos I’m assuming 700hp On an aerodynamic sedan like that would be…chaotic.
I like how the car sounds like it's going "woo-hoo" every time you let off the gas
It's not stock.
It's Super Mario's voice actor having an existential crisis in the trunk.
@@no1DdC I was thinking it was an asthmatic teenage darth vader.
Turbo charger kicks in
grrrrrrrr-wooohooo
grrrrrr-woohoohooo
I had many Vauxhalls in the 90s from an ex police 3ltr Senator (no traction control) to a 3000Gsi Carlton (only 12v) through to a Mk2 Astra GTE 16v. I remember the press going mental about the Lotus Carlton and i wanted one even more because of it. Still looks perfect even today.
I had and stole e ery hothatch ever made back then including this one
I had the occasional use of one of these back in the ‘90’s. Speed cameras weren’t a thing then except on the M25 near Heathrow airport and everyone knew where they were. I remember seeing off an M5 BMW easily in this beast. He chased me half way across the country trying to prove his worth but to no avail😂. It was and still is, in my opinion, the best car I have driven, better than any of the more exotic cars I have had the privilege of driving.
That turbo dose noise . I bet it was an absolute weapon.
think it was matched by siera cosworth
@@truthinlifewoken6698 no. I drove a few of those back then too. They were very fast but the Lotus was an animal.
@@truthinlifewoken6698 a standard sierra cosworth had no chance against a Lotus Carlton. Cossie had 165bhp/ton the Carlton had 228bhp/ton. I’m a Ford guy that hates Vauxhall but even I’d take the Lotus Carlton.
@@truthinlifewoken6698I’m a massive Cossie fan & will fight the corner all day long.. but even I’ll admit nothing comes close to a Lotus Carlton 👌🏻 there’s a reason 40 RA is such a legend 🤣
My dad had a couple Carltons when I was growing up in the early 90s, so I had a lot of childhood memories in that car. I definitely remember it being a comfortable car for our long holiday drives to Scotland, France or Germany.
In the early 2000s I found out my dad's friend had both a Carlton GSi 3000, as well as a Lotus Carlton. My dad's friend also used to be a rally driver. I was lucky enough to get two mildly terrifying rides with him: one in the GSi, up in the French Alps, and then another in the Lotus, going down British country lanes. The Lotus was absolutely bonkers, especially when driven close to the limit by someone who really knows how to drive. Ironically I was just thinking about it a few days ago, so funny that you should release this video now! Thanks for featuring this not-so-well-known 4-door supercar of the day!
Man that is so cool. 4 door sedans are the best. This, the 190 AMG Evo and the VXR8 are some of the coolest cars ever made.
@@SumChap1 VXR8? I will go google this car, I drive a lancer Evo and I like the 190 AMG and this Lotus Carlton is also awesome!!
@@Hunikengt VXR8 = Chevy SS but with more HSV (tuner) parts
We had to do all that in a Fiat Panda.
🤢
Jason is simply one of the best motoring journalists in the world!
He is only a host of the show, there are a lot of people behind these videos, though he is a good host to be honest
@@eustahijelifetips watch the carmudgeon show and you know better. He researches this stuff himself.
He’s no Matt Farrah.
@@Bob_Smith19 MF sux
@@Bob_Smith19 who always talks about money and how to get the most of it from youtube.
I was at the Lotus test track at Hethel as a teen and had the privilege of watching one of these take part in an ‘auto test’.
A short sprint that goes through a tight set of cones, returning to a square to park in.
I swear I have never seen such a large car shift from a stationary start to up to 60 or so mph in such rapid style. It just chewed the track and was gone in a flash. Twin Garrett Turbos kicked it into next century !
This is one of the funniest and best videos I have ever seen from across the pond. Love it
You are a legend ! Your grip on UK humour is spot on mate
I can't tell if thats turbo noise or Jason audibly going "woo" after every upshift. These episodes are fantastic. You've successfully scratched a Top Gear itch.
This. Almost sounds like they sped up the audio of him. Sound like a chipmunk.
