The Car the Police Couldn't Catch
In 1990, a Norfolk factory took a brand-new Vauxhall family sedan off the production line, drove a plasma cutter through its wheel arches, threw the engine in a skip, and bolted in a twin-turbo straight-six built by the same engineers designing the Corvette ZR-1's V8.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━📚 ORDER MY NEW BOOK "History Written by Losers" — out now. The true story of global power has been whitewashed by the victors and the fixers. This book tells the side of history they tried to bury. 👉 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GP9TKPBH━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━🏎️ IN THIS EPISODEThe Hubris. January 1986. General Motors writes a £22.7 million check and buys 91% of a nearly bankrupt British sports car company. The plan was for Lotus to sprinkle magic dust on Vauxhalls and Opels. Lotus CEO Mike Kimberley had a different plan. We tell the story of how he convinced Bob Eaton, head of GM Europe, to green-light a project so absurd that Opel's German engineers refused to participate — and why the team picked the boring Carlton over the fast Senator.The Frankenstein. At Factory 3 in Hethel, brand-new fully-assembled Vauxhalls were ferried in from Germany and systematically destroyed. Engines ripped out and shipped back. Wheel arches plasma-cut wider. 130 man-hours of labor per car. We break down the C36GET — bored to 3.6 liters, twin Garrett T25 turbos, forged Mahle pistons, 377 horsepower, 419 pound-feet of torque, and 75% of that torque available at just 2,000 RPM. The transmission was a Corvette ZR-1 unit. The differential was Australian. The chassis was German. Nobody at GM stopped to ask if any of this made sense.The Numbers That Broke Ferrari. 0-60 in 5.1 seconds. Top speed 176 mph — Lotus engineers regularly recorded 180+ at the Nardò ring in Italy. We compare the Carlton head-to-head with the 1990 Ferrari Testarossa and Porsche 911 Turbo. The result is uncomfortable: a four-door, five-passenger family sedan with a boot big enough for a golden retriever was, on real-world roads, the fastest production car on Earth.The Public Panic. The Daily Mail launched a sustained campaign demanding the car be banned. Autocar magazine called it "ours-is-better-than-yours immaturity." On November 16th, 1990, the House of Commons debated whether Vauxhall should be allowed to sell it. ACPO went on the record condemning it. We trace how a single car became Britain's moral panic — and why GM, Vauxhall, and Lotus refused to fit a speed limiter despite political pressure that should have killed the project.40 RA. November 26th, 1993. An Imperial Green Lotus Carlton is stolen from a driveway in Pershore. For the next six weeks, an organized gang uses it to ram-raid off-licences across the West Midlands. They hit Bromsgrove, Redditch, Wythall, Belbroughton, Earlswood — and at one point, a newsagent thirty yards from a police station. The West Midlands Police fleet was Austin Metros and Ford Fiestas. Trying to catch a 377-horsepower twin-turbocharged supercar in a 70-horsepower commuter hatchback was, in PC David Oliver's own words, hopeless. Then command issued a formal order: stop chasing it. Then it outran a police helicopter on the M6. Then, in January 1994, it vanished into a canal — and the gang was never caught.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━🔗 LINKS & SUPPORT📚 The book: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GP9TKPBH📺 Documentary channel: https://youtube.com/@thatjasonhassett🔔 Subscribe for weekly post-mortems on the cars, companies, and engineering decisions that shaped modern motoring.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━#LotusCarlton #VauxhallLotus #OpelLotusOmega #SleeperCar #BritishCars #CarHistory #AutomotiveHistory #FerrariTestarossa #Porsche911Turbo #ColdWarCars #1990s #40RA #RamRaiders #TheCarNerd #CarEnthusiast #ClassicCars #SuperSaloon #Hethel