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Vauxhall Victor

The Vauxhall Victor is a large family car produced by Vauxhall from 1957 until 1976. The Victor was introduced to replace the outgoing Wyvern model. It was renamed Vauxhall VX Series in 1976 and continued in production until 1978, by which time it had grown significantly and was viewed, at least in its home market, as a larger-than-average family car.

Vauxhall Victor
Vauxhall Victor Saloon (F Series)
Overview
ManufacturerVauxhall (General Motors)
Also calledVauxhall VX4/90
Vauxhall Ventora
Envoy
Production1957–1978
Body and chassis
ClassLarge family car (D)
Chronology
PredecessorVauxhall Wyvern
Vauxhall Cresta (FE series)
SuccessorVauxhall Carlton
Vauxhall Viceroy
Vauxhall Royale

The last Victor, the Victor FE, was also manufactured under licence by Hindustan Motors in India as the Hindustan Contessa, during the 1980s and early 2000s, with an Isuzu engine.

The Victor was replaced in 1978 by the Vauxhall Carlton - essentially a badge engineered version of the Opel Rekord E.

The Victor briefly became Britain's most exported car,[1] with sales in markets as far flung as the United States (sold by Pontiac dealers, since Vauxhall had been part of GM from 1925), Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and Asian right-hand drive markets such as Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), India, Pakistan, Malaysia, Thailand, and Singapore.

In Canada, it was marketed as both the Vauxhall Victor (sold through Pontiac/Buick dealerships) and the Envoy (through Chevrolet/Oldsmobile dealers). The Victor was also instrumental in giving Vauxhall its first in-house-designed estate car, which complemented the four-door saloon.

F Series Victor edit

Vauxhall Victor F
 
Overview
Also calledEnvoy
Vauxhall Voyager [2]
Production1957–1961
390,745 produced.[3]
AssemblyUnited Kingdom
Australia[4]
Petone, New Zealand
Antwerp, Belgium
Biel/Bienne, Switzerland[5]
Body and chassis
Body style4-door saloon
5-door estate car
Powertrain
Engine1.5 L OHV I4
Transmission3-speed manual
Dimensions
Wheelbase98 in (2,489 mm)[6]
Length167 in (4,242 mm)[7]
Width63 in (1,600 mm)[7]
Height59 in (1,499 mm)[7]

The original Victor, launched on 28 February 1957,[8] was coded the F series and saw a production run of more than 390,000 units. The car was of unitary construction and featured a large glass area with heavily curved windscreen and rear window. Following American styling trends then current, the windscreen pillars (A-pillars) sloped forwards. In fact, the body style was derived directly from the classic ′55 Chevrolet Bel Air, though this is not apparent unless the two cars are viewed side by side. Bench seats were fitted front and rear trimmed in Rayon and "Elastofab", and two-colour interior trim was standard. The Super model had extra chrome trim, notably around the windows; remnants of the signature Vauxhall bonnet flutes ran along the front flanks and the exhaust pipe exited through the rear bumper. The car was equipped with arm rests on the doors, door-operated courtesy lights, a two-spoke steering wheel, and twin sun visors.

 
Vauxhall Victor F (1958) rear view treatment. On the early cars the exhaust gases emerged through a hole on the right side of the bumper.
 
1961 model year Vauxhall Victor F Estate, featuring the simplified grille new that year and also showing the less sculpted rear doors and restyled bumpers introduced with the 1959 model year Series 2
 
At the request of Canadian Chevrolet-Oldsmobile dealers, restyled "Envoy" variants were developed and sold in competition with the Vauxhall Victor sold through Pontiac-Buick dealers
 
A swiss made 1960 Victor Super, ″Montage Suisse″ badge rightmost in the grille.

An estate variant was launched in 1958. When restyled, as the Series 2, the car lost all its '55 Chevy styling detail and the teardrop shaped Vauxhall flutes were replaced by a single chrome side-stripe running nose to tail. The sculpted "porthole" rear bumper tips, which rusted badly due to exhaust residue, were replaced by plain, straight ones. The old bumper ends continued to be used for many years on a variety of motor coaches and ice-cream vans.

Although the engine was of similar size to that of the outgoing Wyvern it was in critical respects new. Fitted with a single Zenith carburettor it had an output of 55 bhp (41 kW) at 4200 rpm and gained a reputation of giving a long trouble free life. This was also the year when Vauxhall standardized on "premium" grade petrol/gasoline, permitting an increase in the compression ratio from the Wyvern's 6.8:1 to 7.8:1. Premium grade petrol had become available in the UK at the end of 1953, following an end to post-war fuel rationing, and at that time offered average octane level of 93, but in the ensuing four years this had crept up to 95 (RON).[9]

The Victor's three-speed gearbox had synchromesh on all forward ratios and was operated by a column-mounted lever. In early 1958 Newtondrive two-pedal control was available as an option.

Suspension was independent at the front by coil springs and an anti-roll bar was fitted on a rubber-mounted cross member. The rear suspension used a live axle and semi elliptic leaf springs. Steering was of the recirculating ball type. Lockheed hydraulic 8 in (203 mm) drum brakes were used.

A "Super" version tested by The Motor magazine in 1957 had a top speed of 74.4 mph (119.7 km/h) and could accelerate from 0-60 mph (97 km/h) in 28.1 seconds. A fuel consumption of 31.0 miles per imperial gallon (9.1 L/100 km; 25.8 mpg‑US) was recorded. The test car cost £758 including taxes.[7] The estate car cost £931.

A Series II model was announced in 1959 with simplified styling. The new car was available in three versions with a Deluxe as the top model featuring leather trim and separate front seats.

F Series Victor sedans were assembled at General Motors New Zealand plant in Petone. Most were Supers with column shift and three-speed manual transmission, though some base models were made for government fleet contracts. Wagons were imported.

F type Victors were available in the United States and Canada through the Pontiac dealer network. They are the only Vauxhall-brand car ever offered in the US, however Vauxhalls continued to be available from Buick-Pontiac-GMC dealers in Canada (along with their unique Envoy-branded variants sold at Chevrolet-Oldsmobile dealers) until 1971.

FB Series Victor and VX4/90 edit

Vauxhall Victor FB
Vauxhall VX4/90 FB
 
Overview
Also calledEnvoy[10]
Production1961–1964
328,640 produced.[3]
AssemblyLuton, United Kingdom[11]
Australia[11]
Belgium[11]
Denmark[11]
Portugal[11]
Trinidad[11]
New Zealand[11]
South Africa[11]
Body and chassis
Body style4-door saloon
5-door estate car
Powertrain
Engine1.5 or 1.6 L Straight-4 ohv
Transmission4-speed manual
Dimensions
Wheelbase100 in (2,540 mm)[6]
Length173 in (4,394 mm)[12]
Width64 in (1,626 mm)[12]
Height58 in (1,500 mm)[12]

The more cleanly styled FB announced 14 September 1960[13] ran until 1964 with a substantial improvement regarding rust protection. It was widely exported, although sales in the US ended after 1961 when Pontiac, Oldsmobile and Buick came up with home-grown compact models of their own, with the all-new GM "Y" platform (North America). Consequently, the FB only achieved sales of 328,000 vehicles by the time it was replaced in 1964. The body styling owed nothing to any US GM influence, the flat front and turtle-deck rear resembling some older US Fords. Mechanically, the main change was the option of a 4-speed all-synchromesh transmission with floor change but the previously used 3-speed all-synchro column change unit was still fitted as standard. The base (FBY) engine was also revised with higher compression ratio and revised manifolding increasing the power output to 49.5 bhp (37 kW; 50 PS). In September 1963 the engine was enlarged from 1508 to 1594 cc, identified as the FB30.[14] The increased capacity coincided with a further increase in the compression ratio of the standard engine from 8.1:1 to 8.5:1, reflecting the continuing increase of the average octane level of "premium grade" fuel (on which the Victor unit had by now standardised) offered in the UK, now to 97 (RON).[9] 1963 was also the year when front disc brakes with larger 14 in (360 mm) wheels became an option. Models with the larger engine had a revised frontal treatment with a block style grille element and revised parking lights at either lower extreme of the grille.

A Vynide-covered bench front seat was standard on the base model and Super Victor but individual seats were standard on the De Luxe and optional on the lower-priced cars. Other options included a heater, fog lamps, radio, screen washers, reversing light and seat belts.

 
The FB was the first Victor to spawn a sporty VX4/90 derivative.
 