I really hope they keep the driving sections at the end as driving noise only, without any bits or commentary.
That’s noise of the turbo 😂
The worst part about Jason's videos is that they end 😢
*The only bad part
I was just stoked that he made another video. Feels like forever
Facts.
there’s always a beginning and an end to everything; but doesnt mean it wont ever come back or keep building.
Interestingly enough, I knew two brothers that used to live near me; one had the Ferrari Testarossa and the other Lotus Omega. The main difference was the Omega was actually driven, while the Ferrari spend at least 360 days a year in the garage after some small fender bender resulted in outrageous repair bill.
I actually ordered one of these cars, I had to fly to London to go to the motor show because that was were you could order the car the earliest and I was number 3 on the list and the cars order book was closed at the show. The driving experience was exciting bordering on terrifying it was phenomenally fast and if the turbo started to produce serious boost at the wrong time, let's just say you had to be concentrating or you would be leaving the road most likely backwards, as I said exciting!
You can see this at the end of the video - whoever is driving is having to put in some serious steering input to stay on the road. I've driven a Porsche Panamera Turbo GT with 620HP and the computers in that thing let you slam the pedal down with one finger on the steering wheel. I've also driven an Alfa Romeo 33 Boxster that was FWD and would change lanes at the slightest throttle input. Mad respect to drivers of the Lotus Carlton for not spearing it straight into the nearest ditch.
@gospelofrye6881 my grandad had one and I loved it proper drivers car unfortunately it got scrapped for a v6 omega 😅 bit of a step down the omega was a dog
@@gospelofrye6881it's Jason driving.
How much were these new back in the day?
@@Stu_Kennedy around £39000 - £40000 from what I remember and well worth the money.
Same story with the Sierra Cosworths. They were pissed that a blue collar had access to the same speed as a blue blood.
It cost £48,000 in 1990, thats not blue collar money. This guys opening premise is stupid and straight up false, thats over £100,000 in todays money.
@@johnk190 the same as a ZR1 back in 2012. I saw a lot more guys wearing New balances coming out them then Armani loafers.
@@johnk190 Blue collar ≠ broke. A Hellcat RedEye ScatPack Widebody Tire Molester or whatever the latest Challenger is called is not a cheap car by any means, but it is cheaper than almost anything else packing 700hp from the factory. They just attract a wealthier redneck.
@@johnk190 Yep, 48 grand would probably get you a pretty decent house in 1990.
A testarossa in 1990 was £123,000. (More in America at £140k) that £357,689 in 2023 money so.....yeah, you forgot to add perspective. Same power for a third of the price.....and he wasn't talking about poor people, he was talking about middle class people.
My stepfather once owned one of these extraordinary cars. I remember when we went on vacation to Lake Constance in 1994 and suddenly a Ferrari appeared in the rear-view mirror and thought it was going to casually shake us off. The Ferrari probably didn't know what it was up against and gave up relatively quickly. My childhood memory of this car! My second car was then a normal Opel Omaga. Unfortunately, I wrecked it. Now, in my 40s and a convinced Volvo driver, the Lotus Omega is and will always be my dream car. Alongside the Ferrari F40, it was my legendary car of my childhood.
It's crazy how for such a small company Lotus is, their roots can be found across so many of today's awesome automotive foundational developments across a ton of manufacturers.
They had a slight impact on in formula one mid 60’s……..
Lotus is a fantastic little company of super inspired individuals. A great & unique story. ...that's why i drive one of their cars.
I absolutely adore this Lotus! It was such a unique vehicle and it isn't appreciated enough.
Check out their sale listings. They're appreciated, they're appreciating!
Came here to say this. They’ve been selling in the 100k range for many years now.
As the other two have said - you try buy one, and you'll find out fairly sharpish how well appreciated they are! They are a bona-fide classic - and justifiably so, lusted over by any and every true petrolhead brought up on clapped out hatchbacks in the 80's and 90's!
Well, I just mean people focus on the insane, well done, iconic cars instead of the weirder ones like this.
