Originally Posted by: commodorenut The Senator has unique rear sheetmetal, the additional rear pillar window, and a longer nose (as well as the IRS). It is not the same thing. It's like calling a HZ Statesman a Kingswood.
The smaller, and lighter Rekord is what our Commodore is based on, with the Senator front end as Terry pointed out.
The only exterior panels the Rekord shares with the Senator are the front doors, rear door skins, sills, and most of the roof skin. All other panels are unique to the Senator.
Like how different a HZ statesman is to the sedan (except their bootlids interchange - the Opel ones don't).
The Rekord only had small engines (around 2L), live axle (no IRS) and even ran 4-stud wheels......
It was only the Senator that got the IRS and the 3.0L 6, which is quite the boat anchor - it's almost as big as the Jag inline 6s from the 70s, and weighs as much as a 308.
And if you really looked at the Senator, you'd see where the WB Sedan front seats originated......
How can a VC handle so bad compared to a VB? They are effectively the same suspension - almost identical spring rates as each other, and the same struts & swaybars, and wheels/tyres for each relevant engine/body combo that you would compare from one to the other.
Holden continually improved the handling over time - moving the rack mounts on non-power steered cars, and altering spring rates, lower trailing arm lengths, and diff pinion angles over time.
I'm with Terry - the VL, moreso in FE2 form, is the pick of all VB-VP live axle Commodores when it comes to handling, from the factory.
It wasn't until they widened the front track with VR that the handling of the wider body gen2 Commodores caught up - the VR/VS front end was a big improvement over VN/VP.
I've owned & driven plenty of early Commodores over the years, so I'm not just comparing one car with clapped out shocks & tarring a whole model span with the same brush.
Looks can also be deceiving - have you ever driven a Vauxhall/Opel version of the VB Commodore? The steering is utter rubbish - it feels worse than a sloppy HZ box. The Aussie rack & pinion was a huge improvement - which improved again with the VL when the rack was further updated. And the IRS under them is nothing to write home about. How bad was the VQ IRS? Where do you think the Holden design evolved from? It was already an improvement on the Opel IRS.....
Even nearly 40 years on people still bring up the same unfounded pub drivel to criticise the VB Commodore, yet the humble VB underpinnings lived on for 22 years of production - longer than the Kingswood badge hung around for. Guess there's some people who will never accept that Holden actually built decent cars after 1977 (as the sales records and COTY awards prove), just like there's some who consider anything after an EH to be a pile of crap....
Statesman and the Kingswood are based on the same car, the VL vs VB is the same car, sure there are different in some ways.
Look at all the test when the VC came out, the RTS was changed because people could not drive well enough to take advantage of what Peter Hannenberger did, so they introduced understeer for the fools, VB-C almost identical you say but not the same and I am not on about old worn out or crap examples.
Opel IRS is where it evolved from and sure we adapted it to ours and when the VX came out we adapted what Opel did to stop the toe in, as did the VT GTS setup.
The VQ Statesman IRS was good only for the ride not handling.
COTY awards well well well what have we got here.
From the EH on is where it all becomes ok for me, before that they were real slugs and just totally boring to drive.
When the HZ WB came out they sure did handled grate, but nowadays when you get a wheel alignment most use a different setup that turns it into a shit box like a HX and they do this new settings because they don't understand why Peter Hannenberger set it up that way in the first place, so they set it up for dip sticks who can't drive for shit, bringing back that dreadful understeer that only incompetent drivers love. the same with the VC RTS it makes the car understeer so a incompetent driver will back off, now they do drive well on the highway, but if you get out of control on highway and try to get it back on the road again good luck, and it's the same up to the VS commodore.
With the VB especially the V8's this is a car you can do anything with because you have the power to control it with the throttle, here read Wheels Oct 1978 what Peter Hannenberger is pointing out to Bill Tuckey, poor old Bill has not got a clue what Peter is explaining to him in depth at all and Peter throws the car off into a spin, progressing at speeds leading all the way up to 210KM/H and Peter says all cars must do this ! so you can regain control.
People think IRS makes a car handle better it does not at all, it only works to improve the ride, unless it's real advanced like a Porsche 928 rear end setup, but it's an expensive to go that far advanced.
I had a dude claim his Datsun 200B would out handle a VB Commodore because it had IRS.