Vauxhall touts new GSE performance sub-brand
Fast Vauxhalls are back, kicking off this year - albeit with electric power only
We’ve been waiting on this announcement for a little while. Ever since the demise of the VXR badge, the Vauxhall line-up has really missed having proper performance derivatives. Because they were good, for one thing, and because there’s such hot Vaux heritage in the UK that it seemed weird not having any new ones around. Now some order is set to be restored, with the revival of the GSE badge for “particularly dynamic, exhilarating, and emotional Opel models.” So says Opel CEO Florian Huettl.
It’ll stand for Grand Sport Electric, so park any ideas of a reimagined straight-six Monza with that badge right away. On the other hand, the new performance offshoot promises a lot more than the current, very tepid range of hybrid GSE models, and there are some encouraging signs in the wider Stellantis empire that fast, vaguely affordable EVs matter. The latest Abarth 600e has been well received, and Peugeot has confirmed a GTI will come back; imagine a Corsa GSE spun off the same ‘Perfo-eCMP’ architecture as the Abarth, complete with 280hp…
We’re getting ahead of ourselves. For now, the GSE message is all about branding fizz rather than a tangible product. Apparently, every letter of the new brand stands for many different attributes; G is for - and this is not a joke – ‘Grand, German engineering meets goosebumps, great grip, and G-forces’. S, a little more predictably, is for ‘sport, speed, sweat, and sliding through S-curves’. E then covers off electric as well as ‘excitement, exhilaration, and euphoria’. That’s some promise. Although credit where it’s due, Opel is suggesting the right sort of changes beyond buzzwords: each GSE model will get a bespoke chassis tune that ‘directly integrates the driver and offers exciting driving pleasure’, alongside brake upgrades - it isn’t just power and a new badge. Opel believes it will demonstrate ‘once again that all-electric vehicles are also full of emotions.’
What happens next? It’s not exactly clear, but Opel does promise more is coming in 2025, so there won’t be very long to wait before another announcement. Furthermore, the mention in the press release of the GSE brand being resurrected back in 2022 is encouraging, because that was when the brilliant little Manta ElektroMOD concept was shown. And when they said the car was coming in 2025, in fact. A proper little coupe would be quite the way to kick off a new electric sub-brand.
Article after article on PH and other car press is about upcoming EVs - when was the last time there was any announcement of note that wasn't either EV only or hybrid for a non-supercar?
Article after article on PH and other car press is about upcoming EVs - when was the last time there was any announcement of note that wasn't either EV only or hybrid for a non-supercar?
EVs are here to stay sure I agree but will all these models find customers not so sure
HSR, SRI, GSE, leave them in the past, same applies to all manufacturers, just marketing boloney.
Why not Vauxhall/Opel ESV of something similar, there’s no need to try reignite the past, that was then, this is now.
I suspect, it make a difference, its unlikely Vauxhall will exist in 5 years.
Changing all the dealerships and parts boxes and everything else would probably cost so much it'd take a million years to make back the savings, without considering weirdos who won't buy another one because "I only buy Vauxhalls".
Or do you mean the entire former GM Europe now platform shared PSA Opel/Vauxahll thing? I think that should be around for a while, it's far from the lamest horse in the Stellantis Stable of Losers
Ford of Europe though? You can all but see the vultures circling.
Not everybody is a chiseled PBCD Driving God™ who lets his V12 rip on every dab-of-oppo journey to Tesco Metro...
The only time anyone on PH is interested in their output is in a "What motability car with zero deposit should I get for my old mum" car buying thread, regular appearances on the dashcam bad driving thread, and now and again a post of "I bought this for £300" on the shed thread.
GS-E kind of makes sense as its got an E on the end and they used it before, on Opels.
The why, well I guess they want to sell some cars, keep going, keep their workforce employed and stuff.
It's just that since the late 90s they seemed to have made a conscious decision to be s

"Apparently, every letter of the new brand stands for many different attributes; G is for - and this is not a joke – ‘Grand, German engineering meets goosebumps, great grip, and G-forces’. S, a little more predictably, is for ‘sport, speed, sweat, and sliding through S-curves’. E then covers off electric as well as ‘excitement, exhilaration, and euphoria’. That’s some promise."
I don't know if anyone else feels this way, but I ssooo hate this kind of marketing b

What blows my mind is the fact that these companies are still so detached from the market, that they are spending time and money coming up with this kind of crap tag line bull. Like it makes any difference to the people who may actually have an interest in performance cars.
Wouldn't be surprised if half of those that came up with this stuff didn't even have a driving license...
TX.
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