@@pashkaS54I’ve never seen one listed for 100k and they’ve been on my radar for over two decades. More like 50-75k all day. Most people don’t know what it is, even car people. Obscurity keeps the prices attainable. The last thing true enthusiasts need is another E30 M3 situation.
this show is such an awesome mix of information and humour, i hope it continues for a long time. Jason is an awesome presenter
Started my Vauxhall apprenticeship in 1994, my first introduction to this amazing machine was a stolen recovered one after just a few months of being there. New door locks, new ignition barrel and an amazing test drive later (at 18 years old) I was in love, what a machine, forget your Sierra Cosworths this thing was a world better… I’d give my left testicle or right come to think of it to own one nowadays. Long live the Lotus Carlton.
You'd be lucky to get one these days for an arm, leg, 3 balls and both your kidneys
@@_Area-51 your not wrong, then again a fist full of dollars would help. 😂
Didn’t happen to the 40 RA lotus Carlton???🤣
@@_Area-51they're not that expensive here in the UK at least. There's an abandoned one down the road from me in a junkyard, I have a photo of it aswell
An insanely wealthy acquaintance of mine used to own one of these. He was racing in DTM for an Opel-team at the time and thus the Lotus Omega was a natural choice, I suppose. I caught a ride in this thing and you cannot overstate the impression that car made on me at that time. It was *insanely* fast - and one has to remember Opel's image and state of affairs back then in Germany. They were *mostly* selling cars with laughably outdated tech and stuffy looking interiors that were driven by older men wearing a hat behind the wheel - despite some of their younger fans viewing them as some sort of giant-slaying, fire-breathing monsters. This thing however ... That said: I distinctly remember being much less impressed with the interior and build quality, especially considering the price. It may have been half the price of a Testarossa, but it wasn't cheap by any means. And despite that, it still looked like a not very well put together old man's car - dreary looking interior with cheap plastics and switch-gear everywhere. But perhaps that's exactly what makes it that much cooler.
Opel hated the fact that the car was badged as a lotus so much that they didn't bother homologating the Carlton/Lotus Omega variant for the DTM, instead they used modified version of the c30 of the Omega and called it a day. The body was very much like Carlton though, they had to come up with another homologation name so it was hologated as Omega Evo 500
@@gountzas Weren't turbo engines banned in DTM in any case? There were no Cosworth Sierras or Nissan Skylines either. I thought only NA Group A cars were allowed in DTM.
£45,000 in 1990 is equal to £131,000 today and $161,000. Not exactly cheap at all.
In terms of supercats thats cheap, remember in the 90s a ferrari, or porsche 911 was 80k
Yes. This whole video is based on a flawed notion. The minister wasn't saying that the car was shockingly cheap. He was saying how expensive it was.
My jaguar XJR-S V12 6.0 from Jaguarsport was the most expensive Jag in 1990 and was 44,000. This upstart Vauxhall was as expensive (but was even faster, my Jag only does 160mph)
@@stanmil5495 The Nissan GTR is cheaper than that.
When viewers learn what Lotus actual history was.....they're surprised
I didn't get that far into the video yet but Lotus history has some darker aspects, Chapman did innovate, he did change motorsport but he also got people killed as his competitive desire to win led to lethal compromises in the designs.
Also took money with Delorean as well I believe.
@@Tuberuser187 Many teams lost drivers due to lack of safety and pushing bounderies back in the 60s and 70s not just Lotus.
Emerson Fittipaldi always said he believed Mr Chapman faked his death to escape the DeLorean scandal and hid in Brazil
@@neillaw9867 That's true but Lotus often pushed things bit too far.
I live in the West Midlands, the region where that Carlton in the story was stolen from. ‘40 RA’ is legendary amongst car enthusiasts in the UK.
Yes the fantom 40RA.
It's still out there somewhere, just planning it's next raid. And it'll be a big one!
The owner from back then even bought another one and put the 40 RA plates on.
Vauxhall stole the "getaway car of choice" title from Jaguar!
Some say it ended up in a canal but maybe it's hiding in some dusty garage somewhere, waiting, just waiting..........
