quote:
Originally posted by castellan
Commodore VK SS is just an option, as are all the Commodores after it.
Only because of the restrictive trim code system used on Commodores prior to VE - you only had base, mid & high level to choose from.
Thus all packs had to be based on one of 3 levels. Even VS Senators are mid-level based, by the VIN.
But it's not a blanket rule.
XV2 on a base model (just like HQ) was VH & VK SS.
In the Commodore's case, K was the base model trim code.
These are the most closely related cars to the HQ SS as far as the base vehicle & added options.
In VL, XV2 only referred to the Walky Group A SS (not the HDT Group A SS, which was an A9L). The Walky ironically began life as a K-code car (obviously for the lower racing weight) but the L trim level on the other tag will tell you it was mid (Berlina) based, which was required to get the power options.
Through the 2nd & 3rd generations, the option codes grew to denote wider variations of the SS - in VN/VP it was A9F/A9G for an SS. They went numeric with the driveline packs for VR (824, 825 - 8 denoting an SS, so a set of model-specific codes) before further adding alpha-numeric "value" and "safety" packs during later VS and all VT onwards (8BB, 8DD etc). These were still an extension pack, and based on K-code trim level bodies, but unlike the earlier cars, what went in was significantly different to the base K-code exec (main wiring harness to start with).
But in VE, the coding opened up further, so the SS-V became a model with it's very own trim code, like back in HK GTS days.