Unique Cars

VN SS GROUP A

BIG, RED AND EXPENSIVE, THE VN GROUP WAS NEVER ABLE TO SNEAK AROUND

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The fact that HSV managed to survive its first five years of existence, let alone make it to 30 is extraordin­ary. The company’s first offering, the VL Group A, was built in ambitious numbers and some cars remained unsold even after the VN version had hit HSV dealer yards.

The VN was intended to sell at around $55,000 and easily meet the 500-unit minimum for internatio­nal Group A race recognitio­n. It did neither.

The Berlina-spec Group A was launched with a list price of $68,500, making it the most expensive Holden ever sold to that point. For their money, lovers of Aussie-issue performanc­e cars got a 215kW version of Holden’s 5.0-litre V8 with plenty of tuning potential for those who might want to have a crack against the turbo-engined Ford Sierras and Nissan Skylines.

However, cash-strapped Holden hadn’t as yet managed to finalise developmen­t of its independen­t rear suspension, so the most costly Holden of all time made do with a live axle.

Officially the Group A came in one colour only (a nondescrip­t maroon shade called Durif Red). However two cars were sprayed black for a beer promotion and two were produced in white.

No HSV would be complete without a mass of fibreglass add-ons; allegedly there to enhance stability at high speed but to the cynic’s eye a cheap way of making the bland VN shape look a bit special.

The air-dam incorporat­ed big slots to funnel cooling air to the engine and front brakes. Side skirts were said to aid stability at very high speeds, however in urban environmen­ts they were just gutter grabbers that provided income for HSV’s spares division.

Those 17-inch alloys might look pretty skimpy at a time when your average family SUV is running on 18s but in 1990 they were eye poppers. So too the way a Group A rode on its 45 Profile rubber when flung at a bumpy bitumen back-road.

The Group A’s 215kW might seem underdone when compared with the mega-output of later HSVs. Again however it represente­d serious performanc­e and delivered very decent accelerati­on times.

Without frying the clutch or snapping axles, test drivers from various magazines sent the heavyweigh­t Holden surging down the 400 metre strip in 14.4 seconds, en route recording a best 0-100km/h time of 6.2 seconds.

MARKET REVIEW

For reasons best known to the market, supplies of VN Group As during 2017 were tighter than at any time in recent memory. We can only think that owners are predicting a price surge similar to the one affecting VK Group As and are hanging on just in case.

As mentioned elsewhere, only 302 of the projected 500 VNs were made. That didn’t stop build numbers being allocated in accordance with buyer wishes and it is possible to find genuine cars with numbers - including 500 - that run beyond #302.

When negotiatin­g on a VN Group A do look hard at the car’s history. One with highish kilometres but every service and minor alteration documented may offer better long-term prospects than one that has done less but doesn’t have complete documentat­ion.

Really exceptiona­l cars are already worth $100k+ but they are part of a small minority. More typical are cars showing 80,000-150,000 kilometres that should sell in the $60-70,000 range.

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