© Cavalier and Chevette Club 2015
With acknowledgement to Vauxhall Motors Limited
Cavalier Mk1 “Silver Aero” 2.4 Turbo Sportshatch
By middle of 1980 the Vauxhall Cavalier range covered a huge section of the mid-range car market, from the basic 1300L 2 door Saloon right the way up to the top of the
range 2000GLS Sportshatch, with all the 1.6, 2.0, L, LS, GL and GLS variations in between. Work was also nearly complete on the U car replacement, the J Car, which
would debut at the October 1981 Motor Show. Against this backdrop, and also the fact that Vauxhall had announced they lost £7m in 1979, it seems strange that the
Company would spend probably the best part of £150,000 to produce a concept car based on a model that was just about to be replaced. For the rationale you need to
dig a little deeper behind the scenes at what was happening within Vauxhall. The Luton Design Department, headed up by Wayne Cherry, had produced mock-ups for the
1980 Astra Mk1 and the Cavalier Mk2 with distinctive “Vauxhall” design differences to their Opel equivalents, in the same vein as had been done in the past with the
Chevette, Cavalier Mk1 and Carlton Mk1.
However, late in 1978 the decision was taken by General Motors Europe that the Luton Design Centre would become solely responsible for Bedford commercial truck
design and all passenger vehicles would be fully designed and engineered by Opel in Germany and re-branded for the UK market as Vauxhalls. This did not become public
knowledge until late in 1979 when it was announced Vauxhall would cease exports to mainland Europe – it would have been pointless trying to sell exactly the same car
as Opel. So the 1980 NEC Motor Show in October was the last chance to show something publically that Vauxhall’s Studio had designed and Wayne Cherry did not waste
the opportunity one bit! Publically Wayne Cherry claimed the motivation behind the concept was that he wanted to take the Cavalier Sportshatch to its logical
conclusion and this is how he and his team did it:
The preliminary design sketches were done in March 1980 by a team headed up by John Taylor, Assistant Design Director, with the planned aim of the major parts of the
design changes being able to be replicated as an after-market kit for customers to have retro fitted to their own cars. A new one piece fibreglass front end nose cone
was fitted which extended forward the front of the car by 8ins compared to the standard Cavalier, not only did it transform the front appearance but also improved the
aerodynamics over the standard car. The headlamps were standard with the addition of wash wipe but the lower spot lamps were covered by a clear glass panel
stretching across the front of the car which also housed the number plate.
The nose cone wrapped around as far as the front wheel arches where it was joined to another smaller panel that followed the arch round to the door post.
There were neat extractor slots set into the trailing edge to draw excess residual air from the wheel wells and duct it along the smooth side of the car. The same
principle was used at the front of the nose cone to draw air along the bonnet which featured a NASCA style duct to funnel air inside the engine bay just ahead of the
turbocharger, then at the rear of the bonnet a row of angled slots for engine bay heat to escape. The rear wings matched those at the front with vents to improve
airflow through the wheel arches. A revised door panel is fitted and below is the side skirting made from thick black steel reinforced rubber and and were similar to
those fitted to the Black Magic Chevette. These act to draw air underneath the car and effectively hold the car down. To ensure they blend into the body-line special
panels were developed. To round off the bodywork a rear valence spoiler was mounted below the bumper line and worked in conjunction with the tailgate spoiler to
reduce rear turbulence. All these aerodynamic additions were not the result of a stylist’s whim or ”that should be all right” design rules, they were the culmination of
many hours spent in a wind tunnel making tweaks and adding bits on or taking bits off. One serious flaw to the aerodynamic efficiency was the wheels, in the Design
Studio the car was fitted with Compomotive split rims which in the wind tunnel ended up negating a lot of the gains from the bodywork modifications. The answer was
to fit full cover disc trims, remember this is 1980 and the proliferation of full cover plastic wheel trims hadn’t happened yet, and once fitted the drag coefficient was
just under 0.32 – in 1980, using a base car designed in 1973, it was spectacular.
Another feature some years ahead of its time was the fitment of a Rajay Engine Management System to keep everything running as it should. The final part of the
package was the interior, this started with Recaro front seats recovered in black leather and fully electrically adjustable via a push button panel at the side of each seat.
The rear seats, door panels and parts of the centre console were also re-upholstered in the same black leather. Contrasting silver grey carpet was fitted, again edged in
black leather. The various wear points, such as window winder handle surrounds, were faced with black Perspex with white graphics, electric windows were a surprising
omission. The same white stripe used on the outside of the car was also used to divide the interior trim. A Voxson Tenvox stereo radio cassette with 4 speakers provided
the audio pleasures – real 80s hi tech!
Mechanically, the design team turned to ace Vauxhall tuner, the late and sadly missed, Bill Blydenstein. A standard 2.0litre CIH engine was shipped off to W B Blydenstein
(Racing) Ltd at Shepreth who stroked the capacity to 2.4litres, fitted a big valve cylinder head and also fitted a Rajay turbocharger to give a power output of 150bhp.
Another feature some years ahead of its time.
The Vauxhall stand at the 1980 Motor Show was light on crowd pullers, the Viceroy made its first public appearance along with the cut price Chevette ES and host of
cheaper Astra models, so the Silver Aero was a bit of a bright spot. The public line from Vauxhall was that it was “exhibited to assess public reaction to the concept” and
that existing Sportshatch owners would be able to upgrade their car with a three stage “kit” comprising 1> Interior, 2> body and 3> engine. Vauxhall claimed that there
was significant interest but not enough to justify a production run of the “kit”. Looking back now it seems unlikely that, with all the work involved, the kit would have
been a sales reality. I suspect the real reason for Silver Aero was to show what Vauxhalls Design Department were capable of, it was the last Vauxhall concept from
Luton, the Lightening Concept was designed in Birmingham by Cadillac’s advanced studio so doesn’t count. It also proved Wayne Cherry’s credentials for his future roles
in Europe and ultimately as President of GM Design worldwide.
With the launch of the J Cavalier in October 1981 there was no coupe offered, apart from Brazil's J car - the Chevrolet Monza – which offered a Coupe version, and the
plan was to stop production of all the U Car variants, however Fords decision to revamp the Capri and continue with sales forced General Motors Europe to look at a cost
effective overhaul of the U Car to compete. This included a fairly wacky body kit, designed under Gordon Brown, and the addition of a new 1.8 engine from the
forthcoming Carlton Mk2. This meant the U Car, in Opel Manta, guise was able to soldier on until 1987 by which time Wayne Cherry had taken over as head of GM Design
in Europe and he ensured the next Cavalier, the Mk3 had a proper Coupe derivative - the Calibra.
The Car is in the hands of a Club Member and can regularly be seen at Car Shows.