RE: Vauxhall Vectra VXR estate | The Brave Pill

RE: Vauxhall Vectra VXR estate | The Brave Pill

Saturday 12th June 2021

Vauxhall Vectra VXR estate | The Brave Pill

Buy, hold, sell - or run away?



The word investment is dropped into an increasing number of car adverts these days. This week's Brave Pill could be the first time it has been applied to a Vauxhall Vectra. Age and natural wastage is thinning the population of Vauxhall's one-time Mondeo-fighter quickly - the last was produced 13 years ago - but its former ubiquity means it is still a vehicle that most will see as street furniture. There are still plenty of cheap, banger-grade ones smoking around. Often literally.

This isn't one of those. Indeed it's pretty much the pinnacle of the Vectra tree in terms of original cost, rarity and the fact it has made it into the 2020s unsullied by rust, panel damage or grizzly modification - a late, clean-looking VXR estate. As such it carries a price tag to match, for £6,500 this seems to be very nearly the most expensive Vectra in the country. But with one owner, a full service history, 63,000 miles and a clean MOT record that isn't ludicrous considering its rarity.

The VXR story is undoubtedly one of the bright spots in the mostly dull recent history of Vauxhall. Think of an exciting example of any of the cars produced wearing a Griffin badge in the last 20 years and it almost certainly carried VXR branding too. Plenty of less exciting ones got it as well.


Vauxhall had enjoyed success with GTE and GSI performance models in the '80s and '90s, but it had pretty much lost its way in the early 'noughties. Opel was already producing OPC branded versions for Europe, so the decision was made to bring these to the UK under VXR branding. Also, against GM Europe's wishes, to add some non-Opel models to the portfolio, too, in the form of the Australian HSV Monaro.

In short, VXR wasn't a hard club to get into if you were a Vauxhall, with the badge slapped on almost everything in the range. Corsa and Astra versions were popular and sold well, but the only real success for the Zafira and Meriva VXRs was to establish just how limited the market for go-faster people carriers was. The Vectra VXR was a much better car than the MPVs, but it also struggled - only 1,000 were sold here between 2005 and 2008, the number Vauxhall had originally projected it would shift each year.

That's because tastes were changing, even as the VXR was launched. Those seeking thrills in what was known by the more cynical auto analysts as the 'D-for-dull' segment were increasingly opting to upgrade to premium badges. By the early noughties repboxes were increasingly 'D-for-diesel', too - and although GM's decision not to offer its OPC/ VXR models with compression ignition now looks forward thinking it made it very hard for British user-choosers to justify them on the basis of the CO2 benefit-in-kind beatdown they would earn.

Not that there wasn't plenty to like about the VXR Vectra itself. It replaced the now almost entirely forgotten Vectra GSI, swapping that car's anaemic 208hp 3.2-litre V6 for a far punchier 2.8-litre turbocharged V6. This engine had mostly been developed by Saab, and appeared in various late era 9-3 and 9-5s, but was actually produced in Australia. As launched the VXR had 252hp but got upgraded to 277hp in 2006. The Vectra was front driven and had a standard six-speed manual gearbox - an auto option was offered right at the end, but found few takers. It was also offered in both hatch and estate guises.


The Vectra VXR was much more mature than the frantic, grabby Corsa and Astra versions. The V6 was a belter, with strong, linear urge and an impressively bristly top-end soundtrack. The Vectra felt unsurprisingly nose-heavy on tighter roads and, despite standard active dampers, the chassis struggled to maintain discipline over corrugated surfaces. But it was an excellent high-speed cruiser, with the fact that any of the darker colours made it look like an undercover police car helping the clear motorway outside lanes better than almost anything else.

Vauxhall took the brave decision to hold the original media launch in Sicily, using parts of the route of the Targa Florio. The VXR took to the unlikely challenge impressively well, although one lead-footed journo proved that the brakes were marginal under hard use by reaching a rest stop with the alarming sight of flames licking through the spokes of the front alloys. (No, it wasn't me.)

The VXR was also tuneable, something Vauxhall positively encouraged owners to do. The company's own VXR Performance Centres sold warranty-backed remaps which could boost the early cars to around 290hp and the later ones to 310hp, while adding up to 100 lb ft of torque to the stock 262 lb ft. More extreme unsanctioned upgrades were also easily applied, and the VXR inspired an enthusiastic tuning scene. Another appeal of our Pill's estate body is that it predates the trend for curved and contoured lifestylish station wagons, the no-nonsense vastness of its boxy load area making it easy to load big objects.


So what's brave about this one? Beyond the need to be able to front driving around in a bright red Vectra wagon, not a great deal. Springs are known to snap and the active dampers often fail, with these needing to be replaced as a pair. Under-loved engines sometimes pick up timing chain rattles which, if left untreated, can lead to expensive failure. The motor is also intolerant of incorrect spark plugs and prone to consume coilpacks. Like lesser Vectras of this era the VXR can also suffer from damp carpets due to blocked drainage pipes and from the sudden borkage of the wiper motor, this inevitably happening in a heavy rainstorm.

