Street Machine

CLANDESTIN­E COMMODORES: THE TOP FIVE SLEEPERS

WE LOOK BACK AT SOME OF THE MORE UNASSUMING MODELS THAT HID SOME REAL PUNCH

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AFTER 41 years, five generation­s and dozens of driveline variations, Holden has finally, some say mercifully, laid the Commodore nameplate to rest. Across the decades, HDT/ HSV usually took care of the go-fast brigade, but not all heroes wear capes. Holden snuck out a few speedy units – clandestin­e Commodores that didn’t look that fast, but were. Here are our faves.

VY COMMODORE SV8 WITH the option of a V8 Executive disappeari­ng with the VX model, Holden redressed the situation by offering the VY SV8. While it lacked the SS’S interior treatment, cruise, fast glass, leather wheel, front bar and 18-inch alloys, the SV8 packed heat where it counted: red dials, a spoiler and 235kw of LS1 in the lightest package available. And at $40K, it was exactly 10 grand cheaper than the full-fat SS.

VFII CALAIS V V8 DEVELOPED by enthusiast­s for enthusiast­s, the VFII’S power increased by a whopping 30kw thanks to the 304kw 6.2-litre LS3 being standardis­ed across all V8-optioned cars. Managerial gentlefolk could eschew the gaudy SS and access the same 570Nm of sledgehamm­er torque and 13-second quarters from the cosseting surrounds of their range-topping Calais V, with only a discreet LS3 badge to give the game away. And they could have a wagon. Surely, it didn’t get any better. Or sneakier.

VSIII SS UTE HOLDEN’S SS range has never been introverte­d, but it got close with the VSIII SS ute. Gone was the sedan’s gregarious wing, replaced instead by a chrome ‘sportsbar’, which, if you’re really unlucky, I may have installed myself. Only 600 were built across MY98 and MY99, with the latter receiving the VT’S $2 million V8 upgrade. Result: a then-healthy 179kw fitted to a rig weighing 200kg less than the porky VT.

VL COMMODORE SL TURBO IF YOU walked into a Holden dealer in 1986, you could option the Nissan-built turbo upgrade on any model on offer, including the povvo-pack Commodore SL. Despite lacking even air and power steering as standard, the SL could be had with 150kw of RB30ET, getting you running 15-second quarters out of the box and on the road for about $18K. Cops loved ’em.

VTII COMMODORE EXECUTIVE LS1 SIX-SPEED

THE 220kw Gen III LS1 fitted to the VTII proved a revelation for bent-eight buyers. Gone was the beloved Holden V8’s chubby, low-down torque, replaced with peaky power best suited to a manual tranny. It was a tuner’s delight, as ‘Gus Bus’ Paul Cronin recalls: “One of the toughest cars cruising South Australia in Y2K was a green, flash-tuned Exec with 300kw at the wheels.”

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