Brilliant video Ian, and very surreal for me to watch my own car being tested. More so than watching the Super National video, as I was with you during filming for that one. I actually only bought this car as my ratty diesel E-class was playing up so much. I went on Ebay to see what I could get for 500 quid, and this popped up local-ish. 69k and 11 months mot, 2 previous owners with the last owner having kept it from when it was a 3 year old ex mobility car, up to him giving up driving just before lockdown aged 94! It then stood for 2 years, a local trader recommissioned it on his behalf and sold it to me. Just to add, the front suspension in this car is fairly tired, the shock absorbers were picked up on the last mot as not actually doing much. I have new ones, and new lower arms, track rod ends etc, ready to fit, but I still haven't got around to it. Naturally, I fixed the E-class the day after buying the Astra, but I decided to keep it anyway as its such a delightful car to drive.
We had these as beat cars in West Yorkshire Police in the 1990's. They were slow, basic, handled like shopping trolleys on ice, but in the hands of a determined Bobby with far less regulation than they have today it could be forced to perform way beyond it's capabilities. I was once on the way to an immediate call in Leeds on nights absolutely thrashing one of these to within an inch of its life when i went over a blind crest in the road with it bouncing off the limiter at about 80mph, completely took off and like the Duke boys landed , got behind a stolen car and forced it to stop and locked up a load of burglars inside. I'm sure the driver thought we'd landed from outer space. Funny times.
I think these were ubiquitous in 'The Bill', or was it the Mk. 4? So long since I watched that. Aussie police cars were somewhat larger (think AU :-) ) so the Astras always stuck out for me.
Never had a mk3 but my mk4 was so great at just being a car. Nothing fancy in it, just a good reliable plodder of a car. I miss the 90s and early 00, modern cars leave me so disenfranchised.
Still see plenty of mk4 Astras on the road, a testament to their reliability especially as theyre never looked after and just run into the ground..hardly ever see any rust on them either!
I agree . My first car was an Astra mark 2 in white with a red stripe down the sides later I had an Astra GTE l loved that car I actually cried when I sold it . Loved all the Astras up until the more recent ones .
Ahhh memories. When I worked for Sainsbury's HQ they used to give us these as rental cars to drive around the country doing systems installations. Generally the 1.4, but sometimes you got lucky and got a 1.6 auto and, very occasionally, a Cavalier. These were pre-speed-camera days and I remember setting all manner of personal best speed records returning from whatever store back to home at silly-o'clock in the morning. Happy days.
I worked for Alamo at the same time collecting and delivering cars in the south east (usually very quickly). I could be mistaken but didn't Sainsbury's have an office in Wallington? I'm fairly sure we had the contract to supply your cars. Do you remember where the ignition keys were hidden?
@@antman5474 Hah - yes, Alamo. I was in Hampshire at the time and our regional office was in Woking - I guess their South-Eastern region was Wallington. Were the keys up the exhaust? It was a long time ago....
@@Hebbers Yes they were up the exhaust, well there's a blast from the past lol. I was based out of Gatwick and ragged it round East and West Sussex and South London. We drove it like we'd nicked it, we operated as a pair, one car was the office and usually a 2.0l or a Senator and later the Omega (most customers rented cheap motors but we did have the good stuff on our fleet) and the other car was whatever we were to collect clean and deliver, usually a slow piece of shit. But damn we had fun in the pre camera smart motorway days. The operation collapsed in '96 and we ended up driving vans. White ones. Thanks for the reminder. Keys up the exhaust. Fuck yeah, the 90's rocked.
Good solid dependable cars, my sister had one. I had a 1.8LS Cavalier from the same year and it is still one of the best cars we've ever had. Engine and gearbox were bullet proof. Normal services plus track rod ends and two sets of rear shocks and that was it over 140,000 miles! Nothing broke or fell off. 1990's were definitely peak motoring and probably peak Vauxhall too.
The estate was, in my opinion, the best of the bunch for both looks and practicality. We had one as our works pool car, so it got abused for the ten years it was with us, often driven off road, often overloaded with tools and machinery parts in the back, often asked to tow more than it should (loaded Ivor Williams 16' trailer or a small cattle box). It did well over 100,000 miles and was still going strong. As someone who has never liked fwd Vauxhalls, I thought it was a great car.
We had a few of these at work in estate form, both petrol & diesel. They all got hammered and clocked up starship mileages. But they never let anyone down. We found them to be reliable and fairly inexpensive to run.
