Astra Opel Astra OPC reviews


The Opel Astra is a compact car/small family car (C-segment) developed and produced by the Opel since 1991. It was first launched in September 1991 as a direct replacement to the Opel Kadett. As of 2025, the car slots between the smaller Corsa supermini and the larger Frontera subcompact crossover SUV.

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The performance hatchback arena has never been more tightly packed or hotly contested. The all-new Ford Focus ST, as well as the updated Renaultsport Megane 265 and Volkswagen Golf GTI Edition 35, are all aiming to be at the top.
However, Vauxhall’s latest contender – the new Astra VXR – is definitely the most promising: it has more power, more torque and more performance-boosting technology than all of its rivals.


http://www.autoexpress.co.uk/carreviews/firstdrives/284305/vauxhall_astra_vxr.html#ixzz1xVL9vNLT
 
I want this baby

Those figures only tell half the story. This is a car full of character. Not only is there searing pace throughout the rev range, but the VXR also produces an exhaust note that sounds like nothing else on the road. From inside the cabin, there’s a growl up until about 4,000rpm, when it develops into something more like the rough whoosh of a jet engine. All that performance is more accessible than ever thanks to a clever front suspension set-up borrowed from the Insignia VXR.


 
Carmagazine review.

It’s very, very good. The steering – switched from pure electric assistance to electro-hydraulic especially for the VXR – has a nice meaty, reassuring heft, and that diff really points the VXR into corners and pulls you through them under acceleration.
The lack of body roll also means the VXR stays noticeably flat through fast transitions, allowing you to keep on the power for longer and get back on it sooner.
 
CAR UK said:
Carmagazine review.

Any drawbacks to the Astra hot hatch?
Sadly, yes. That aggressive limited-slip diff causes an awful lot of torque steer, to the point where it inhibits confidence during overtakes on B-roads – you worry that you’ll be pulled towards either the car you’re overtaking or dragged into the scenery. Yes, it’s very effective at getting you through corners, but the Megane RS manages to do the same thing without the torque steer.

The extremely competent chassis also disguises the fact that the engine doesn’t feel hugely quick, and it doesn’t sound particularly good: a harsh, spitting turbo roar dominates when you’re driving fast.

Verdict
The 2012 Vauxhall Astra VXR is a very, very good car. The problem is that its less powerful sibling, the Astra GTC, suggested the VXR could be epic. Generally it is, with an astonishingly competent chassis that indulges huge point-to-point speed.

But the slight feeling of lethargy from the engine disappoints, while the steering corruption from that LSD more seriously detracts from the enjoyment.

Great car, the VXR, but it’s not class-leading.

Conflicting reports already. In any event, in the traditional (i.e. non-RWD) hot hatch class, the Megane RS continues to look like the best buy if you're after all out dynamic ability and the Golf GTI 35 the most satisfying all-round ownership prospect.
 
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First drive review: Vauxhall Astra VXR


In regular driving, I think you can feel its German influence; it steers positively, with good weight and much stability around straight ahead. You could imagine driving it at proper autobahn speeds for hours at a time. There’s a touch of turbo lag at low revs - it really gets going about 3000rpm or so. But it's pleasingly accomplished.


And so in faster driving? Well, it makes an extraordinary noise: lots of whooshing and sucking and a bizarre but compelling high-pitched whistle as the revs wind around. It’s quick, too, there’s no denying. It wouldn’t surprise me if, over a lap, it had the measure on all of its rivals over a lap. The steering is quick and the Astra fairly dives at a corner; there’s precious little roll but what there is comes fast, and from that point on the VXR is poised and capable.

Full story: http://www.autocar.co.uk/car-review/first-drives/first-drive-review-vauxhall-astra-vxr
 
Vauxhall Astra VXR
Verdict on the new turbocharged Vauxhall Astra VXR, which delivers on its bold looks with huge pace and sharp handling
Rating: 5 STAR