I still drive a Opel Omega but with the smallest 6 cil engine 2.6i with 150hp and also build now from a Omega Station a trailer. I drive a Omega A since 1998 and don´t wont drive any else. I love this car and as long i can fix everything by myself i will keeping drive it!
Greeting from the Netherland
Jason Cammisa could do an hour long video on the Dodge Omni and I'd be fascinated. He makes any video top notch.
Same here. Ooh maybe they can do the Omni GLH turbo!!! That would be sick!
Or even better...the GLH -.....S!
@@robcampbell3235
👍
Don’t forget about the Dodge Daytona Shelby Z
@@Bob_Smith19 heck a whole "Where in the World was Carroll Shelby ??" episode would be awesome.
Disappointed that Jason missed the opportunity to call the Carltomega the Omegaton.
thats allright
Omegatron
Let's call things how they appear: _Jason _*_did not take_*_ the opportunity.._
Nuclear acceleration!
What an utterly brilliant video!! I was fortunate to have worked on these things as an apprentice at one of the few Vauxhall dealers that were allowed to sell them. One of our auto electricians invented remote central locking for them, so there were no door locks. (We put back door handles on the front) At one point, we had 10 stolen ones all recovered by the Police lined up in one of the workshops! Epic epic car.
I have the privilege of being a passenger in one of these in the mid 90’s. It was insane how fast it was we topped 150mph on the M6 towards Cumbria. Good times.
Did you happen to ram raid a shop beforehand
Did it have a fridge in the glove compartment?
Classic villain car. Did you have 30000 Es in the boot?
@@kevfullo Why would anyone have 30000 Envelopes in their boot other than Postman Pat (whom I heard was a gangster...)?
150 in these say 30 x in 5 of them we stole at least 10 police chases to sold the entire interior the wheels and the engines on all 5 of them
The Lotus Carlton sits at that awkward point between when I was a kid, and could dream of any car I wanted, and when I was a young adult and couldn't afford anything fun at all. I was acutely aware that it had dethroned the Cosworth (because my Dad had one of those) and that it was somehow a transgression against the natural order of things. Great episode. As always.
Dear Jason and his team, YOU ARE FREAKING KILLING IT. Can’t have enough of these ‘Revelations’ videos. Wonderful job. ❤
Someone in my town got an Omega when I was young. I will never forget the sound. One of my holy grail cars
I'm English and the statement "A classist bunch of twats" was spot on. So funny but so correct🤣🤣
Great video 🤣🤣👍👍👍
Always funny hearing Americans do an English accent. Nice surname BTW 😉👍
@@promtbeat When done ironically, I imagine the comparable Brit imitation of America to be a dramatic eastern Texas/rural Tennessee accent. It's amazing to me that there are just as many regional accents across the British Isles as there are throughout the entire US/Canada. You seem to be able to tell where someone is from, despite the distance being
I mean, I think they would have called them something else less family friendly, If they could.
@@rturner4205 oh no that is a perfect use.
Limey agrees!
Saw one of these in the wild at a local petrol station many years ago. Photos don’t do it justice. It screamed brute power but in a very stealthy way. The colour absolutely suits the character of the car. Loved it and obviously envied the owner to this day.
The engine sound at the end is just...EPIC!!!
I remember when the Lotus Carlton came out when I was at school. It was the coolest thing on four wheels. You rarely saw one, but when you did (even though my dad had a 2.0 Vauxhall Carlton), it was like seeing a Ferrari. Sooooo cool 👌👍
Only 950 made, I can bet you rarely saw em! My Hyundai is 1 of 500 and I got lucky enough to see 4 or 5 of them so far. I bet 50% are written off though.
Wonder how many Carltons are left
@@johndc2998 In the UK 56 on the road and 126 sorned, globally no idea.
Used to walk past one daily to school on Anerley Hill Crystal Palace in the early 00's. Beast of a car.
@@80sBaby925 I lived in Charnwood road.