The Victor FB Estate was marketed in Canada as the Envoy Sherwood Station Wagon

A 1508 cc "Super" version was tested by the British magazine The Motor in 1961 and was found to have a top speed of 76.2 mph (122.6 km/h) and could accelerate from 0–60 mph (97 km/h) in 22.6 seconds. A fuel consumption of 32.2 miles per imperial gallon (8.8 L/100 km; 26.8 mpg‑US) was recorded. The test car cost £798 including taxes of £251.[12]

A sporty derivative, the VX4/90, announced separately in mid-October 1961[15] was also available. It was fitted with a twin-carburettor, a taller alloy head, high-compression expansion controlled pistons, and a nitrided EN19B steel crankshaft engine giving 71 bhp (53 kW; 72 PS) and servo-assisted disc brakes (same as Cresta brakes) on the front wheels. Externally the car was distinguished from the standard car by a coloured stripe down the side, revised grille and larger tail-light clusters. These cosmetic features were essentially similar to the Canadian-market-only Envoy models.

The VX4/90 was available only in saloon form with 4-speed (GM Opel) all-synchro gearbox, Lockheed front disc brakes, 14 inch wheels, front individual / bucket seats, full instrumentation including mechanically driven (from the distributor) tachometer and heater. The VX4/90 FBX engine also was upgraded to the 31FB, the larger bore size giving 1595 cc (97 cubic inches). With a change in rear axle ratio from 4.125 to 3.9, the VX 4/90 could now easily exceed 90 mph.

General Motors New Zealand assembled the Victor FB sedan line in New Zealand, in Standard and Super form with three speed, column shift manual and bench front seat. Four speed floor shift, a factory option in England, was not available nor were disc brakes. Wagons, Deluxe sedans and the VX4/90 were rare imports, many under the no-remittance, no overseas exchange, deposit scheme available to consumers at the time. The Kiwi models were facelifted for 1964 but did not get the revised rear licence plate surround introduced in the UK market.

FC Series Victor and VX4/90 edit

Vauxhall Victor FC
Vauxhall VX4/90 FC
 
Overview
Also calledEnvoy
Production1963–1967
219,814 FC and 13,449 VX4/90 produced.[3]
Body and chassis
Body style4-door saloon
5-door estate car
Powertrain
Engine1.6 L Straight-4 ohv
Transmission3- or 4-speed manual
automatic
Dimensions
Wheelbase100 in (2,540 mm)[6]
Length174.7 in (4,437 mm)
(saloon & estate)
Width65 in (1,651 mm)
Height55.2 in (1,402 mm)
Curb weight2,194 lb (995 kg) (Victor)
2,256 lb (1,023 kg) (VX 4/90)

The FC was the first Vauxhall to use curved side-window glass, allowing greater internal width: the Estate derivative was noted as being especially capacious for its class. Nevertheless, the public at the time regarded it as a qualitative downgrade after the pleasantly styled, conservative FB. As a countermeasure the FC Victor was marketed as the Victor 101, the name arising from the claim that there were '101 improvements' over the FB. Bench or separate front seating was offered, with three-speed column-change gearbox or the optional four-speed floor change. A 'Powerglide' two-speed automatic transmission was also available. Another US feature was that the optional radio was incorporated into the bright-metal dashboard trim. An innovative styling cue, which was adopted four years later by the Audi 100, was the incorporation of the side and indicator lamps in the front bumper, as had been common practice in the US for many years. The sculpted bumpers were, for the first time in the UK, contiguous with the body styling. The overall look of the car was unique in GM, with its slab sides outlined with brightwork seam covers incorporating the door handles. This, with the full width grille incorporating the headlights, was more reminiscent of the Lincoln Continental.

The FC (101) was the last Victor to have an engine with push rods and rockers operating the overhead valves. Victor FC models had racked up 238,000 sales by late 1967 when the 'Coke bottle'-shaped FD replaced it.

As with the rest of the running gear, the sporting VX 4/90 was developed from the FB series and offered an alloy head, higher compression ratio, twin-Zenith 34IV carburettors, stiffer suspension and additional instruments. Vauxhall took the VX4/90 seriously enough to offer an optional limited-slip differential, but few cars were ordered with it: the VX4/90 was, by this time, largely overshadowed by the less expensive Ford Cortina GT, which also had a higher profile in race and rally competitions.

Overall, FC survival numbers appear to be less than the F, FB and even FD series, due to bad rust problems, so examples are rare, unfairly forgotten, and undervalued.

Towards the end of the model run, in May 1967, a Victor 101 de luxe was road tested by Britain's Autocar magazine. The vehicle tested came with a four-speed floor-change gearbox and the 1595 cc engine delivering a claimed 66 bhp.[16] A maximum speed of 81 mph (130 km/h) was achieved, which matched that achieved by a recently tested Austin A60 Cambridge and a Ford Cortina 1600 de luxe.[16] The Victor accelerated to 60 mph (97 km/h) in 20.4 seconds, which was slightly quicker than the Austin but slightly slower than the lighter Cortina.[16] The Vauxhall's overall fuel consumption for the test, at 23.1 mpg (10.9 L/100 km) placed it at the bottom of this class by more than 10%, while its manufacturer's recommended retail price of £822 was higher than that asked for the Austin at £804 or for the Ford at £761.[16] (A lower price of £806 would have been available on the Victor if the test car had come with the three-speed column-change gearbox and all-round drum brakes.[16]) The overall tone of the test was cautiously positive, with plaudits for the comfort, the lightness of the controls, the (optional) servo-assisted disc/drum brakes and the road holding, but adverse comments concerning the extent of the Victor's propensity to roll and the rather low gearing which accentuated the variability of fuel consumption according to driving style.[16]

All Victors sported a different grille treatment for 1967, a final-year facelift that was standard Vauxhall practice at the time. This had a more finished and upmarket look with sturdier bars rather than the cheaper looking criss-cross element on earlier cars. The waistline chrome strip was also thinner.

New Zealand assembly continued again with the Super with three-speed manual column-shift transmission and bench front seat though some base models - minus the distinctive waistline chrome strips - were also built for government fleet business. Powerglide two-speed automatic became an option in 1966. As with the FB, there were no factory options. The model was facelifted for 1967 and, near the end of the run, a four-speed manual gearbox with floor shift and twin front seats replaced the three-speeder with bench seat. Some Deluxe models, wagons and VX4/90s were imported fully assembled from the UK but were quite rare.

FD Series Victor, VX4/90 and Ventora edit

Vauxhall Victor FD
Vauxhall VX4/90 FD
Vauxhall Ventora FD
 
Overview
Also calledEnvoy
Production1967–1972
198,085 produced.[3]
Body and chassis
Body style4-door saloon
5-door estate car
Powertrain
Engine1.6 L ohc I4
2.0 L ohc I4
3.3 L ohv I6
Transmission3-speed manual (column)
4-speed manual (floor)
Borg-Warner 3-speed automatic (4 cyl engines till 1969)
G M Powerglide 3-speed automatic (6 cyl engines from 1968: all engines from late 1969) [17][18]
Dimensions
Wheelbase102 in (2,591 mm)[6]
Length177 in (4,496 mm)
(saloon & estate)
Width67 in (1,702 mm)
Height52.5 in (1,334 mm)
Curb weight2,320 lb (1,052 kg) (Victor)
2,553 lb (1,158 kg) (Ventora)

The FD was released at a time when the UK was undergoing a currency crisis as well as increasingly militant labour relations, resulting in rising prices and reduced quality. The FD Victor was inspired by the contemporary "coke bottle" styling which had emanated from Detroit USA, five years before Ford's Cortina MK III. Fitted with all-new 1599 cc and 1975 cc engines that were the first British mass produced belt-driven overhead camshaft engines, the Slant Four was advanced for its time and application.[19] The car also featured a bonded-in windscreen, the first for a mass produced car. The suspension design of the car was more sophisticated than most other British mass-produced efforts of the time, with a live axle located by trailing arms and a Panhard rod and sprung on coil springs instead of the traditional leaf springs, and a double wishbone front suspension assembly. The FD Victor was first shown at the October 1967 British Motor Show. where it was dubbed "Car of The Show" and also received the Don Safety Award.[20]

The FD, however, departed from the traditional Victor family car bench front seat norm (there were still models with bench seats however) and could be ordered with comfortable contoured bucket seating front and rear. This was standard on the Victor 2000 (later 2000 SL with the facelift for 1970) and optional on the Victor 1600 (renamed Super with the 1970 facelift). Bucket seats were standard on the more sporty VX4/90 and six-cylinder Ventora versions, with the latter having reclining backrests as standard from 1969. All bucket seat models dispensed with the column shift and adopted a four-speed floor shift, with overdrive standard on manual VX4/90s and optional on the Ventora.[citation needed]

 
The Ventora combined the body of the Victor FD (from 1972 Victor FE) with the 3.3-litre engine from the Vauxhall Cresta.
 
