RE: Vauxhall Omega V6 | Shed of the Week
RE: Vauxhall Omega V6 | Shed of the Week
Today

Vauxhall Omega V6 | Shed of the Week

James Bond is famously partial to a nice-looking Omega - now, for considerably less money, you can have one too...


Bob the Binman has two shared interests with Shed: football, and Mrs Shed. They’re very much in that order as far as Shed is concerned, so when Bob made tentative inquiries about the possibility of a threesome Shed said he wasn’t against the idea as long as he was allowed to sub himself off in the first minute and immediately leave the field of play. Unsurprisingly, Bob had no issue with that. Negotiations are ongoing and doubtless there’ll be more developments over the next few weeks, not to mention a fair bit of shouting and pan-twirling when Mrs Shed gets to hear about it. In the meantime though, it’s hard to imagine the need for much in the way of negotiation on the price of this week’s shed, a trouser-untroubling £1250 for what looks like a very nice Vauxhall Omega.

Anyone under 50 who is for whatever mad reason reading this won’t have a clue about the Omega, or possibly even Vauxhall given that the days of first-time car buyers defaulting to that marque are long gone. What do the young ‘uns aim at nowadays when they’re stepping out for their first motor? Whatever, we’re talking Omegas here. What’s the appeal? 

Well, speaking as an old dude well past his 50s, Shed would say that the pleasures of Omega motoring are many and various. With the state of his rear end these days comfort is paramount. He knows his posterior would thank him (if posteriors could speak) for this CDX’s deeply cushioned velour seats. It would be a pleasant thing to pilot too thanks to its rear-wheel drive, 4-speed slushbox and decent engine.

What engine is that then? The last Omega featured in the back end of 2021 was a late (2003) 2.2 petrol CD auto. Without the benefits of turbocharging it could only muster 142hp, 150lb ft and mpg figures in the 20s. Today’s shed is a different kettle of herrings, boasting (if cars could boast) a 2.6-litre V6 with 176hp, 177lb ft and mpg figures in the 20s. Fuel consumption aside, the 2.6 had enough bant about it to propel this 1,670kg saloon through the 0-60mph test in a relaxed 9.2 seconds, going on to a maximum speed of 139mph. 

As noted by Shed at the time, the British bobby of the early 21st century very much liked grunty 3.0 versions of the Omega for their mobile policing, but a bit like Shed they struggled to find somewhere to put their helmets, so these Vauxhall jam sandwiches were eventually supplanted by Volvo estates. In fairness, the Omega boot was very spacious at 530 litres. It just wasn’t quite big enough to accommodate all the tracklements of modern crimestopping.

Our 85,000-mile shed is a couple of years older than that 2.2, but you’d never guess it from the condition, which visually at least seems excellent. Last September’s MOT picked up on worn tyres and non-excessive engine oil and trans fluid leakages, both of which were common on this engine. Misfires weren’t unusual either. They were usually down to faulty coil packs and wonky MAF sensors. 

Some nearside rear wheel arch corrosion was sorted between the 2018 and 2018 tests. Nothing more has come up on that front since. The vendors say ‘new MOT’ in the blurb, which suggests it could have been languishing on their forecourt since September. The ad also says it’s got a new Motsunroof. That’s not something Shed is familiar with. He has been excitedly toying with the notion that this car might once have been owned by the sadly departed footy commentator and sheepskin coat model John Motson, the vendors having accidentally typed in a ‘u’ instead of an ‘o’. It wouldn’t be the first spelling mistake in a classified car ad after all. 

Today’s Omega was first registered in September 2001, a few months too late for it to benefit from the £230 annual rate that applies to pre-March 2001 cars over 1,549cc. Its 276g/km figure should then drag it into the dreaded £760pa bracket, a ludicrous jump for the sake of seven months. Fortunately, it was registered before 23 March 2006 and therefore falls into the shadowy Band K, bringing the annual bill back down to £430 or £415, depending on what part of the internet you choose to believe. Is it any wonder a confused old duffer like Shed gets this stuff wrong? Whatever way you look at it, it’s still a not insignificant amount of cash to be throwing away, and almost certainly pivotal to this car’s ongoing unsold status. 

Shed regularly gets Vauxhall spec levels wrong too so he won’t be doing anything more than venturing the vague opinion that a CDX might perhaps be nearer the top end of the Omega range than the bottom. Again he is pleading brain fog and the frazzling multiplicity of Omega types to choose from, including Sport, GLS, Reflection, CD, CDX, MV6, Elite and a few dozen more that even Vauxhall has forgotten about. The selection of engines was even more boggling. Eeeh, crazy times, but somehow good ones too.


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

tomsugden

Original Poster:

2,419 posts

250 months

I remember these as executive company cars in the office car park in the 90s. They were like a space ship back then.

StuntmanMike

13,317 posts

173 months

Lovely old thing, never captured my imagination like a Carlton/Senator but I hope it goes to a good home.

phil_cardiff

8,242 posts

230 months

I'm under 50 and have always wanted a 3.0 Omega biglaugh

StuntmanMike

13,317 posts

173 months

PS not sure what’s going on with the stereo, that silver ste would have to go. scratchchin

Portofino

5,086 posts

213 months

One of my old bosses had a few Omegas & used to sing their praises about how good they were & they do look smart.




HTP99

24,642 posts

162 months

I do love a Vauxhall from that era but they were all ruined by that god awful V grille badging.