I will never forget the only time I ever held another non-family male’s (my best friend’s) sweaty hand, it was in December 1995, in the backseat of this car. The father of another friend of mine offered a ride home from our uni, it was raining heavily and this man did 150 (non-freedom units) on a sharp bend in a highway divider. I heard he later bought one of the first pagani’s in my country. I will never forget that bend and I still think about that moment of fear and cringe when I drive trough that bend nowadays. This car is sick. You directly notice the exterior as there’s something strange about it you can’t really put your hand on. Until the motor starts…
At 0:23, Jason refers to the Carlton/Omega as the only 4-door sedan to be badged as a Lotus. But I think we shall not forget the Ford Cortina Lotus from the 1960's. Especially because it was heavily modified by Lotus, vastly known as the Lotus Cortina and it has a huge racing pedigree (as a certain Jim Clark (RIP) would agree😉). I enjoyed a lot the longer driving section at the end. Please keep on doing the same for the next cars! 🙏
I think that you will find that 1) the Cortina Lotus was a two door and 2) it was officially a Ford.
@@rolandsuch I think you'll find they did make four 4-door Corrina's bufdy
@@lukebarker594 The Cortina was also available as four door saloon and estate, but the Lotus was officially only available as a two door in both Mk I and Mk II guise.
The Lotus Omega/Lotus Carlton was officially a Lotus, with a SCC VIN code, the Cortina was officially still a Ford, called Ford Cortina Lotus, with a Ford VIN code.
Guys, thanks a lot for all the info! Therefore, I "unsay" what I said... 🙃
I'm so happy to see a new Revelations episode!
in Brazil the Omega was sold in the 80s and 90s rebranded by gm, this means that there is a LOT of "chevy Omegas" in BR, my boss has one, a CD(comfort diamond) edition, very rare one, but an used one here is kinda cheap if youre talking about dollar conversion, but is kinda hard to find one that is in good shape
Yet another awesome instalment, loved these when I was growing up in the UK.
One of the most notorious getaway cars was a Carlton wearing the registration number 40RA
they still haven't found those responsible for the theft haha. The car was recovered just a few years ago
@@mr.summerset8054 in a canal of all places, such a shame.
Absolute legend of a car. Probably my #1 dream car honestly. That 90s nostalgia look, combined with absolutely raw go fast.
3:58 - that drawing, 35 years later - still looks good - could easily build that in 2024 and sell.
Great show, as always, Jason and Hagerty team. How do you know so much? And how do you find all those priceless period-correct ads, TV shows, and film clips? Amazing and so entertaining. And enlightening!
They do put the work in, complete respect.
Revelations are THE BEST car videos ever! In Brazil we had the Chevrolet Omega with many different engines, the most powerfull being a 4.1L straight six, good for 168hp, and it was already a beast on the road. I can only wonder how monstruous the Lotus version is.
Being a Brit, kid of the 90s I knew all aboit this car and always had a soft spot for it. Still your video kept me interested! Great content. Subbed.
One other thing worth noting. The final development work on the engine to get it to behave and be reliable was done by Alpina. Here in Australia a BMW tuning shop in Sydney worked on my 5 and 6 series back in the mid 90’s. Their engine man was a guy called Volker Gunther who had been one of Alpina’s engine gurus. Up on the wall he had a poster of the Alpina B10 Biturbo motor being run on the dyno with exhaust manifold and turbos aglow. On chatting to him, it turns out Volker had done much of the dev work on that engine. It was at that point that he revealed that this was a much better engine than the Lotus Carlton motor, and that he knew this because he was the guy assigned to fix all the problems with it that Lotus could not sort. This was done on a back door contract between GM and Alpina on the understanding that it was never to be made public…
Now THAT is a cool side note.
I used to be a big Vauxhall fanatic, these are the Holy Grail for Vauxhall people. Always a rare sight on our roads though I did pass one a couple months back. What a sweet sound from the cockpit, those twin garretts so audible.