You had to hand it to Vauxhall that their cars of this era just felt right, they were simple underneath and the engines unburstable and efficient. Perfectly drivable today and cheap to run without being boring
Nice review of a nice and simple car. My dad had a 1.7 D at the end of the 90s from his work. It had already run over 300.000 km and it was still going strong. I have driven it too and it felt very durable and safe.
Great cars. I’ve worked on so many of these as a Vauxhall technician and owned them too. Like a little Cavalier. Rear wheel arches went a bit scabby and the galvanised Astra G was a massive improvement but these were streets ahead of the crappy Escort of the time and a safe bet in its day.
This era of small family hatchbacks was fantastic, the Golf, Astra, ZX, R19 and Tipo were all good and very modern cars at the time I remember. Ford shot themselves in the foot with the 'new' Escort.
@@SpitfireFortyFour Wouldn't say it was absurdly good but it was another good family hatch and had its own personality. It was a bit small inside compared to the competition though.
Fun fact, in the 90's, no matter what car you were driving or how fast you were going on a motorway, at some point you would always be passed by an Astra hire car or van leading many people to mistakenly believe that the MKIII Astra was the fastest car in the UK.
Another one of those cars that were absolutely everywhere and then somehow wasn't anymore. Had the chance to test one back when they were new and liked it a lot. Also like the look - one of the better looking Astras, in my opinion.And yes - you got to love a 3-spoke!
Ian, May I say "Thank you" . This video took me back to my Late Mother's MK3 Vauxhall Astra SRI (3door, in White with Plastic Wheel Trims). It was nice to see you driving a MK3 Vauxhall Astra, which as you say are thin on the ground these days. I look forward to seeing your next test drive video.
Still running a 1.7 TDL van version of this car , if everything in life was this undemanding and fuss free the world would be a better place, I doubt I will ever part with it.
This was my first car! I had one in this exact spec but in metallic green. It was fantastic! Stayed in the family from new right up until it was sadly scrapped. Loved that car so much. So lovely to see it getting some love on hubnut - thank you Ian
I had a 1.3L mk2 Astra for a good few years. Got it up to 250,000 miles on the same engine and clutch before the rot got too bad. Brilliant workhorse of an engine, poor interior build quality with lots of rattles. I even used it to tow a berth caravan all over the South of England! I look back in amazement that it managed that with such a small engine😊
A friend from school had a 1.4 Merit for a few years, was reliable but very sluggish and body roll was like piloting a boat. My brother had a Mk3 SRi for quite a long time which was quite nice to drive, but not a patch on my Mk2 GTE 16v. Those were the first and last GM products that any of us owned which probably says something for that era of Vauxhall.
Had one fully loaded 1.6 convertible. Not a very dynamic drive, but really comfartable, frugal and - being a convertible - great joy to drive when thge rain stopped. Heating was so strong, you could easily drive it open in the coldest of winter!
I had one of these P reg 1.4 merit with the HT engine (single point injection) Only bought it for £500 in 2009, had it for 3 years running it from 72,000 miles to 236,000 miles without any major problems Only got rid of it because I fancied a newer car
They were still called a Kadet in South Africa.. Astra was the sedan and estate.. great vehicles indeed! We got a 2.0 turbo version called the 200ts (C20LET engine if memory serves) and they were absolute beasts in their day.. hens teeth these days of course.
My father had one of these in dark blue when I was a kid. I think it might’ve been the facelift of it. I remember being amazed at the aerial popping up from out the rear quarter panel near the window and thinking it was magical, then my father changed the volume on the radio without touching it and my mind was confused and blown by that. Vividly remember asking him how he was doing that and he always told me “I’m using the force, feeling the presence. It’s magic!” We got rid of that car years later for the newer model in 2003 in white and we’d went to France and back in it. Neither of those cars had ever let the family down and were super reliable and comfortable to be in. Good cars are the Astra. I had a 2012 about 4 year ago and absolutely loved that thing, only thing it ever needed was brakes, tyres, coil springs in the rear once and that was it. Good on fuel and never left me stuck at the side the road. Imho Vauxhall cars get too much flack from badge snobs, they’re good dependable cars.
I get excited seeing the ever so rare saloon booted variants of these as they are rare to see. The MK4 Astra saloon booted versions are also rare to spot.
My uncle was area manager at Vauxhalls EllesmerePort he took me into the factory once at a weekend , he also brought me back the Vauxhall badges from the 1980’s used to place them on my window ledge , great childhood days .