Vauxhall Victor FD Estate

In February 1968, Vauxhall launched the Vauxhall Ventora, which was in effect a marriage of the Victor FD body with the 3.3-litre six-cylinder engine hitherto offered only in the larger Cresta and Viscount models.[21] The Ventora offered a claimed 123 bhp (92 kW; 125 PS) of output compared with 88 bhp (66 kW; 89 PS) from the 2-litre 4-cylinder Victor, also featuring correspondingly larger front disc-brake calipers. The Ventora therefore differed most spectacularly from its siblings through its effortless performance: in that respect it had no obvious direct competitor at or near its price (£1,102 including taxes in February 1968) on the UK market.[21] The interior was also enhanced, with extra instrumentation including a rev counter. From the outside Ventoras can be identified by their wider tyres, a front grille of toothy-harmonica like gaps in place of the Victor's closely packed horizontal bars, fluted inserts in the hubcaps, and a black vinyl roof.[21]

 
The VX 4/90 was a sporting derivative of the Victor, initially based on the Victor FB, but subsequently included in the FC, FD and FE Victor families.

May 1968 saw the return to the Vauxhall range of a Victor estate, now based on the Victor FD.[22] The estate, like the saloon, offered a choice of 1599 cc or 1975 cc four-cylinder engines and was also offered with the 3294 cc engine normally found in the Vauxhall Cresta.[22] (The Victor estate 3294 was the only six-cylinder Victor offered on the domestic market, although the Ventora was effectively a six-cylinder Victor saloon by another name.) Rear suspension was beefed up on the estate models and all apart from the base 1599 cc version came with front wheel disc brakes.[22] As on the FD saloon, however, the standard transmission was a three-speed manual gearbox controlled from a column-mounted lever.[22] A four-speed box with a floor-mounted gear lever was available at extra cost on the four-cylinder models, although it was included in the overall package for buyers of the Victor 3294 cc estate.[22] The floor-mounted lever was set well forward to enable it to remain clear of the bench front seat which was standard in the 1599 cc versions.[citation needed]

Sales of the FD came in below those of the FC, at 198,000 or so units produced over a slightly longer production run that ended in December 1971, though new cars were offered for sale until the arrival of the Victor FE in March 1972.[23] The lower numbers reflected the effects of a long strike Vauxhall underwent in 1970, as well as the closing off of some export markets — the FD was the last Victor to be sold in Canada as either a Vauxhall or Envoy, and the last to be officially imported (and assembled) into New Zealand.[citation needed]

As well as the 1.6 and 2.0 I4s, the FD series, the last Victor line to be sold there, was also available in New Zealand (sedans only; wagons were rare imports) with the larger Cresta PC's 3294 cc engine, badged as the Victor 3300, later 3300SL. These were manufactured with a choice of 4-speed manual gearbox or a 2-stage GM Powerglide automatic and most, apart from early cars, had the Ventora's grille. The new three speed GM Automatic (aka Holden Trimatic) gearbox was available for the update 1970 2.0 and 3.3 models. Bench (earlier 1.6 models with three-speed manual column shift only) or bucket front seats were available.[citation needed]

A one-off Ventora was the Black Prince. This high-profile modified car used components leftover after Gordon-Keeble went bust in the 1960s and was built in 1971, based on a modified Victor FD. The car featured a 5.4-litre V8 Chevrolet engine, ZF 5-speed gearbox and a limited-slip differential. Special features included a Sony 4-band radio that could be removed from the dashboard and used as a portable radio, auxiliary dials, Lucas Square 8 fog lights, matt black bonnet stripe, dash-mounted ice detector and map lights. The car was offered for sale in 1972 for approximately £3000, and was broken up in the late 1980s, with the owner using the running gear in a kit car. However, it is now known that one of the two cars built still exists in reasonable condition, but without the original engine/transmission, as it has been offered for sale in recent years. In reality, this car was merely a project to utilize the parts received from the administrators of the bankrupt Gordon-Keeble Car Co.[24]

A 1972 Victor purchased at £60 and called Red Victor 2, has been heavily modified with around 2,000 hp to go 0-60mph in 1 second while still being street legal.[25][26][27][28]

The earliest known surviving original FD series Victor 2000 is LRU 802F. A January '68 registered car in Oyster Grey with a Casino Red interior. Known affectionately by The FD Register as 'Tom' after its first owner.[citation needed]

One earlier example in red survives which is extensively modified.[citation needed]

FE Series Victor, VX4/90, Ventora, VX1800 and VX2300 edit

Vauxhall Victor FE
Vauxhall VX4/90 FE
Vauxhall Ventora FE
Vauxhall VX1800 FE
Vauxhall VX2300 FE
 
Overview
Production1972–1978 [29]
1984–2002 (India; Hindustan Contessa)
44,078 (Victor 1800/2300) [29]
113,476 (VX4/90 to 1976) [29]
7,291 (Ventora) [29]
693 (Victor 3300) [29]
25,185 (VX1800/VX2300) [29]
Body and chassis
Body style4-door saloon
5-door estate car
RelatedOpel Rekord
Hindustan Contessa
Powertrain
Engine1759 cc OHC I4
2279 cc OHC I4
2793 cc OHV I6
3294 cc OHV I6
Transmission4-speed manual
automatic
Dimensions
Wheelbase105 in (2,667 mm)[6]
Length179 in (4,540 mm)
Width67 in (1,700 mm)
Height54 in (1,400 mm)

The last of the Victors, launched in March 1972,[23] was the FE. Magazine and newspaper advertisements used the marketing slogan, "NEW VICTOR - The transcontinentals". The car appeared substantially larger than its predecessor, but was actually no wider and only 2 inches (5 cm) longer with much of the extra length accounted for by larger bumpers.[30] Nevertheless, a higher cabin and improved packaging enabled the manufacturer to boast of 1.5 inches (38 mm) more leg room in the front and no less than 4 inches (100 mm) of extra leg room in the back, with virtually no loss of boot/trunk capacity. Useful increases in headroom and shoulder-level cabin width were also achieved through the use of differently shaped side panels and windows.[30] The Victor Deluxes originally had a bench seat in front; this was replaced with bucket seats for 1973 and the parking brake was moved to its conventional position on the floor between them.[31]

Most UK cars in this class featured manual transmission and with the FE Vauxhall belatedly fell into line with their principal UK competitor by including a four-speed gearbox – available only at extra cost on the old Victor FD – as standard equipment.[30] The FE's extra weight presumably made this development irresistible. The four-speed transmission used the same box and ratios across the range, from the 1759 cc Victor to the torquey 3294 cc Ventora-badged version: contemporary road tests of the four-cylinder cars comment adversely on the wide gap – highlighted on the mountain roads included in the Portuguese route chosen for the car's press launch – between second and third gears.[30]

 
1972 Victor FE
 
1972 Victor FE estate

Although the architecture of the suspension remained as before, numerous detailed modifications were made to counter criticism of the old model. Changes included an anti-roll bar as standard equipment on all but the entry-level models, and stiffer springs at the back, intended to compensate for the Victor's tendency to understeer.[30] At the front the springing remained soft by the standards of the time: the track was widened (by 1.7 inches / 4 cm) and wheel geometry modified to incorporate "anti-dive action", improvements intended to address the Victor's tendency to wallow, which by then was attracting criticism from performance-oriented commentators.[30]

 
1972 Vauxhall VX4/90 (FE)
 
Vauxhall Ventora Saloon (FE)

The new Victor shared its floorpan and its basic bodyshell architecture with the Opel Rekord D (therefore the two cars look superficially similar) but all of the exterior panels were unique to the Victor and thus not interchangeable with the Rekord. The car used Vauxhall powertrains, along its own suspension and rack-and-pinion steering as opposed to the Rekord's recirculating ball unit. The front end incorporated the then advanced detail of having the slim bumper bisect the grille, with a third of the grille and the side-lights (on quad headlamp models) below the bumper line.

Comparisons between the Victor and the Opel Rekord D were inevitable. An important difference from the back seat involved the rear doors. The Opel's door incorporated rear quarter lights and windows that wound fully down into the door whereas Vauxhall's designers preferred the "cleaner uncluttered look" arising from their elimination of rear quarter lights.[30] The fact that back seat passengers could only open their windows down to approximately a third of their depth before further opening was blocked by the presence of the wheel arches was held out as a safety feature to complement the fitting of child-proof locks, given that back-seat passengers would no doubt include small children.[30] Despite the absence of shared body panels anywhere that they could be seen, detailed investigation disclosed that minor assemblies such as the door locks and the wiper mechanisms were shared with the Opel Rekord D.[30]

The FE Victor was the last Vauxhall to be designed independently of Opel. The engines were carried over from the FD range although enlarged to 1759 cc and 2279 cc. For a short period, the straight-six engine was used in the Ventora and 3300 SL models, the latter effectively a Victor Estate with lesser trim than the luxury Ventora. In spite of the heavy engine the 3300 SL Estate did not originally have power steering, this only arrived for the 1973 model year.[31] The estates had a more sloping rear, similar to a hatchback, than the Rekord equivalent. The four-cylinder FE estate in fact had perfect 50/50 weight distribution. For the 1974 model year, the Victor underwent a light facelift with some interior modifications as well.[32]

1974 finally saw the introduction of a proper Ventora Estate, along with running changes for the rest of the range. For some markets there was also a smaller 2.8-litre version of the big six available in the Ventora and Victor 3300 SL Estate;[33] with more weight and less power than the four-cylinder, as well as higher fuel consumption, the extra cost was hard to justify and it soon disappeared from price lists along with the Ventora 3.3-litre.[34]

World energy crises, falling exports and an increasingly muddled image led to Vauxhall's decline during the early 1970s, such that sales of the FE slumped to 55,000 units before it was transformed to the VX series in January 1976.

