Wheels (Australia)

TURBO AUSTRALIS

NO CARS BETTER ENCAPSULAT­E AUSSIE TURBO CULTURE THAN THE HOLDEN COMMODORE VL TURBO AND THE FORD FALCON BA XR6 TURBO. ANDY ENRIGHT EXPLAINS

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Buyer’s guide on the best boosted Aussies. Contains VL Turbo content

AUSTRALIA CRASHED the turbo party almost by accident. Put that down to the Commodore VL Turbo. The last of the line of the original Commodore shape was an odd thing; a stop-gap model that should have staggered to obsolescen­ce given it was replaced just three years later by the brave new VN. Yet it earned a place in the hearts of enthusiast­s via the fickle hand of legislatio­n.

Unleaded fuel rules spelled the end for the old Holden Black straight-six engine, so a deal with Nissan was done to fit the Skyline's RB30E in the 1986 VL. This was followed six months later by the turbocharg­ed RB30ET variant. Available in SL, Berlina and ritzy Calais trims, it's fair to say we liked it.

Back in August 1986, Wheels wrote: “The engine is silky smooth and flexible. Accelerati­ng with wide-open throttle the turbo’s up to maximum boost pressure and into full stride as it clears the 2400rpm mark. Equally importantl­y, it willingly works right down to 1500rpm or less. It may lack the raw bottom-end punch of the bigger engines when accelerate­d from lowly speeds, but there’s no real suggestion of turbo lag either. What you get is immediate response which gathers strength very quickly as the revs rise to two-five ... The turbo may, however, prove to have more performanc­e everywhere when ranged against the coming VL unleaded 4.9-litre V8...”

To a certain degree, Ford made it easier for Holden to offer its flagship sedan with an exclusivel­y six-cylinder line up (albeit temporaril­y), having dropped the V8 from its XE line up some four years earlier. It wouldn't be until 2002 that Ford finally appreciate­d the benefits of a turbo six, and while the VL Turbo has achieved cult status, the blown Barra lump is unarguably the hero engine.

Where the old Holden made a hearty 150kW, the 3984cc overhead cam Barra was good for a massive 240kW. Let's put that figure into the perspectiv­e of 2002. Back then, a 911 GT3 only made 25kW more, and here was Ford offering that much power in a $44K sedan. It upset the hierarchy somewhat, its 14.2s 400m time eclipsing its XR8 sibling by 0.2sec.

With a lighter front end, the XR6T was nimbler than the XR8 too, and its sports suspension package was developed with the help of John Bowe. Unlike the VL Turbo, the early five-speed manual's not the preferred gearbox; the sequential four-speed auto does a solid job of keeping the turbo fizzing. A six-speed Tremec T56 manual appeared in 2004.

We're not sure who coined the phrase, ‘Aussies love V8s but buy sixes’, but the Commodore VL Turbo and the Ford Falcon XR6 Turbo are two vehicles that were transforme­d for the better by forced induction, in effect doing much of the heavy lifting for the image of the straight-six.

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