A guy I worked for years ago had one. He rarely drove it though, he took me out in it once was unbelievably fast
Back in 2015 there was a Lotus Omega for sale in TX for $30,000, I wish I could have bought it. It would have gone stunningly with my 2013 Chevrolet (Holden) Caprice PPV that I bought with only 800 miles in a nice shade of Alto Grey. There was a 1st year silver HSV Commodore GTS for sale in Australia for less than $20,000 that I wish I could have imported as well...could have had a trifecta of ultra rare, fast as heck, 4 doors.
I actually have a original signed owners edition of the bood entitled "Lotus Carlton" by Ian Adcock. Very detailed book showing the history and developmental stages of the Carlton.
No 886 currently for sale in UK for £99,995 on 34k miles. I remember all of the outrage when it launched, which I thought was hilarious!! I still think it's one of the coolest British cars ever 😁
Even though it's mostly German?
@@SMlFFY85 that's not strictly true because when GM amalgamated Opel and Vauxhall in the seventies, many of the design team at Vauxhall relocated to Opel. Wayne Cherry was the head of design for GM Europe and he came from Vauxhall.
The base car was built in Germany, all of the engineering and assembly was at Hethel.
@@demon352003 well the Carlton/Omega was a crap basic car. Lotus could have turned anything into a masterpiece, just like Cosworth turned a p.o.s. Ford Sierra into another legend of the road.
One of these down the road from me in Staffordshire England stunning cars truly
To me, this car is a gem and it always will be. I remember when I first knew of its existense and serious performance when I saw it in Gran Turismo 4 way back in '05.
As a Brit I'd like to say, thanks for a completely honest review of this. They were f*cking fast back in the day. Still quick now. UK benchmark performance is a 0 - 100mph...these could do it in around 10 seconds... back in 1988!
The moment I saw this I saw a 1988 Holden Commodore. The Holden Commodore stock motor was a 3.6L Buick V6 or 5.0L Holden V8. Rear Wheel drive. Either could smoke the tires and very comfortable to drive.
Eventually this same Commodore after revisions came with a 6.3 Super charged chev V8 option (R8) was sold as the Vauxhall VRX8 in the UK and the Pontiac VR8 in the USA.
It was a GM product that exceeded a BMW M series vehicles in most regards of performance but the base model fittings were designed to be affordable so was not marketed as a luxury vehicle.
Today Holden can't be bothered and just resell the Front wheel drive Opel Commodore which is less desirable than a 2010 Camry. I doubt Holden will exist is 5 years.
Top Gear did a good review on the insanity of the supercharged VRX8.
Amazing car.
This really needs more exposure. Let's promote this channel so Jason gets a decent budget to feed us every day
With 2.5 million subs ,,hes doing ok I think lol
@@oddsandwindsocks5905 too few views for the quality he delivers, look at the insane amount of views that other UA-cam channels get, filming just silly things
I could not have been more excited for you to document the Carlton and the ZR-1. Thank you both so much, and bless Lotus for leaving their impression on every decade of my memory!
I worked for Nissan EU technology at the time this was in development testing at Millbrook I remember these running around the high speed circuit sideways/scrubbing tires at 140 to 150 mph amazing
Good god, I LOVE YOU CAMMISA!!
Don't you ever stop doing this. Ever. I will not allow it.
Your writers need a raise.
Your editors and graphics department need a raise.
You need a contract that will permanently enshrine the perpetual production and hilarious historical hashing that is REVelations for years to come. I'm sorry if you had other plans.
Keep it up, you're doing great!
You're right on the money about the hypocrisy and class ridden nature of so much of our (UK) society. Sadly, things don't seem to be getting any better. At least, today, more of us can enjoy driving well engineered, characterful cars than ever before. Thank you for reminding us of some of these classics
There seems to be this mentality against UK, or claiming that things in UK are worse here than elsewhere, but it's rarely based in facts. Normally spread by people with political agendas.
Look at the numbers - USA is, and for the last century has always been, dramatically more divided by class.
The poorest in USA are far poorer, and the richest are far richer.
Example: Gini coefficient is 30% higher in USA, closer to most countries in Africa than Western Europe.
Now it's forcing people into electric cars that won't be able to afford them or able to home charge because they don't live in a house with a garage or driveway
@@svong8789 "If you're so smart how come you ain't rich?" - America.