VX Series edit

 
A late Vauxhall VX2300 GLS

At the start of 1976 the relatively large 1800 cc Vauxhall Victor came with a recommended sticker price lower than that of the more modern but smaller and relatively well equipped Vauxhall Cavalier GL, which will have encouraged fleet managers to negotiate for higher discounts on the Cavalier and left the basic Victor looking embarrassingly underpriced.[35] To try to move the Victor upmarket, Vauxhall upgraded the trim level of the basic Victor 1800 cc to match that of the 2300 cc version, with improvements that included fabric seat trim, a new clarified instrument display embellished with mock timber surround as well as a new central console.[35] and a seat belt warning light across the range.[35] Under the bonnet / hood various upgrades were made to the 1800 cc engine which now offered 88 bhp (66 kW; 89 PS) of output in place of the 77 bhp (57 kW; 78 PS) previously claimed.[35] The changes carried a weight penalty, but performance was nevertheless usefully improved with top speed up from 89 mph (143 km/h) to 100 mph (161 km/h).[35] To draw attention to the changes Vauxhall also dropped the Victor and VX 4/90 model names and the range was renamed the Vauxhall VX in January 1976.[36] The VX Series is distinguished from the outside by a simplified grille and revised headlights.[35]

 
Vauxhall VX1800 Estate

Since the demise of the Vauxhall Cresta more than three years earlier, only the Ventora had used the old Vauxhall six-cylinder engine: but now the four-cylinder VX 2300 GLS replaced the six-cylinder FE Ventora as Vauxhall's flagship. The VX2300 GLS was fitted with four square halogen headlamps, velour upholstery, tinted glass and power steering.[37]

The more sporting VX 4/90 was reintroduced, now based on the VX (formerly Victor FE), in March 1977 with a 5-speed close-ratio Getrag gearbox with dog-leg first gear (also featured in the VX 2300 GLS model), initially for mainland European export markets only.[36][38] The car featured a modified, twin-carburettor version of the existing 2279 cc four-cylinder engine for which an output of 116 bhp (87 kW; 118 PS) was claimed,[38] up from 108 hp (81 kW; 109 PS) in the VX 2300, and a prototype fuel-injected variant was tested but not put into production. The car was fitted with twin halogen headlights and supplementary front fog-lights fitted beneath the front bumper, and also benefitted from extra sound-deadening materials to reduce road noise.[38] The side window frames were fashionably blackened, and only four exterior colours could be specified, of which three were metallic.[38] The manufacturer stated that the UK market would receive right-hand-drive versions of this latest incarnation of the VX 4/90 only in 1978.[38] In 1978 the Vauxhall Carlton was released as a direct replacement for the VX1800/2300, production of which ended in the same year.[39] The Carlton was based on the corresponding Opel Rekord E, and unlike the Victor FE/VX, was much closer in its engineering and body structure to its Opel sister - continuing the process of "Opelisation" of the Vauxhall range that had begun some years earlier.[40]

Product variants edit

The VX four-ninety was announced as a performance oriented version of the FB Victor in October 1961. During the FB series, the name changed slightly to VX 4/90 which continued to be used until the end of the FE range although the final VX 1978 incarnation carried badges which read VX490. The VX Four Ninety designation originally came from its engineering designation - Vauxhall eXperimental four-cylinder engine of 90 in³ capacity. As well as performance increasing modifications, VX 4/90s also had a number of exterior and interior modifications to distinguish them from Victors.

The Ventora, was introduced to the FD series sold between 1968 until it was dropped from the FE series in 1976. This used the Victor bodyshell, but had the Bedford derived 3294 cc straight six engine from the larger Cresta models. Again, the Ventora was distinguished from the Victor by improved trim levels and a more regal grille.

Victor specials edit

Big Bertha edit

A special version of the FE was the one-off 1974 Repco Holden-engined Ventora, nicknamed "Big Bertha", built to compete in the "Super Saloon" category of British motor sport.[41] Driven by Gerry Marshall, this car was fitted with a race-tuned 5.0 L V8 Repco Holden engine and bore little resemblance to the production car, except in its overall appearance. However the design was ill-fated, and suffered an accident in its sixth race. It was considered too big and too heavy, and had handling problems. Eventually it was decided to build a new, much smaller car around the same engine and chassis (much shortened) and this car was given the silhouette of the "droopsnoot" Firenza. Nicknamed "Baby Bertha", this car was more successful and went on to dominate the category until Vauxhall moved from racing into rallying in 1977.

References edit

  1. ^ Koch, Jeff (June 2008). "1957-'61 Vauxhall Victor". Hemmings Sports and Exotic Car.
  2. ^ "Vauxhall F - Victor US market". Vauxpedia.
  3. ^ a b c d Sedgwick, Michael; Gillies, Mark (1986). A–Z of Cars 1945–1970. Osprey. ISBN 978-0-600-33391-3.
  4. ^ A Look at GMH, First Edition - September 1961, www.hrc.org.au Retrieved 27 March 2018
  5. ^ They built Buicks in Switzerland (and other GM′s)? Retrieved 13 August 2020
  6. ^ a b c d e Culshaw; Horrobin (1974). Complete Catalogue of British Cars. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-16689-5.
  7. ^ a b c d "The Vauxhall Victor Super". The Motor. 6 March 1957.
  8. ^ "Those were the days: 1957". Express & Star. The Claverley Group. Retrieved 11 December 2013.
  9. ^ a b "Getting the lead out". The Motor. Vol. 3539. 25 April 1970. pp. 23–25.
  10. ^ . 30 December 2014. Archived from the original on 30 December 2014. Retrieved 9 February 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Vauxhall FB - Victor & VX Four Ninety, vauxpedianet.uk2sitebuilder.com 16 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 8 January 2016
  12. ^ a b c d "The Vauxhall Victor Super". The Motor. 8 November 1961.
  13. ^ New Vauxhall Victor. The Times, Thursday, 14 September 1960; pg. 8; Issue 55186
  14. ^ "Verdict on the Vauxhall Victor". Popular Motoring. 8 nbr 6: 58–59. March 1969.
  15. ^ Research Brings New Era In Car Design. The Times, Tuesday, 17 October 1961; pg. 18; Issue 55214
  16. ^ a b c d e f "Autocar Road Test: Vauxhall Victor 101 de luxe". Autocar. Vol. 126, no. 3718. 18 May 1967. pp. 17–21.
  17. ^ "Autotest - Vauxhall Victor 2000 EC Automatic". Autocar. Vol. 129, no. 3786. 5 September 1968. pp. 16–21.
  18. ^ "A VX 4/90 again". The Motor. Vol. Nbr 3512. 11 October 1969. pp. 54–55.
  19. ^ "VAUXHALL - THE SLANT FOUR ENGINE STORY". Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  20. ^ "About the FD Victor, Ventora and VX4/90". Vauxhall VX4/90 Drivers' Club. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  21. ^ a b c "Vauxhall Ventora: Cresta power train in Victor structure". Autocar. Vol. 128 nbr 3759. 29 February 1968. pp. 2–5.
  22. ^ a b c d e "Vauxhall Victor Estate". Autocar. Vol. 128 nbr 3770. 16 May 1968. pp. 18–19.
  23. ^ a b "Used car test: 1971 Vauxhall Victor 3300SL Estate automatic". Autocar. Vol. 138, no. 4000. 5 September 1968. pp. 50–51.
  24. ^ . Retro-Motoring.com. Archived from the original on 9 February 2009. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  25. ^ BBC. "W'ton man owns the world's fastest car". Retrieved 9 February 2017.
  26. ^ "Fifth Gear - Season 10, Episode 4: Episode 4 - TV.com". TV.com. CBS Interactive.
  27. ^ "Andy's Vauxhall has edge on F1 « Express & Star". expressandstar.com.
  28. ^ "Red Victor dragsters adopted by Vauxhall « Express & Star". expressandstar.com.
  29. ^ a b c d e f Graham Robson, A-Z of Cars of the 1970s, pages 170-171
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Vauxhall's fifth Victor". Motor. 19 February 1972. pp. 36–44.
  31. ^ a b Wilkins, Gordon (December 1972). "World Cars 1972-3". CAR (South Africa). Vol. 16, no. 11. Cape Town, South Africa: Ramsay, Son & Parker (Pty) Ltd. p. 59.
  32. ^ Braunschweig, Robert; et al., eds. (14 March 1974). "Automobil Revue '74". Automobil-Revue (in German and French). 69. Hallwag AG: 5161. ISSN 0005-1314.
  33. ^ Automobil Revue '74, p. 5162
  34. ^ "Vauxhall – FE Victor VX4 90 Ventora 1972". vauxpedia.com.
  35. ^ a b c d e f "Autotest: Vauxhall VX 1800". Autocar. 17 July 1976. pp. 6–10.
  36. ^ a b Quattroruote: Tutte le Auto del Mondo 77/78 (in Italian). Editoriale Domus S.p.A. 1977. p. 524.
  37. ^ Vauxhall V72 Platform - 94000 FE VX Series, vauxpedianet.uk2sitebuilder.com 20 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 5 May 2016
  38. ^ a b c d e "Motorweek:New Models ... VX 4/90". Motor. 5 March 1977. p. 2.
  39. ^ Graham Robson, A-Z of Cars of the 1970s, pages 171-172
  40. ^ Parliamentary Papers, House of Commons and Command, Volume 25, H.M. Stationery Office, 1974, page 164
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 March 2016.