Brings back memories, I drove around in a quite tatty R-reg mk3 1.6 Astra from 2011-14, it was a mid spec so had alloy wheels, (broken) air conditioning, (broken) motorised radio aerial, power steering and yet still had keep fit windows for some reason. And the red paint had faded to a lovely salmon pink colour. Drove lovely though, until the head gasket went. £300 for nearly 3 years of motoring though. Replaced it with a mauve Fiat Punto that cost the same and lasted 6 months. I started buying modern cars on finance after that. Funnily enough I'm in an Astra again, though a mk6 now.
Never had an F, but grew up loving the way the F sedan looked. My first car was a South African built Astra G hatch and had several (Opels) since. Currently driving a German built Astra J sedan.
I loved these back in the day, and especially the 3 door. Nice styling, decent stereo and minimal faff. I much preferred Vauxhall of this era to Ford too
Could not agree more. Bought an estate 1.7 TDi L reg for my wife’s 30th birthday present back in ‘96. She was supposed to get a Golf GTi but smashed up her Golf C Formel E 3 months before so the insurance sky rocketed. March this year I paid £553 for another L reg Estate, 1.4i this time, from the car auction site I work at. Defo saved it from the scrapman. Rear wheel arches borderline perfect, one careful gentleman owner, garaged and polished, caribic blue. Drives a treat, I love it. And registered on my birthday. It was fate that it should be mine. Primarily bought to share daily duties, and keep the mileage down, with my other nicely coloured estate, a 5 litre, 572bhp, RS6 monster in sepang blue, my actual dream car, had for 6 years now. Love them both.
These do have a nice reputation here in Asian countries too, especially where GM offered locally produced versions which made prices pretty competitive. My uncle had a GSi, and I believe that's the reason why my dad decide to pick up an Omega B when I was born. Still commuting with it today, really nice car.
Had that exact engine in my first car, a P reg Corsa, loved that car. No power steering, electric nothing but was a great first car, and cheaper to insure as a 17 year old than 1.1 saxos and 106s (probably because it made the same power- a measly 60hp) while being much more dependable than either of those! Sadly rust killed it, like most Vauxhalls of the 90s
We ran a couple back in the day, the wife had a 1.6 saloon and I had a diesel estate, the other cheap to service item was the ability to replace the clutch with the gearbox in situ, great design.
There’s one locally I’ve always wanted to save. 1.4 Hi-Torq with Mk3 Owners Club stickers. Sadly being left there just sitting. Given my Mk4 is needing a new alternator though I should really get around to that first.
I've driven an Astra F 1.6 and 1.7D a couple of times in 1995-1996. The 1.6 felt very wrong geared and the 1.7D was painfully slow, but for cruising on the motorways they were excellent and they offered a much more comfortable ride than the Mk2 Golf I owned at the time and didn't rust like its Kadett E predecessor.
The issue with the windscreen wipers/washers is that it's probably had the washer pump replaced. I had to do that on my Mk1 Focus, and had the same issue. The polarity of the replacement aftermarket pump was reversed in relation to the original Ford pump, so the two-way pump was working the opposite way to the Ford one. A simple snip of the two wires to the pump, reverse them and solder them up again, and insulate them, had it sorted.
Drove one of these as a rental car in 1999 (1.6 Holden Astra sedan). Once I got used to the offset steering wheel, it proved to be a nice drive from Hobart to Launceston and back.
My Son has a very Hub nut car, a 2009 Fiat Panda (169) 1.1 Active Eco. Electric front windows, C.D.L., P.A.S. and no cigar lighter/12v power outlet? But actually really fun to drive, almost impossible to speed, but economical. We brought of first owner at 3 years old 72k on clock it now has around 95k Drives lovely.
Peak motoring, is a very good description, I pretty much thought that with my MK 1. That was a 1300s with the OHC engine, the 1275 pushrod MK 2, I had later was very similar in ride etc. I then had 2 Mk3s. The turbo diesel with the intercooled Isuzu engine pulled very well.
Drive one in France 1992 when it was new (1,4 80 hp I believe, Opel of course) and really liked it. My dad looked on a second hand 2 L a couple of years later and took it for a drive to his local mechanic to get a verdict. The mechanic said: it’s probably a nice car but have you seen the rust spots? The car was 3 years old, 3000 miles on the clock, my dad returned the car quickly to the dealer. The rust problems where solved with the next generation Opel Astra, and no, the Golf didn’t rust to the same extent!
