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 EPISODE The 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. The Last Outlaw. Production ended in December 1992. GM had planned 1,100 cars. They built 950 — the recession killed it, the insurance premiums killed it, and the price of a Ferrari for a car wearing a Vauxhall badge killed it. Today, surviving Lotus Carltons in Imperial Green sell for more than the Ferraris they used to embarrass. We break down why the Carlton was the last car of its kind ever built — and why no major manufacturer will ever build another one. So why does a 35-year-old four-door sedan still terrify the modern car industry? The answer has nothing to do with horsepower — and everything to do with what cars are no longer allowed to be. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🔗 LINKS & SUPPORT 📚 The book: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GP9TKPBH 📺 Documentary channel:    / @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