External links edit

  • Publicity pictures for the Vauxhall F Victor Estate
  • VX4/90 Drivers Club (Owners Club catering for FD, FE and VX series Victors, Ventoras and VX4/90's)

vauxhall, victor, large, family, produced, vauxhall, from, 1957, until, 1976, victor, introduced, replace, outgoing, wyvern, model, renamed, vauxhall, series, 1976, continued, production, until, 1978, which, time, grown, significantly, viewed, least, home, mar. The Vauxhall Victor is a large family car produced by Vauxhall from 1957 until 1976 The Victor was introduced to replace the outgoing Wyvern model It was renamed Vauxhall VX Series in 1976 and continued in production until 1978 by which time it had grown significantly and was viewed at least in its home market as a larger than average family car Vauxhall VictorVauxhall Victor Saloon F Series OverviewManufacturerVauxhall General Motors Also calledVauxhall VX4 90Vauxhall Ventora EnvoyProduction1957 1978Body and chassisClassLarge family car D ChronologyPredecessorVauxhall WyvernVauxhall Cresta FE series SuccessorVauxhall CarltonVauxhall ViceroyVauxhall Royale The last Victor the Victor FE was also manufactured under licence by Hindustan Motors in India as the Hindustan Contessa during the 1980s and early 2000s with an Isuzu engine The Victor was replaced in 1978 by the Vauxhall Carlton essentially a badge engineered version of the Opel Rekord E The Victor briefly became Britain s most exported car 1 with sales in markets as far flung as the United States sold by Pontiac dealers since Vauxhall had been part of GM from 1925 Canada Australia New Zealand South Africa and Asian right hand drive markets such as Ceylon now Sri Lanka India Pakistan Malaysia Thailand and Singapore In Canada it was marketed as both the Vauxhall Victor sold through Pontiac Buick dealerships and the Envoy through Chevrolet Oldsmobile dealers The Victor was also instrumental in giving Vauxhall its first in house designed estate car which complemented the four door saloon Contents 1 F Series Victor 2 FB Series Victor and VX4 90 3 FC Series Victor and VX4 90 4 FD Series Victor VX4 90 and Ventora 5 FE Series Victor VX4 90 Ventora VX1800 and VX2300 5 1 VX Series 6 Product variants 7 Victor specials 7 1 Big Bertha 8 References 9 External linksF Series Victor editVauxhall Victor F nbsp OverviewAlso calledEnvoy Vauxhall Voyager 2 Production1957 1961390 745 produced 3 AssemblyUnited Kingdom Australia 4 Petone New ZealandAntwerp BelgiumBiel Bienne Switzerland 5 Body and chassisBody style4 door saloon5 door estate carPowertrainEngine1 5 L OHV I4Transmission3 speed manualDimensionsWheelbase98 in 2 489 mm 6 Length167 in 4 242 mm 7 Width63 in 1 600 mm 7 Height59 in 1 499 mm 7 The original Victor launched on 28 February 1957 8 was coded the F series and saw a production run of more than 390 000 units The car was of unitary construction and featured a large glass area with heavily curved windscreen and rear window Following American styling trends then current the windscreen pillars A pillars sloped forwards In fact the body style was derived directly from the classic 55 Chevrolet Bel Air though this is not apparent unless the two cars are viewed side by side Bench seats were fitted front and rear trimmed in Rayon and Elastofab and two colour interior trim was standard The Super model had extra chrome trim notably around the windows remnants of the signature Vauxhall bonnet flutes ran along the front flanks and the exhaust pipe exited through the rear bumper The car was equipped with arm rests on the doors door operated courtesy lights a two spoke steering wheel and twin sun visors nbsp Vauxhall Victor F 1958 rear view treatment On the early cars the exhaust gases emerged through a hole on the right side of the bumper nbsp 1961 model year Vauxhall Victor F Estate featuring the simplified grille new that year and also showing the less sculpted rear doors and restyled bumpers introduced with the 1959 model year Series 2 nbsp At the request of Canadian Chevrolet Oldsmobile dealers restyled Envoy variants were developed and sold in competition with the Vauxhall Victor sold through Pontiac Buick dealers nbsp A swiss made 1960 Victor Super Montage Suisse badge rightmost in the grille An estate variant was launched in 1958 When restyled as the Series 2 the car lost all its 55 Chevy styling detail and the teardrop shaped Vauxhall flutes were replaced by a single chrome side stripe running nose to tail The sculpted porthole rear bumper tips which rusted badly due to exhaust residue were replaced by plain straight ones The old bumper ends continued to be used for many years on a variety of motor coaches and ice cream vans Although the engine was of similar size to that of the outgoing Wyvern it was in critical respects new Fitted with a single Zenith carburettor it had an output of 55 bhp 41 kW at 4200 rpm and gained a reputation of giving a long trouble free life This was also the year when Vauxhall standardized on premium grade petrol gasoline permitting an increase in the compression ratio from the Wyvern s 6 8 1 to 7 8 1 Premium grade petrol had become available in the UK at the end of 1953 following an end to post war fuel rationing and at that time offered average octane level of 93 but in the ensuing four years this had crept up to 95 RON 9 The Victor s three speed gearbox had synchromesh on all forward ratios and was operated by a column mounted lever In early 1958 Newtondrive two pedal control was available as an option Suspension was independent at the front by coil springs and an anti roll bar was fitted on a rubber mounted cross member The rear suspension used a live axle and semi elliptic leaf springs Steering was of the recirculating ball type Lockheed hydraulic 8 in 203 mm drum brakes were used A Super version tested by The Motor magazine in 1957 had a top speed of 74 4 mph 119 7 km h and could accelerate from 0 60 mph 97 km h in 28 1 seconds A fuel consumption of 31 0 miles per imperial gallon 9 1 L 100 km 25 8 mpg US was recorded The test car cost 758 including taxes 7 The estate car cost 931 A Series II model was announced in 1959 with simplified styling The new car was available in three versions with a Deluxe as the top model featuring leather trim and separate front seats F Series Victor sedans were assembled at General Motors New Zealand plant in Petone Most were Supers with column shift and three speed manual transmission though some base models were made for government fleet contracts Wagons were imported F type Victors were available in the United States and Canada through the Pontiac dealer network They are the only Vauxhall brand car ever offered in the US however Vauxhalls continued to be available from Buick Pontiac GMC dealers in Canada along with their unique Envoy branded variants sold at Chevrolet Oldsmobile dealers until 1971 FB Series Victor and VX4 90 editVauxhall Victor FB Vauxhall VX4 90 FB nbsp OverviewAlso calledEnvoy 10 Production1961 1964328 640 produced 3 AssemblyLuton United Kingdom 11 Australia 11 Belgium 11 Denmark 11 Portugal 11 Trinidad 11 New Zealand 11 South Africa 11 Body and chassisBody style4 door saloon5 door estate carPowertrainEngine1 5 or 1 6 L Straight 4 ohvTransmission4 speed manualDimensionsWheelbase100 in 2 540 mm 6 Length173 in 4 394 mm 12 Width64 in 1 626 mm 12 Height58 in 1 500 mm 12 The more cleanly styled FB announced 14 September 1960 13 ran until 1964 with a substantial improvement regarding rust protection It was widely exported although sales in the US ended after 1961 when Pontiac Oldsmobile and Buick came up with home grown compact models of their own with the all new GM Y platform North America Consequently the FB only achieved sales of 328 000 vehicles by the time it was replaced in 1964 The body styling owed nothing to any US GM influence the flat front and turtle deck rear resembling some older US Fords Mechanically the main change was the option of a 4 speed all synchromesh transmission with floor change but the previously used 3 speed all synchro column change unit was still fitted as standard The base FBY engine was also revised with higher compression ratio and revised manifolding increasing the power output to 49 5 bhp 37 kW 50 PS In September 1963 the engine was enlarged from 1508 to 1594 cc identified as the FB30 14 The increased capacity coincided with a further increase in the compression ratio of the standard engine from 8 1 1 to 8 5 1 reflecting the continuing increase of the average octane level of premium grade fuel on which the Victor unit had by now standardised offered in the UK now to 97 RON 9 1963 was also the year when front disc brakes with larger 14 in 360 mm wheels became an option Models with the larger engine had a revised frontal treatment with a block style grille element and revised parking lights at either lower extreme of the grille A Vynide covered bench front seat was standard on the base model and Super Victor but individual seats were standard on the De Luxe and optional on the lower priced cars Other options included a heater fog lamps radio screen washers reversing light and seat belts nbsp The FB was the first Victor to spawn a sporty VX4 90 derivative nbsp The Victor FB Estate was marketed in Canada as the Envoy Sherwood Station Wagon A 1508 cc Super version was tested by the British magazine The Motor in 1961 and was found to have a top speed of 76 2 mph 122 6 km h and could accelerate from 0 60 mph 97 km h in 22 6 seconds A fuel consumption