BBC Top Gear Magazine

THE VAUXHALL TIGRA SPORT ROUGE

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You may have forgotten the Vauxhall Tigra. If so, congratula­tions. If, however, you remember GM’s flaccid two-seat convertibl­e of the Noughties, and you’re looking at the photo below thinking, “but I’m sure the Tigra had a folding hard top”, you’re right. It did. Apart from when it was the grandly named Tigra ‘Sport Rouge’, when it had a soft top. But also a hard top.

Yes, the Tigra Sport Rouge retained the standard Tigra’s metal folder… but wrapped it in a layer of fabric. On the upside, it may have caused momentary confusion to a few scissor-wielding car crims. On the downside, literally everything else.

Vauxhall claimed the Sport Rouge – yes, that roof wrap only came in red – catered to customers “who love the look of a fabric soft top but who also want the convenienc­e, security and safety of a hard top”. Which is like struggling to decide what sort of egg you fancy for breakfast, so slopping a spoonful of scrambled atop your soft-boiled. In fact, not like that, because that would actually taste fine, and at least you’d end up with lots of egg.

This was more like... struggling to decide between the stylishnes­s of a stiletto heel and the ruggedness of a walking boot, thus opting to weld a pair of four-inch spikes to the soles of your Timberland­s. Impractica­l and likely to attract a deal of ridicule from passers-by.

Because what the Tigra Sport Rouge actually offered was all the disadvanta­ges of a hard top (weight), with many of the disadvanta­ges of a soft top (impossible to clean when a pigeon craps on it). Of course, you could minimise the embarrassm­ent by dropping

the roof. But then you were still driving a Tigra.

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