@Gospelofrye I think you misunderstand my point, which had nothing to do either with being smart, nor being rich. It was just pointing out a fact on wealth distribution.
@Gospelofrye P.S. Personally I think wealth division is key for overall wealth production... it just isn't great for an overall happy society - getting the balance right is tough.
I don't care what Jason's video is about .... You Sir, you are the perfect presenter of anything that moves on 4 wheels, Bravo Mr. Cammisa !
There's nothing more exciting than a new Jason Cammisa video! Love his videos!
As a kid I used to go trough price lists that a car magazine published here in Germany, and I always used to marvel at the Porsches and Ferraris, because they were so expensive and had so much power. But my father was a mechanic and a die-hard Opel guy and tried at every turn to show me that cheaper cars could be awesome too. So one day he told me about the Opel Omega and how a comparatively boring sedan used to beat up Ferraris and Porsches on the Autobahn and from that day onwards that car was burned into my brain.
I’d pick this over the sierra rs cosworth.
I lived in a council estate in the UK, a working class relatively poor area. There was an old guy who lived in the house at the top of the road. His son would often pop over on the weekends. He had a spanking lotus Carlton. I’d often admire it. The best you got in my street was a home painted ford escort.
My dad had one in the mid 90s, the thing was an utter monster! I have tried to track the car down but sadly I had no luck 😢
Right now. Haggerty has the best automotive content available. Between Jason & Randy it's awesome! Thank you!
first time watching.
these dudes must be extremely rich/wealthy. their understandingn of "working class vs upper class"
ive never met somebody "upper class" with a 24/7 live in house butler.
Totally agree
Jason Cammisa IS the BEST automotive JOURNALIST, period! Catchpole and Harris don't even come close to compete with this level of eloquence & heavenly cars reviewing....Even the trio from Top Gear (Clarkson, May & Hammond) are not a match to Cammisa! Thank you a Gazillion times Hagerty for giving Jason a "Carte Blanche" to present to us car enthusiasts the most unknown legends of the automotive world!
To Jason, I say: Please keep up the great work and NEVER EVER lower your standards when it comes to content quality! Much love & appreciation from Montreal Canada!
PS: can't believe this stuff is free on YT, because in all seriousness, this is "Amazon series" worthy!
*Everyone had Lambos and Ferraris on posters on their bedroom walls. I had THIS!*
I remember walking with my dad in Hammersmith one time, on a dull sunday afternoon and saw this car, parked alone. It looked so unassuming. As a 12 year old kid it was easy to pass by without noticing. That was until my dad pointed it out, and spoke about its mythical status. I was hooked, especially when I heard crazy stories about my govt trying to get this thing banned!! Incredible beast and can still go toe-to-toe its VXR8 pretender (another favourite fast saloon.)
I lived off Askew Rd 👍 one of these lives in Whitton Richmond now 😍
VXR8 = Holden Commodore HSV Clubsport/GTS.
@@thethirdman225 rebadged Vauxhall/Opel Omega underneath makes you wonder why they never made any interesting versions back in the 90s
@@JohnLawley24v The Commodore was an all-Australian car, bigger than an Opel and with a 6.2 litre Chevrolet V8 in it. The HSV versions had a number of improvements to suspension, brakes and power.
It's a car which reminds me of why I love cars in the first place. I remember when it came out and most car fans were in total awe of it. It certainly didn't do Vauxhall's reputation any harm in the real world. Not to my recollection, anyway.
My dad has an Opel Omega CD 2.0i (115 HP) in the late 80s. It was an amazing car at the time. It had onboard computer, drove nicely, velour interior, sunroof, all the gadgets and extras you could get at the time. And it looked great and futuristic, especially considering what most cars looked like at the time.
Every single video of yours makes me feel like a child watching Top Gear on the living room floor mouth agape but grinning inside. These videos are a treasure Jason. Please keep it coming!
You could buy a 4.0 version, c40se from Irmscher opel/Vauxhall tuning arm. There is also an Opel Omega Evo homologation special for DTM that's more rare than the Lotus Carlton.