of 32 2 miles per imperial gallon 8 8 L 100 km 26 8 mpg US was recorded The test car cost 798 including taxes of 251 12 A sporty derivative the VX4 90 announced separately in mid October 1961 15 was also available It was fitted with a twin carburettor a taller alloy head high compression expansion controlled pistons and a nitrided EN19B steel crankshaft engine giving 71 bhp 53 kW 72 PS and servo assisted disc brakes same as Cresta brakes on the front wheels Externally the car was distinguished from the standard car by a coloured stripe down the side revised grille and larger tail light clusters These cosmetic features were essentially similar to the Canadian market only Envoy models The VX4 90 was available only in saloon form with 4 speed GM Opel all synchro gearbox Lockheed front disc brakes 14 inch wheels front individual bucket seats full instrumentation including mechanically driven from the distributor tachometer and heater The VX4 90 FBX engine also was upgraded to the 31FB the larger bore size giving 1595 cc 97 cubic inches With a change in rear axle ratio from 4 125 to 3 9 the VX 4 90 could now easily exceed 90 mph General Motors New Zealand assembled the Victor FB sedan line in New Zealand in Standard and Super form with three speed column shift manual and bench front seat Four speed floor shift a factory option in England was not available nor were disc brakes Wagons Deluxe sedans and the VX4 90 were rare imports many under the no remittance no overseas exchange deposit scheme available to consumers at the time The Kiwi models were facelifted for 1964 but did not get the revised rear licence plate surround introduced in the UK market FC Series Victor and VX4 90 editVauxhall Victor FC Vauxhall VX4 90 FC nbsp OverviewAlso calledEnvoyProduction1963 1967219 814 FC and 13 449 VX4 90 produced 3 Body and chassisBody style4 door saloon5 door estate carPowertrainEngine1 6 L Straight 4 ohvTransmission3 or 4 speed manualautomaticDimensionsWheelbase100 in 2 540 mm 6 Length174 7 in 4 437 mm saloon amp estate Width65 in 1 651 mm Height55 2 in 1 402 mm Curb weight2 194 lb 995 kg Victor 2 256 lb 1 023 kg VX 4 90 The FC was the first Vauxhall to use curved side window glass allowing greater internal width the Estate derivative was noted as being especially capacious for its class Nevertheless the public at the time regarded it as a qualitative downgrade after the pleasantly styled conservative FB As a countermeasure the FC Victor was marketed as the Victor 101 the name arising from the claim that there were 101 improvements over the FB Bench or separate front seating was offered with three speed column change gearbox or the optional four speed floor change A Powerglide two speed automatic transmission was also available Another US feature was that the optional radio was incorporated into the bright metal dashboard trim An innovative styling cue which was adopted four years later by the Audi 100 was the incorporation of the side and indicator lamps in the front bumper as had been common practice in the US for many years The sculpted bumpers were for the first time in the UK contiguous with the body styling The overall look of the car was unique in GM with its slab sides outlined with brightwork seam covers incorporating the door handles This with the full width grille incorporating the headlights was more reminiscent of the Lincoln Continental The FC 101 was the last Victor to have an engine with push rods and rockers operating the overhead valves Victor FC models had racked up 238 000 sales by late 1967 when the Coke bottle shaped FD replaced it As with the rest of the running gear the sporting VX 4 90 was developed from the FB series and offered an alloy head higher compression ratio twin Zenith 34IV carburettors stiffer suspension and additional instruments Vauxhall took the VX4 90 seriously enough to offer an optional limited slip differential but few cars were ordered with it the VX4 90 was by this time largely overshadowed by the less expensive Ford Cortina GT which also had a higher profile in race and rally competitions Overall FC survival numbers appear to be less than the F FB and even FD series due to bad rust problems so examples are rare unfairly forgotten and undervalued Towards the end of the model run in May 1967 a Victor 101 de luxe was road tested by Britain s Autocar magazine The vehicle tested came with a four speed floor change gearbox and the 1595 cc engine delivering a claimed 66 bhp 16 A maximum speed of 81 mph 130 km h was achieved which matched that achieved by a recently tested Austin A60 Cambridge and a Ford Cortina 1600 de luxe 16 The Victor accelerated to 60 mph 97 km h in 20 4 seconds which was slightly quicker than the Austin but slightly slower than the lighter Cortina 16 The Vauxhall s overall fuel consumption for the test at 23 1 mpg 10 9 L 100 km placed it at the bottom of this class by more than 10 while its manufacturer s recommended retail price of 822 was higher than that asked for the Austin at 804 or for the Ford at 761 16 A lower price of 806 would have been available on the Victor if the test car had come with the three speed column change gearbox and all round drum brakes 16 The overall tone of the test was cautiously positive with plaudits for the comfort the lightness of the controls the optional servo assisted disc drum brakes and the road holding but adverse comments concerning the extent of the Victor s propensity to roll and the rather low gearing which accentuated the variability of fuel consumption according to driving style 16 All Victors sported a different grille treatment for 1967 a final year facelift that was standard Vauxhall practice at the time This had a more finished and upmarket look with sturdier bars rather than the cheaper looking criss cross element on earlier cars The waistline chrome strip was also thinner New Zealand assembly continued again with the Super with three speed manual column shift transmission and bench front seat though some base models minus the distinctive waistline chrome strips were also built for government fleet business Powerglide two speed automatic became an option in 1966 As with the FB there were no factory options The model was facelifted for 1967 and near the end of the run a four speed manual gearbox with floor shift and twin front seats replaced the three speeder with bench seat Some Deluxe models wagons and VX4 90s were imported fully assembled from the UK but were quite rare nbsp Vauxhall Victor FC Estate nbsp Vauxhall VX4 90 FCFD Series Victor VX4 90 and Ventora editVauxhall Victor FD Vauxhall VX4 90 FD Vauxhall Ventora FD nbsp OverviewAlso calledEnvoyProduction1967 1972198 085 produced 3 Body and chassisBody style4 door saloon5 door estate carPowertrainEngine1 6 L ohc I42 0 L ohc I43 3 L ohv I6Transmission3 speed manual column 4 speed manual floor Borg Warner 3 speed automatic 4 cyl engines till 1969 G M Powerglide 3 speed automatic 6 cyl engines from 1968 all engines from late 1969 17 18 DimensionsWheelbase102 in 2 591 mm 6 Length177 in 4 496 mm saloon amp estate Width67 in 1 702 mm Height52 5 in 1 334 mm Curb weight2 320 lb 1 052 kg Victor 2 553 lb 1 158 kg Ventora The FD was released at a time when the UK was undergoing a currency crisis as well as increasingly militant labour relations resulting in rising prices and reduced quality The FD Victor was inspired by the contemporary coke bottle styling which had emanated from Detroit USA five years before Ford s Cortina MK III Fitted with all new 1599 cc and 1975 cc engines that were the first British mass produced belt driven overhead camshaft engines the Slant Four was advanced for its time and application 19 The car also featured a bonded in windscreen the first for a mass produced car The suspension design of the car was more sophisticated than most other British mass produced efforts of the time with a live axle located by trailing arms and a Panhard rod and sprung on coil springs instead of the traditional leaf springs and a double wishbone front suspension assembly The FD Victor was first shown at the October 1967 British Motor Show where it was dubbed Car of The Show and also received the Don Safety Award 20 The FD however departed from the traditional Victor family car bench front seat norm there were still models with bench seats however and could be ordered with comfortable contoured bucket seating front and rear This was standard on the Victor 2000 later 2000 SL with the facelift for 1970 and optional on the Victor 1600 renamed Super with the 1970 facelift Bucket seats were standard on the more sporty VX4 90 and six cylinder Ventora versions with the latter having reclining backrests as standard from 1969 All bucket seat models dispensed with the column shift and adopted a four speed floor shift with overdrive standard on manual VX4 90s and optional on the Ventora citation needed nbsp The Ventora combined the body of the Victor FD from 1972 Victor FE with the 3 3 litre engine from the Vauxhall Cresta nbsp Vauxhall Victor FD Estate In February 1968 Vauxhall launched the Vauxhall Ventora which was in effect a marriage of the Victor FD body with the 3 3 litre six cylinder engine hitherto offered only in the larger Cresta and Viscount models 21 The Ventora offered a claimed 123 bhp 92 kW 125 PS of output compared with 88 bhp 66 kW 89 PS from the 2 litre 4 cylinder Victor also featuring correspondingly larger front disc brake calipers The Ventora therefore differed most