Everything about Opel Omega totally explained
» There was also an Oldsmobile Omega, an unrelated vehicle that was produced during the 1970s and 1980s
The
Opel Omega was an
executive car produced by the
German automaker Opel between 1986 and 2003. Replacing the
Opel Rekord, it was voted
European Car of the Year for 1987. Like the Rekord, the Omega was produced at
Rüsselsheim in
Germany. There were two generations of the model, the latter (Omega B) debuted in 1993. The Omega was available as
saloon or
estate (
Caravan).
In the United Kingdom, the Omega A was marketed as the second generation
Vauxhall Carlton (the first generation Vauxhall Carlton having been a rebadged
Opel Rekord) E2, and the Omega B generation as
Vauxhall Omega. The Omega was also built and sold in
Brazil badged as a
Chevrolet Omega and
Suprema (Caravan), but this name is now used for imported
Holden Commodores. A
badge engineered version of the Omega B MV6 was also sold in North America under the name of
Cadillac Catera.
In the
United Kingdom, the
Benelux countries,
Germany and
Italy, the Omega was widely used as a
police car and was once commonly used as a security vehicle to transport politicians etc. Following the cessation of production in 2003, the closest Vauxhall equivalent now used by police forces is the
Opel Vectra. The car has also been converted into
limousines and
hearses.
Production of the Omega ceased in 2003. There was no direct replacement for it, as executive models from "non-presteige" manufacturers were proving less popular by the early
2000s; rival manufacturer
Ford had pulled out of this sector in
1998 on the demise of its
Scorpio.
Omega A
Development
The original Omega went into production in September 1986 as a replacement for the
Opel Rekord, which had been in production since 1978. Sales began in November. The body was designed as an evolution of the previous Opel design theme engineered more towards aerodynamics in view of higher fuel prices and the general drive towards more fuel efficiency. The result was a remarkable
drag coefficient of 0.28 (0.32 for the Caravan). The whole development program cost 2 Billion
Deutschmark.
The Omega A was available in
saloon and
estate (
Caravan) bodystyles as a competitor for the likes of the
Ford Scorpio and
Rover 800. Like the late Rekord, the Omega A adopted the
Vauxhall Carlton nameplate for the British market. The Rekord-based
Opel Senator A was also superseded by the Senator B, based on a similar concept - a stretched Omega platform and body along with some unique sheetmetal modifications.
Technical novelties
Compared to the Rekord, the Omega featured many modern technological advances, which were new to Opel in general, if not to the volume segment European automotive market. These included electronic engine management, ABS, on-board computer (which displayed parameters such as momentary fuel consumption or average speed), air-conditioned glove compartment and even the then-fashionable LCD instrument cluster (available in some version from 1987 but dropped in 1991). More importantly, the Omega came with a self-diagnose system (which is now a standard feature in present-day cars), whose output could be read by appropriately equipped authorized service stations.
Powertrains
All Omegas used a longitudinally-mounted engine with a
rear-wheel drive setup, with a five-speed
manual transmission or four-speed
automatic transmission. The engine range comprised of 1.8 L, 2.0 L and 2.4 L four-cylinder units (2.0 L and 2.3 L
Diesel, 2.3 L
turbodiesel) to 2.6 L, 3.0 L, 3.0 L-24v six-cylinder units. In Brazil, the Chevrolet Omega/Suprema was powered to 2.0/2.2 four cylinders and 3.0 V6 Opel engine. The 4.1 6cil 250 derivate of Chevrolet Opala, was a powerful and preferred version in Brazil.
Trim levels and special versions
Trim Levels
The four basic trim levels were LS, GS, GLS and CD (from least to most expensive). The base LS was clearly intended for the fleet market, with the sedan not available to individual customers in some markets. The LS Caravan was also available as a panel van with rear side windows covered with body-colored foil rather than replaced by solid panels.
For the 1991 year, the Omega A was afforded a
facelift, which encompassed slight alterations to front and rear fascias, as well as interior materials and additional sound dampening. The until-then base 1.8 L engine was dropped. The LS and GLS trim levels were also dropped, while the CD was joined by Club and CD Diamant.
Omega 3000 / Carlton GSi
The Omega 3000 was the sports version of the Omega. It featured a
straight-6, 3.0 litre, 12-valve engine, which produced 177 bhp. Other modifications from the base model included a lowered
suspension and
limited slip differential, as well as different fascias and a rear spoiler. The car had a top speed of 222 km/h, and accelerated from 0-100 km/h in 8.8 seconds.
In 1989, the Omega 3000 was upgraded. The engine now had 24 valves, two overhead
camshafts, and a variable
intake manifold (Opel
Dual Ram system). It also used a more advanced
engine control unit. Power increased to 204
bhp, which increased top speed to 240 km/h, and 0-100 km/h time dropped to 7.6 seconds.
In countries where the car was sold as a
Vauxhall, the 3000 was called the Carlton GSi.
Omega Diamant
This options package was introduced in 1988 and could be added onto the GLS, LS and CD trim version. It included alloy wheels, metallic paint, tinted windows, stereo with cassette player, various leather trim in the interior, as well as a painted grille and door mirrors. It sold well and the package was kept after the facelift and a similar system with the same name was used for the Omega B.