Was the DTM used in bank robberies?
1990 in Australia the (Opel based) VN Group A sedan was released. A homologation race special, and V8 powered.
Not as quick as this, but about 75% of the price.
VN Group A also had brakes and gearbox from ZR1
I still remember seeing one of those Omegas parked in my neighborhood near Toulon in 1993. I had read about them and I was shocked to see it a short walk from our front door! A legend.
This thing is one of the coolest cars I've never heard of.
Was a big deal back in the 90's in the UK and notorious for some of the reasons outlined in this vid. Absolute freakish monster of a car at the time and still pretty dam quick even now!
Same thing happened in Australia with the Falcon XYGT Shaker and the Torona XU-1
Taken down after a campaign led by the Editors of the Sydney Morning Herald one of who's son ended becoming editor of Car UK
I miss seeing these around. One of at least 20 cars I couldn't afford when they hit rock bottom prices because I was 20k in debt in my 20s. Now I'm not broke, all of those cars are trading for 5 times as much and I STILL can't afford them
The Carlton was epic. Sit behind one and it was so wide and aggressive
Still remember as a little boy seeing one of these and my dad explaining what it was. We had a Merc 300E-24 at the time which was considered a conventionally pretty quick saloon and my mind was blown. Great content!
My ex´s dad had one of these tuned around 700 hp, and boy was it fast! it felt unreal sitting in the back when he did a pull in it.
I adore these little love stories to the automotive industry. Thank you from the bottom of my heart - these are such feel-good well-produced videos. ❤️
I had the a couple of Chevrolet Omega in Brazil when we're living there between 2001 and 2014. One with 4.1L and second with 3.0L engines, both straight 6. Amazing stable car and fun to drive believe or not. Sweet memories
We had the Omega here in brazil too. Our performance option was a 4.1 liter engine rooted in the 1930's...
Revelations is such an outstanding series of videos. I could seriously watch hours of this stuff.
I live in the UK and have owned two Vauxhalls. Neither I would describe as nice. But man oh man is the Lotus Carlton the nicest looking saloon ever made. Bring back 90s car design. Escort Cosworth lab is delta integralie. Ford RS 200. Just sensational.
And the sierra RS500😍
It looks really dull, as far as I'm concerned.
I had no idea what this car wall all about. This has been an awesome episode.
This is by far one of the best sounding cars on this series. Thank you!!!
Jason is a man of culture and he shows it with his various accents and impersonations.
He is the perfect mix of whit, culture, and childish behavior. I think my favorite video of his is the one where he makes exhaust noises with his mouth. But everything he outs out is dope.
... and booger extractions.
My Neighbor actually does have a Lotus Omega, which he only takes for a spin at good weather. And the nearest entrypoint to the Autobahn is not far away...
My goodness Jason. I remember this from the car magazines back then and has since been off my radar. Thanks for the reminder that they still exist. Great video once again. Thank you and the production team for research and great work!
I remember reading the R&T World's Fastest article that had the Lotus Omega like it was yesterday. Kudos for bringing this gem across the water!
I worked at Lotus between 1997 and 2011.. Mike Kimberly came back briefly as CEO, and as a Staff Representative; I had a number of meetings with him. He was a great man, and very knowledgeable
The Lotus brought me in, the fun presentation had me subbing. Didn't realize Hagerty was producing this kind of content until now. Nice work!
Hopefully this causes you to go back through all the Revelations offerings, because they're all fantastic.
This is a whole other level of automotive journalism, the dude is being accurately informative while giving Hollywood acting performance, this is the next best automotive journalist since Clarkson 👌
Indeed 👍
These are genius and funny. Turning a topic I didn’t know I was interested in, into 10 minutes of entertainment, education, and social commentary. Well done, sir!
I had this model in a book about the fastest production cars at that time. I think I received it when I was 10. Lotus Carlton was in there alongside Ferraris, Porsche...honestly, I thought it looked cool AF and when I looked at the stats... I wanted one.