spectacularly from its siblings through its effortless performance in that respect it had no obvious direct competitor at or near its price 1 102 including taxes in February 1968 on the UK market 21 The interior was also enhanced with extra instrumentation including a rev counter From the outside Ventoras can be identified by their wider tyres a front grille of toothy harmonica like gaps in place of the Victor s closely packed horizontal bars fluted inserts in the hubcaps and a black vinyl roof 21 nbsp The VX 4 90 was a sporting derivative of the Victor initially based on the Victor FB but subsequently included in the FC FD and FE Victor families May 1968 saw the return to the Vauxhall range of a Victor estate now based on the Victor FD 22 The estate like the saloon offered a choice of 1599 cc or 1975 cc four cylinder engines and was also offered with the 3294 cc engine normally found in the Vauxhall Cresta 22 The Victor estate 3294 was the only six cylinder Victor offered on the domestic market although the Ventora was effectively a six cylinder Victor saloon by another name Rear suspension was beefed up on the estate models and all apart from the base 1599 cc version came with front wheel disc brakes 22 As on the FD saloon however the standard transmission was a three speed manual gearbox controlled from a column mounted lever 22 A four speed box with a floor mounted gear lever was available at extra cost on the four cylinder models although it was included in the overall package for buyers of the Victor 3294 cc estate 22 The floor mounted lever was set well forward to enable it to remain clear of the bench front seat which was standard in the 1599 cc versions citation needed Sales of the FD came in below those of the FC at 198 000 or so units produced over a slightly longer production run that ended in December 1971 though new cars were offered for sale until the arrival of the Victor FE in March 1972 23 The lower numbers reflected the effects of a long strike Vauxhall underwent in 1970 as well as the closing off of some export markets the FD was the last Victor to be sold in Canada as either a Vauxhall or Envoy and the last to be officially imported and assembled into New Zealand citation needed As well as the 1 6 and 2 0 I4s the FD series the last Victor line to be sold there was also available in New Zealand sedans only wagons were rare imports with the larger Cresta PC s 3294 cc engine badged as the Victor 3300 later 3300SL These were manufactured with a choice of 4 speed manual gearbox or a 2 stage GM Powerglide automatic and most apart from early cars had the Ventora s grille The new three speed GM Automatic aka Holden Trimatic gearbox was available for the update 1970 2 0 and 3 3 models Bench earlier 1 6 models with three speed manual column shift only or bucket front seats were available citation needed A one off Ventora was the Black Prince This high profile modified car used components leftover after Gordon Keeble went bust in the 1960s and was built in 1971 based on a modified Victor FD The car featured a 5 4 litre V8 Chevrolet engine ZF 5 speed gearbox and a limited slip differential Special features included a Sony 4 band radio that could be removed from the dashboard and used as a portable radio auxiliary dials Lucas Square 8 fog lights matt black bonnet stripe dash mounted ice detector and map lights The car was offered for sale in 1972 for approximately 3000 and was broken up in the late 1980s with the owner using the running gear in a kit car However it is now known that one of the two cars built still exists in reasonable condition but without the original engine transmission as it has been offered for sale in recent years In reality this car was merely a project to utilize the parts received from the administrators of the bankrupt Gordon Keeble Car Co 24 A 1972 Victor purchased at 60 and called Red Victor 2 has been heavily modified with around 2 000 hp to go 0 60mph in 1 second while still being street legal 25 26 27 28 The earliest known surviving original FD series Victor 2000 is LRU 802F A January 68 registered car in Oyster Grey with a Casino Red interior Known affectionately by The FD Register as Tom after its first owner citation needed One earlier example in red survives which is extensively modified citation needed FE Series Victor VX4 90 Ventora VX1800 and VX2300 editVauxhall Victor FE Vauxhall VX4 90 FE Vauxhall Ventora FE Vauxhall VX1800 FE Vauxhall VX2300 FE nbsp OverviewProduction1972 1978 29 1984 2002 India Hindustan Contessa 44 078 Victor 1800 2300 29 113 476 VX4 90 to 1976 29 7 291 Ventora 29 693 Victor 3300 29 25 185 VX1800 VX2300 29 Body and chassisBody style4 door saloon5 door estate carRelatedOpel RekordHindustan ContessaPowertrainEngine1759 cc OHC I42279 cc OHC I42793 cc OHV I63294 cc OHV I6Transmission4 speed manualautomaticDimensionsWheelbase105 in 2 667 mm 6 Length179 in 4 540 mm Width67 in 1 700 mm Height54 in 1 400 mm The last of the Victors launched in March 1972 23 was the FE Magazine and newspaper advertisements used the marketing slogan NEW VICTOR The transcontinentals The car appeared substantially larger than its predecessor but was actually no wider and only 2 inches 5 cm longer with much of the extra length accounted for by larger bumpers 30 Nevertheless a higher cabin and improved packaging enabled the manufacturer to boast of 1 5 inches 38 mm more leg room in the front and no less than 4 inches 100 mm of extra leg room in the back with virtually no loss of boot trunk capacity Useful increases in headroom and shoulder level cabin width were also achieved through the use of differently shaped side panels and windows 30 The Victor Deluxes originally had a bench seat in front this was replaced with bucket seats for 1973 and the parking brake was moved to its conventional position on the floor between them 31 Most UK cars in this class featured manual transmission and with the FE Vauxhall belatedly fell into line with their principal UK competitor by including a four speed gearbox available only at extra cost on the old Victor FD as standard equipment 30 The FE s extra weight presumably made this development irresistible The four speed transmission used the same box and ratios across the range from the 1759 cc Victor to the torquey 3294 cc Ventora badged version contemporary road tests of the four cylinder cars comment adversely on the wide gap highlighted on the mountain roads included in the Portuguese route chosen for the car s press launch between second and third gears 30 nbsp 1972 Victor FE nbsp 1972 Victor FE estate Although the architecture of the suspension remained as before numerous detailed modifications were made to counter criticism of the old model Changes included an anti roll bar as standard equipment on all but the entry level models and stiffer springs at the back intended to compensate for the Victor s tendency to understeer 30 At the front the springing remained soft by the standards of the time the track was widened by 1 7 inches 4 cm and wheel geometry modified to incorporate anti dive action improvements intended to address the Victor s tendency to wallow which by then was attracting criticism from performance oriented commentators 30 nbsp 1972 Vauxhall VX4 90 FE nbsp Vauxhall Ventora Saloon FE The new Victor shared its floorpan and its basic bodyshell architecture with the Opel Rekord D therefore the two cars look superficially similar but all of the exterior panels were unique to the Victor and thus not interchangeable with the Rekord The car used Vauxhall powertrains along its own suspension and rack and pinion steering as opposed to the Rekord s recirculating ball unit The front end incorporated the then advanced detail of having the slim bumper bisect the grille with a third of the grille and the side lights on quad headlamp models below the bumper line Comparisons between the Victor and the Opel Rekord D were inevitable An important difference from the back seat involved the rear doors The Opel s door incorporated rear quarter lights and windows that wound fully down into the door whereas Vauxhall s designers preferred the cleaner uncluttered look arising from their elimination of rear quarter lights 30 The fact that back seat passengers could only open their windows down to approximately a third of their depth before further opening was blocked by the presence of the wheel arches was held out as a safety feature to complement the fitting of child proof locks given that back seat passengers would no doubt include small children 30 Despite the absence of shared body panels anywhere that they could be seen detailed investigation disclosed that minor assemblies such as the door locks and the wiper mechanisms were shared with the Opel Rekord D 30 The FE Victor was the last Vauxhall to be designed independently of Opel The engines were carried over from the FD range although enlarged to 1759 cc and 2279 cc For a short period the straight six engine was used in the Ventora and 3300 SL models the latter effectively a Victor Estate with lesser trim than the luxury Ventora In spite of the heavy engine the 3300 SL Estate did not originally have power steering this only arrived for the 1973 model year 31 The estates had a more sloping rear similar to a hatchback than the Rekord equivalent The four cylinder FE estate in fact had perfect 50 50 weight distribution For the 1974 model year the Victor underwent a light facelift with some interior modifications