The performance hatchback arena has never been more tightly packed or hotly contested. The all-new Ford Focus ST, as well as the updated Renaultsport Megane 265 and Volkswagen Golf GTI Edition 35, are all aiming to be at the top.
However, Vauxhall’s latest contender – the new Astra VXR – is definitely the most promising: it has more power, more torque and more performance-boosting technology than all of its rivals.
Using the curvy three-door Astra GTC as its base, the VXR looks set to turn the most heads, too. A colour-coded front grille, more aggressive front spoiler, LED tail-lights and 19-inch alloy wheels are all standard.
Our car was also fitted with the £995 VXR Aero Pack – an option Vauxhall reckons 85 per cent of customers will specify. The pack includes attention-seeking 20-inch alloys, a biplane rear spoiler and muscular side skirts.
With 276bhp from its 2.0-litre turbocharged engine, the Astra VXR has the go to match its considerable show. It covers 0-62mph in 5.9 seconds – and if you’re in any doubt about how fast that is, just consider that a Porsche Boxster completes the same sprint in 5.8 seconds. This is also six tenths of a second quicker than the Focus ST can manage, seven tenths up on a GTI Edition 35 and a tenth faster than the Megane 265.
Those figures only tell half the story. This is a car full of character. Not only is there searing pace throughout the rev range, but the VXR also produces an exhaust note that sounds like nothing else on the road. From inside the cabin, there’s a growl up until about 4,000rpm, when it develops into something more like the rough whoosh of a jet engine. All that performance is more accessible than ever thanks to a clever front suspension set-up borrowed from the Insignia VXR.
The HiPerStrut system helps reduce the amount of torque steer – the sensation that the steering wheel is tugging in your hands as you accelerate – and it works very well. Under most conditions, you can floor the throttle out of a bend and feel totally in control. It’s only when you find some camber that the wheel can sometimes wriggle a bit. But this just adds to the sense that this car is a bit of a hooligan.
Steering which feels alive is something that has become harder to come by as new cars switch to less talkative electric power-steering systems, but the VXR’s electro-hydraulic set-up helps buck the trend. Turn into a corner and, as you hit a bump, the wheel will feed back exactly what’s underneath the front tyres to your hands. It gives you huge amounts of confidence.
And that’s a good thing considering how capable this car is in corners. A lot like the Megane 265, you have to be travelling at really high speeds before the Astra VXR even begins to feel flustered on a twisting, poorly surfaced UK B-road.
The car comes as standard with a limited-slip differential, which helps draw you into the apex of a bend and slingshot you out the other side. The front wheels will eventually lose grip, but switch the Astra’s adaptive dampers to Sport, or even VXR mode, and they seem to grip even harder than before.
So is it all good news? Not quite. The problem is the ride. It’s firm – but not necessarily uncomfortable – in the standard setting, but it becomes even stiffer when you start to explore the Sport and VXR settings. As a result, these are best used occasionally on smooth roads, rather than as standard.
Still, for all its immense performance, the Astra VXR doesn’t do too badly at the pumps. Combined economy is 34.9mpg, and the car emits a reasonable 189g/km of CO2.
So the blow to your wallet won’t be from your road tax bill or even at the filling station; instead, it will come at the dealership. Vauxhall has set the starting price of the VXR at £26,995, and once you add the Aero Pack and VXR Performance Seat Pack fitted to our car, that rises to £28,485.
Almost £30,000 for an Astra will certainly cause some people to think twice, but then a VW Scirocco R – perhaps the most similar car in performance – costs £30,745. That said, one of the most capable vehicles in this class is the Mégane Cup 265. It’s not as well equipped, admittedly, but it costs only £24,840. A Focus ST looks a relative bargain at £21,995.
So if anything stops Vauxhall from selling the 1,200 Astra VXRs every year that it’s hoping to, it will be the price, because there’s certainly nothing wrong with the way it looks or the way it drives.
Viewed simply in those terms, this is the best VXR model that Vauxhall has ever produced – and a genuine contender for a place at the top of this class.
 
Such a great looking hatchback, it would have made a great Saturn in the U.S. Sigh.


M
 
I am hearing that the Drexler limited slip differential is working miracles with the Astra VXR, but the Megane still corners better.

That RevoKnuckle front suspension geometry is still used in the new generation Megane? I remember it was introduced with the former Focus RS and Megane RenaultSport.
 
Love the exterior, not completely won over by the interior based on these pictures. Though as I've yet to sit in the latest Astra I can't really pass judgement. Difficult choice to make for someone looking for a hot hatch because the range of options all are appealing.
 
The car might not have razorsharp handling like a Megane but as all-rounder Opel seem to be a better choice. Overall Opel have recieved good ratings and 4.5 stars from EVO is a good verdict.
My two favorite cars in this class are Astra VRX and Scirrocco R, the two only choices I would consider.
 
First performance numbers from AutoBild:

Opel Astra OPC
  • Weight: 1536 kg
  • 0-50 km/h: 2,7 s
  • 0-100 km/h: 6,3 s
  • 0-130 km/h: 10,1 s
  • Flexibility (60-100 km/h) in 4th gear: 4,8 s
  • Flexibility (80-120 km/h) in 6th gear: 8,0 s
 
9.1liters/100km is acceptable for cars like these. Good.
 
9.1liters/100km is acceptable for cars like these. Good.

Don't know. I think the most acceptable figures are the ones of Porsche's Flat 6. Turbocharged cars, when driven hard consume even more.
 
This comparison (with more performance numbers) will be in the new issue of AutoBild Sportscars (out on Friday). :rolleyes:
 

Opel

Opel Automobile GmbH, is a German automobile manufacturer based in Rüsselsheim am Main, Hesse, Germany. Founded by Adam Opel in 1862, it was owned by General Motors from 1929 to 2017, and the PSA Group before merging with Fiat Chrysler Automobiles to form Stellantis in 2021. Most of its lineup is marketed under the Vauxhall Motors brand in the United Kingdom since the 1980s. In Australia, some were rebadged as the Holden brand until 2020, in North America and China under the Buick, Saturn (until 2010), and Cadillac brands, and in South America under the Chevrolet brand.
Official websites: Opel, Vauxhall

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