JRaj

109 posts

95 months

Aged well. Looks far classier and solid compared to the modern day offerings from Vauxhall.

njw1

2,646 posts

133 months

phil_cardiff said:
I'm under 50 and have always wanted a 3.0 Omega biglaugh
I'm 40 and nearly bought an Omega when I was in my mid 20's (a manual 3.0 MV6 smile ), however, the insurance was cheaper on a BMW 535i so I bought one of those instead. Still like the Omega though.

SteveTTT

124 posts

158 months

My dad had an ex-Plod 3.2 V6 and loved it, said it went like stink. Not sure of the reg but he died in 2003.

Andy86GT

825 posts

87 months

JRaj said:
Aged well. Looks far classier and solid compared to the modern day offerings from Vauxhall.
Agreed.
These were from the days of GM when there was over engineered American influence. The Omega was also sold as Cadillac Catera and related to the Holden Commodore. Of course they weren't really Vauxhalls at all, being built by Opel in Germany. Modern Vauxhalls are just rebodied Stellantis models.

Edited by Andy86GT on Friday 20th February 07:19

Gary29

4,841 posts

121 months

StuntmanMike said:
PS not sure what s going on with the stereo, that silver ste would have to go. scratchchin
It's been changed from a different model I'd guess, what an eye sore. Generic Vauxhall stereo from that period, I remember seeing it in Vectras / Astras?

Slowlygettingit

861 posts

63 months

……but a bit like Shed they struggled to find somewhere to put their helmets……

Classic Shed line there……

This car epitomises a shed to me….
I am sure someone will get some great use from it

Jte3397

258 posts

118 months

I've quite liked these since I read an old Evo article on a German chap who'd put some sort of GM V8 in one to break the 200 mph barrier. He chose it as it had the best drag coefficient of the saloons at the time and, if memory serves, he went for 200 mph driving with socks not shoes to get a better feel.

Interesting shed, was pulled over a couple of times by them in my hooning youth. We're these one of the first with xenon lights? You could spot if you were being tailed by the bright whiteness.


Edited by Jte3397 on Friday 20th February 07:23

Wren-went

1,035 posts

60 months

My brother bought a brand new 02 52 plate MV6 , at the time
It was so much car for the money.

Only brand new car he's ever bought, but got rid of it as he needed a diesel due to commute changing from several miles a day to over 100 miles a day.

The car I'm the article looks like it's been well looked after, I definitely was a fan of Vauxhalls particularly in the 90s & early 2000s but the Omega never did anything for me.
I preferred the Signum that sort of replaced the omega a big hatchback.

Konan

2,415 posts

168 months

njw1 said:
phil_cardiff said:
I'm under 50 and have always wanted a 3.0 Omega biglaugh
I'm 40 and nearly bought an Omega when I was in my mid 20's (a manual 3.0 MV6 smile ), however, the insurance was cheaper on a BMW 535i so I bought one of those instead. Still like the Omega though.
Yeah, I think the 'over 50' divide might be based on people who buy far newer cars. Cheap Omegas were very much a thing for people ten years younger than that.

Johnspex

4,956 posts

206 months

I had a pre-facelift MV6 auto.
I think it’s one my favourites of all the cars I’ve owned.
I got rid of it because I could see wisps of steam coming from under the bonnet when I sat in traffic.
Other than that, fantastic spacious car.
Clever boot hinges meant all the space was usable.

Ifinishposts

1,609 posts

159 months



Had this about ten years ago, V6 auto, paid something silly like £275 for it from just around the corner from me.

When I came to move to something better the dealer just didn't want it in part-ex.

LightweightLouisDanvers

2,720 posts

65 months

Jte3397 said:
I've quite liked these since I read an old Evo article on a German chap who'd put some sort of GM V8 in one to break the 200 mph barrier. He chose it as it had the best drag coefficient of the saloons at the time and, if memory serves, he went for 200 mph driving with socks not shoes to get a better feel.

Interesting shed, was pulled over a couple of times by them in my hooning youth. We're these one of the first with xenon lights? You could spot if you were being tailed by the bright whiteness.


Edited by Jte3397 on Friday 20th February 07:23
These were one of the first cars I remember with xenons, you could spot them prowling up the motorway behind you, a good pre warning to moderate your speeding. Nearly 30 years ago I was doing a long motorway commute and I always thought that a white Omega would be the perfect car to 'make progress' with as every other car would dive out of its way. I never did have one. Or any other Vauxhall, this was the only one that ever appealed to me.

CanAm

12,788 posts

294 months

Johnspex said:
I had a pre-facelift MV6 auto.
I think it s one my favourites of all the cars I ve owned.
I got rid of it because I could see wisps of steam coming from under the bonnet when I sat in traffic.
Other than that, fantastic spacious car.
Clever boot hinges meant all the space was usable.
We carried a dining table and 4 chairs in one. I had a 2 litre and then a CD Elite V6 which had just about every luxury going apart from sat-nav. It was an amazingly comfortable autobahn-stormer.

loskie

6,696 posts

142 months

phil_cardiff said:
I'm under 50 and have always wanted a 3.0 Omega biglaugh
as a 13 yr old or so spotty yoof it was a Monza I hankered after. The man who owned the gents outfitters in our wee town had one. Move on to '88 when I passed my test started watching rallies it was the Manta GTE. BUT it had to be a coupe.

This is a good shed week. Whoood have guessed an Omega?

  1. When shed becomes modern classic