as well 32 1974 finally saw the introduction of a proper Ventora Estate along with running changes for the rest of the range For some markets there was also a smaller 2 8 litre version of the big six available in the Ventora and Victor 3300 SL Estate 33 with more weight and less power than the four cylinder as well as higher fuel consumption the extra cost was hard to justify and it soon disappeared from price lists along with the Ventora 3 3 litre 34 World energy crises falling exports and an increasingly muddled image led to Vauxhall s decline during the early 1970s such that sales of the FE slumped to 55 000 units before it was transformed to the VX series in January 1976 VX Series edit nbsp A late Vauxhall VX2300 GLS At the start of 1976 the relatively large 1800 cc Vauxhall Victor came with a recommended sticker price lower than that of the more modern but smaller and relatively well equipped Vauxhall Cavalier GL which will have encouraged fleet managers to negotiate for higher discounts on the Cavalier and left the basic Victor looking embarrassingly underpriced 35 To try to move the Victor upmarket Vauxhall upgraded the trim level of the basic Victor 1800 cc to match that of the 2300 cc version with improvements that included fabric seat trim a new clarified instrument display embellished with mock timber surround as well as a new central console 35 and a seat belt warning light across the range 35 Under the bonnet hood various upgrades were made to the 1800 cc engine which now offered 88 bhp 66 kW 89 PS of output in place of the 77 bhp 57 kW 78 PS previously claimed 35 The changes carried a weight penalty but performance was nevertheless usefully improved with top speed up from 89 mph 143 km h to 100 mph 161 km h 35 To draw attention to the changes Vauxhall also dropped the Victor and VX 4 90 model names and the range was renamed the Vauxhall VX in January 1976 36 The VX Series is distinguished from the outside by a simplified grille and revised headlights 35 nbsp Vauxhall VX1800 Estate Since the demise of the Vauxhall Cresta more than three years earlier only the Ventora had used the old Vauxhall six cylinder engine but now the four cylinder VX 2300 GLS replaced the six cylinder FE Ventora as Vauxhall s flagship The VX2300 GLS was fitted with four square halogen headlamps velour upholstery tinted glass and power steering 37 The more sporting VX 4 90 was reintroduced now based on the VX formerly Victor FE in March 1977 with a 5 speed close ratio Getrag gearbox with dog leg first gear also featured in the VX 2300 GLS model initially for mainland European export markets only 36 38 The car featured a modified twin carburettor version of the existing 2279 cc four cylinder engine for which an output of 116 bhp 87 kW 118 PS was claimed 38 up from 108 hp 81 kW 109 PS in the VX 2300 and a prototype fuel injected variant was tested but not put into production The car was fitted with twin halogen headlights and supplementary front fog lights fitted beneath the front bumper and also benefitted from extra sound deadening materials to reduce road noise 38 The side window frames were fashionably blackened and only four exterior colours could be specified of which three were metallic 38 The manufacturer stated that the UK market would receive right hand drive versions of this latest incarnation of the VX 4 90 only in 1978 38 In 1978 the Vauxhall Carlton was released as a direct replacement for the VX1800 2300 production of which ended in the same year 39 The Carlton was based on the corresponding Opel Rekord E and unlike the Victor FE VX was much closer in its engineering and body structure to its Opel sister continuing the process of Opelisation of the Vauxhall range that had begun some years earlier 40 Product variants editThe VX four ninety was announced as a performance oriented version of the FB Victor in October 1961 During the FB series the name changed slightly to VX 4 90 which continued to be used until the end of the FE range although the final VX 1978 incarnation carried badges which read VX490 The VX Four Ninety designation originally came from its engineering designation Vauxhall eXperimental four cylinder engine of 90 in capacity As well as performance increasing modifications VX 4 90s also had a number of exterior and interior modifications to distinguish them from Victors The Ventora was introduced to the FD series sold between 1968 until it was dropped from the FE series in 1976 This used the Victor bodyshell but had the Bedford derived 3294 cc straight six engine from the larger Cresta models Again the Ventora was distinguished from the Victor by improved trim levels and a more regal grille Victor specials editBig Bertha edit A special version of the FE was the one off 1974 Repco Holden engined Ventora nicknamed Big Bertha built to compete in the Super Saloon category of British motor sport 41 Driven by Gerry Marshall this car was fitted with a race tuned 5 0 L V8 Repco Holden engine and bore little resemblance to the production car except in its overall appearance However the design was ill fated and suffered an accident in its sixth race It was considered too big and too heavy and had handling problems Eventually it was decided to build a new much smaller car around the same engine and chassis much shortened and this car was given the silhouette of the droopsnoot Firenza Nicknamed Baby Bertha this car was more successful and went on to dominate the category until Vauxhall moved from racing into rallying in 1977 References edit Koch Jeff June 2008 1957 61 Vauxhall Victor Hemmings Sports and Exotic Car Vauxhall F Victor US market Vauxpedia a b c d Sedgwick Michael Gillies Mark 1986 A Z of Cars 1945 1970 Osprey ISBN 978 0 600 33391 3 A Look at GMH First Edition September 1961 www hrc org au Retrieved 27 March 2018 They built Buicks in Switzerland and other GM s Retrieved 13 August 2020 a b c d e Culshaw Horrobin 1974 Complete Catalogue of British Cars Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 16689 5 a b c d The Vauxhall Victor Super The Motor 6 March 1957 Those were the days 1957 Express amp Star The Claverley Group Retrieved 11 December 2013 a b Getting the lead out The Motor Vol 3539 25 April 1970 pp 23 25 1962 Envoy Sales Brochure Canada WG8803 Wwafut eBay 30 December 2014 Archived from the original on 30 December 2014 Retrieved 9 February 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b c d e f g h Vauxhall FB Victor amp VX Four Ninety vauxpedianet uk2sitebuilder com Archived 16 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 8 January 2016 a b c d The Vauxhall Victor Super The Motor 8 November 1961 New Vauxhall Victor The Times Thursday 14 September 1960 pg 8 Issue 55186 Verdict on the Vauxhall Victor Popular Motoring 8 nbr 6 58 59 March 1969 Research Brings New Era In Car Design The Times Tuesday 17 October 1961 pg 18 Issue 55214 a b c d e f Autocar Road Test Vauxhall Victor 101 de luxe Autocar Vol 126 no 3718 18 May 1967 pp 17 21 Autotest Vauxhall Victor 2000 EC Automatic Autocar Vol 129 no 3786 5 September 1968 pp 16 21 A VX 4 90 again The Motor Vol Nbr 3512 11 October 1969 pp 54 55 VAUXHALL THE SLANT FOUR ENGINE STORY Retrieved 21 September 2022 About the FD Victor Ventora and VX4 90 Vauxhall VX4 90 Drivers Club Retrieved 30 November 2013 a b c Vauxhall Ventora Cresta power train in Victor structure Autocar Vol 128 nbr 3759 29 February 1968 pp 2 5 a b c d e Vauxhall Victor Estate Autocar Vol 128 nbr 3770 16 May 1968 pp 18 19 a b Used car test 1971 Vauxhall Victor 3300SL Estate automatic Autocar Vol 138 no 4000 5 September 1968 pp 50 51 The Vauxhall Black Prince Retro Motoring com Archived from the original on 9 February 2009 Retrieved 8 September 2011 BBC W ton man owns the world s fastest car Retrieved 9 February 2017 Fifth Gear Season 10 Episode 4 Episode 4 TV com TV com CBS Interactive Andy s Vauxhall has edge on F1 Express amp Star expressandstar com Red Victor dragsters adopted by Vauxhall Express amp Star expressandstar com a b c d e f Graham Robson A Z of Cars of the 1970s pages 170 171 a b c d e f g h i Vauxhall s fifth Victor Motor 19 February 1972 pp 36 44 a b Wilkins Gordon December 1972 World Cars 1972 3 CAR South Africa Vol 16 no 11 Cape Town South Africa Ramsay Son amp Parker Pty Ltd p 59 Braunschweig Robert et al eds 14 March 1974 Automobil Revue 74 Automobil Revue in German and French 69 Hallwag AG 5161 ISSN 0005 1314 Automobil Revue 74 p 5162 Vauxhall FE Victor VX4 90 Ventora 1972 vauxpedia com a b c d e f Autotest Vauxhall VX 1800 Autocar 17 July 1976 pp 6 10 a b Quattroruote Tutte le Auto del Mondo 77 78 in Italian Editoriale Domus S p A 1977 p 524 Vauxhall V72 Platform 94000 FE VX Series vauxpedianet uk2sitebuilder com Archived 20 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 5 May 2016 a b c d e Motorweek New Models VX 4 90 Motor 5 March 1977 p 2 Graham Robson A Z of Cars of the 1970s pages 171 172 Parliamentary Papers House of Commons and Command Volume 25 H M Stationery Office 1974 page 164 Vauxhall Ventora Big Bertha Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vauxhall Victor Publicity pictures for the Vauxhall F Victor Estate 1962 Envoy Sales Brochure Canada VX4 90 Drivers Club Owners Club catering for FD FE and VX series Victors Ventoras and VX4 90 s Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vauxhall Victor amp oldid 1206277205, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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