Our Pill is a facelifted estate, meaning the more powerful engine but also pricier road tax - currently a sizeable £585 a year. Despite clearly being cherished over the years, it is also a fairly basic example, having been ordered without the options of dual-zone climate, parking radar or satnav, although its sole previous owner did specify the DAB radio upgrade. The MOT history isn't blemish free, but does speak of diligent care and attention, with no advisory cropping up more than once and the two fails - for a leaking fuel filter in 2016 and broken coil springs in 2014 - rectified with straight passes on the same days. It's also wearing aftermarket alloys, which is a shame because the original VXR rims were pretty smart.

So definitely not the most courageous Pill this week - variety rather than terrifying financial peril providing the spice this time. Yes, £6,500 is a big ask for any Vectra - it was possible to get heavily depreciated early VXRs for pretty much the same ten years ago. But compared to the optimistic valuations that are being attached to some very shonky looking not-quite classics it doesn't look outrageously expensive. If any Vectra is investment grade, it's probably this one.


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Author
Discussion

Billy_Whizzzz

Original Poster:

2,007 posts

143 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
Least desirable pill yet?

howardhughes

1,004 posts

204 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
I never knew these existed.

Southerner

1,410 posts

52 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
Six and half bags for a Vectra with chav Rimz on it....yikes eek

Shortos

13 posts

107 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
Not a bad Shed of The Week....oh.

Prohibiting

1,740 posts

118 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
No one is gonna buy this at that price.

SMCguy

6 posts

39 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
I’d love this as a practical second car. Yes, it’s pricey and would look at what others are available but really doesn’t seem terrible and doubt I’d regret it in 10 years time. What I can’t stomach is that tax for something I’d do a couple of thousand miles a year in.

milu

2,351 posts

266 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
I had one exactly the same but with the original 19” wheels
Fantastic car. Had 4K miles on when I bought it..took it up to around 45k
We used to call it the fire engine!
I wonder how many red ones were made?

helix402

7,859 posts

182 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
It’s red like a fire engine. The wheels are hideous. I’m sure the engine is good.

pb8g09

2,333 posts

69 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
I’d like it if it were a darker colour. I reckon there would be quite a few Griffin fans to snap this up though it would need an enthusiast’s passion to clean it up (new wheels) and be able to appreciate that interior.

Type of thing you’d see on the Fast Estates thread.

MikeM6

5,004 posts

102 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
Probably a decent car with an interesting engine and very practical, but I just can't get excited by strangely. Maybe it is a little too boxy? I also never thought the front looked right.

GibsonSG

276 posts

111 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
Shortos said:
Not a bad Shed of The Week....oh.
Brilliant comment, sums it up perfectly!

cerb4.5lee

30,516 posts

180 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
I've always liked the rarity of these, plus I'm always drawn towards cars that have Recaro seats(although I've only ever had 1 car with Recaro seats myself sadly). cool

Lester H

2,724 posts

105 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
The colour puts me right off. A small city car like a C1 looks great in bright red ( and goes that bit faster!) but a large car needs a dark hue for gravitas and the Q Car appeal. Agreed also that the wheels look cheap, so before we even come to the price, it’s a “no”.

citizensm1th

8,371 posts

137 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
I owned a vectra once, snapped front spring and an annoying canbus issue put me off the mark for life.

Horrid bland troublesome thing

humphra

481 posts

92 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
Hmmm... it's now £5999. But still, it doesn't come with its original wheels and would need money spent to get a set put back on it!?

Sandpit Steve

10,028 posts

74 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
I was right, it’s the crossover between Shed and Pill columns!

That old S-class belongs here, this one is just an old car with an over-optimistic price tag.

Its Just Adz

14,069 posts

209 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
Would be an interesting buy at £2k, if it had correct wheels on.

alorotom

11,939 posts

187 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
Its not wildly priced at all - given similar VXRs on AT with double the miles for only a smidge cheaper and similar (and marginally higher) upto £1k more.

Not shocked at the scorn for a vauxhall here though - the derision for the brand is constant.

As a household we at one point had his and hers VXRs (Astra and Corsa) and they were great.

The Vectra VXR is massively rare for a real one, yes this would be more desirable with the correct wheels but they arent a bad steer at all.

andyalan10

404 posts

137 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
The groupthink here really is Maoist. Or should that be Orwellian. I'm not sure.

The uniform must be dark grey metallic and carry a MBMVW badge. Anything else is socially unacceptable.

Here is a car that costs about the same amount as the essential options add to a typical £80-90,000 German car.

It comes in the same colour that people used to choose on Bentley Turbo Rs, series III Jaguar XJ12s and the like.

A lot of people seem to think it takes more bravery than they could ever summon up to choose a car with a different badge, or of a different colour.

I'll go and take my pills now.

Augustus Windsock

3,366 posts

155 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
quotequote all
I’ll copy and paste the comment I made about the Land Cruiser 300 yesterday:
“ Designed by Ole Kirk Christiansen:
The man who invented Lego....”
But this time I’ll refer to the interior, which is all straight lines, and the indicator / wiper stalks look like they were whittled from a piece of wood off-cuts by Alexander Archipenko...