Lotus Omega/Carlton
» See main article: Lotus Carlton
In 1989, a high performance version built in cooperation with
Lotus was introduced. The car was named the Lotus Omega or Lotus Carlton, depending on whether the base car was sold as an Opel Omega or Vauxhall Carlton respectively.
The car was built using a great variety of parts from other GM suppliers and car manufacturers. The engine was a 3,0 litre 24 valve item, and this was handed to Lotus for the tuneup. Lotus added a hardened and larger crankshaft, giving the engine its total size of 3,6 litres. Two
Garrett T25 turbochargers were installed, along with a watercooled
intercooler. The engine management was also changed and the ignition changed to an AC Delco type (same system as the Lotus Esprit uses). The result was a 377 bhp performance engine. The Omega also got a bigger differential from a Holden car with a 45% LSD, and the gearbox was changed to the 6-speed manual ZF gearbox from the
Corvette ZR1. The tyres where custom made by Goodyear and can be recognized by the small Greek letter Ω (
Omega) on the side. This was required as this car could reach 280 to 300km/h. This was a fact not popular at the time, as most of the other German car manufacturers that produced fast and powerful cars had already begun putting in speed limiters to limit their cars to 250km/h. The 1663kg car accelerated from 0 to 100km/h (0 to 60 mph) in 5.3 seconds, 0 to 160Km/h (0 to 100 mph) in 11.5 seconds.
The interior featured dark grey Connolley leather, and on the glove compartment lid is a small placard with the words "Lotus Omega Limited Edition", followed by a 4 digit number, starting with a 0. The number after 0 is the car's production number.
A total of 950 cars were built, out of the 1100 cars initially planned. Sales weren't as good as hoped, although as a publicity stunt several cars were given to high profile people like politicians. But what Opel hadn't realized was that they'd given the world the most powerful full-size saloon ever built. Even today it's considered one of
the fastest four-door cars ever produced.
6-door Omega
Chevrolet Omega
» See main article: Chevrolet Omega
Holden Commodore
» See main article: Holden Commodore
Conversions and modifications by external companies
Opel Omega B
The 1994 Vauxhall/Opel Omega was an all-new car with a modern exterior design but a traditional rear-wheel drive chassis. The engine range was all-new:
Four cylinder petrol engines were:
X20SE 2.0 L petrol 8V with 115 BHP
X20XEV 2.0 L petrol 16V with 134 BHP (replaced in 1999 by Y22XE 2.2 L 16V with 144 BHP)
Four cylinder diesel engines were:
X20DTH 2.0 L turbodiesel with 100 BHP
Y22DTH 2.2 L turbodiesel with 118 BHP
Six cylinder engines were:
X25XE 2.5 L V6 with 167 BHP (replaced in 2000 by X26SE 2.6 L V6 with 176 BHP)
X30XE 3.0 L V6 with 207 BHP (replaced in 2001 with Y32SE 3.2 L V6 with 217 BHP)
X25TD 2.5 L straight six with 150 BHP
The BMW-sourced X25TD turbodiesel was refined and gave acceptable performance (150BHP) and the V6 power plants were a far better bet than the acceptable, but slightly underpowered 4-cylinder engines.
The top of the range Omega, with the 3.0 L V6, was the most expensive Vauxhall/Opel on the market at £30,000. Transmission options were a 5-speed manual or 4-speed automatic (AR35)
GM 4L30-E transmission.
From 1997 to 2001, the top 3.0L saloon was sold in the US as a
captive import badged as the
Cadillac Catera. This version of car featured a re-styled interior, modified damper ratings and external trim, in addition, the 3.0 power plant was modifed to reduce the compression ratio and a different ECU setup used which supported OBDII ISO protocols and coil per plug ignition system. The engine changes resulted in a loss of around 10bhp from the unit.
The Omega platform was also heavily modified and enlarged as the basis of the Australian Holden Commodore (VT-VX) and Monaro.
Late in 1999, the Omega received a facelift and a 2.2 L 16-valve engine was added to the range as an eventual replacement for the 2.0 L. The following year, a 3.2 L V6 engine replaced the 3.0 L V6 unit, and a 2.6 L V6 engine replaced the 2.5 L V6 unit.
A V8 engined version was to be introduced in 2001 labeled the V8.com but was cancelled weeks before the official introduction. The reason was concerns about whether the engine was
vollgasfest (
German, "Full throttle resistant") - the engine might overheat and be damaged if driven flat out on the
Autobahn for long periods of time. The power plant used was the quad over head cam GM USA Northstar V8.
During this time, the Omega found itself without any real competition. The demise of the
Ford Scorpio and
Rover 800 (the Omega's biggest rivals) left Vauxhall unable to decide where to focus the Omega. Other brands that had competed in this area had largely left the market, leaving the Omega to take on the likes of the
BMW 5 Series.
Despite a strong showing, the Omega was never a serious rival to the 5 Series. Production of the Omega B finally ceased in 2003 with no direct successor, although the gap in the Vauxhall/Opel range was effectively filled by more expensive versions of the existing Vectra and Signum ranges.
Gallery
Image:100 1244.JPG| Vauxhall Omega 3.0 V6
Photographs of a new Vauxhall/Opel executive car appeared in the motoring press a year after the Omega's demise, though there has been no further mention of it.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Opel Omega'.
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