My mum always had Astras, she had a Mk2 and a Mk3. Both lasting over 10 years a piece with very little problems. Her last one a 1997 Astra Arctic 1.6 was a lovely car. Thanks for this.
My first car was a poverty spec mk2 three door with the 1.2 ohv engine as seen in the Chevette. It was Beige with a brown interior. It only had a 4 speed gearbox MW/LW radio with no cassette and no near side mirror. That last one was resolved by a trip to Tan Y Groes.
my dear old grandpa had his astra f 1600 from 1997 till his death in 2018, it was a 1995 model, did many miles, never had any problems, rusted but not scaringly so.... a good reliable cheap car. my brother bought a 1996 1600 as a banger, thrashed the hell out of it, it did throw a conrod -admittedly whilst he was doing a burnout so big you couldnt see the car 😛
I had a 1.6 Arctic edition in my early 20s and loved it, right up until a van went into the side of me and wrote it off. Having air con and rear head restraints was a total luxury to me at the time
Always preferred the exterior of the Mk2 personally, but these I feel had a better dashboard look than both the Mk2 & Mk4. Performance wise these always felt a tad worse than the Mk2 too, probably down to a bit of extra weight & the higher roofline leading to more roll (as the chassis was essentially the same as before)
I bought one of those brand new on an L plate. It was a 1.7 diesel Merit 3 door, my first AND LAST diesel. It was non turbo and it would NOT get up the hills around Clovelly without dropping into first gear. Got rid after 18 months and bought a new 1.6 petrol cabrio which was miles better.
I drove loads of these back in the day. The ones without power steering were much less pleasant to drive. The 1.4 8v single point injection engine was ok, the mpi 82ps was nicer. The 1.6 8v was great on petrol, but very dull spread of power. The natural aspirated diesel were also great on mpg, but not quick! 2.0 GSi was pretty quick. Turbo diesel was a good choice.
Vauxhall did produce some really decent vehicles. I’d want one with the 1.7 DI engine. Unkillable. I did many miles with that engine in a corsavan and never serviced it. Oil leaked a bit so used oil went in to top it up
Great to see a review of the Astra. Our family had one of these in the 90s, a white pre-facelift one which did have electric windows but was otherwise nearly identical to the one in the review. Immensely practical and reliable car. The only thing I can remember going wrong with it was one front wheel bearing. I remember severely testing the limits of its practicality by loading three bikes on the roof, five people inside and a boot full of luggage. It coped surprisingly well, though fuel economy got down to 30mpg!
I had a new Kadet in 1981 and a total of 6 Vauxhalls culminating in a J reg Astra. The steering constantly pulled to the left with some force and despite repeated visits to the dealer was never improved. This was the last Vauxhall I ever bought, I was lucky to sell it. The buyer said he had a garage and even though he noticed it pulling to the left he thought he could fix it, I was just glad to offload it.
As ex GM employees (UK) my Dad & I had a variety of Vauxhalls over the years. My Dad had one of these Astra's just before he passed. Prior to that Viva's (Mk1, 2, 3), Magnums, Chevette's etc. I had a 1969 Viva GT for a while & have fond memories underneath it most weekends modifying the suspension & engine. Astra GTE's were great & are now quite rare & sought after now.
I went to the launch year motor show for these. They were making a big show of the "Pre restraint" seat belts, that in the event of sudden braking would automatically pull you backwards. They were demonstrating this at the show, putting people in seats and photographing their reactions as the belt snapped back. I liked the styling, but I found many of the 90's designs seemed rather flimsy until they started adding doorbars and extra safety equipment later on. I remember my village taxi driver hanging onto his Mk2 Cavalier for as long as possible because he preferred it to the Mark 3 they had just bought.
Great vlog, had Astra 1.4 LS had electric windows at the front, not a bad engine in most circumstances, barring regular family trips to Scarborough when four up with buckets and spades, notorious Staxton Hill on the way home was a challenge. Thx for posting.
I had an estate version of this 1.4 merit as a company car when I was a field service engineer. I did 100,000 miles in 18 months and it never failed. It's interior design was perfect for my job. Only "issue" I had was that the speedo could be very generous. Reported it every time it went for a service, but dealer could not find anything. It read 95 when you were doing 80...........on a private road.
Yes the speedo is way out on this car. 70 on the speedo is 60 in reality. Not helped by having fractionally smaller tyres, it has 165/70R13's, it should have 175/70's.
If my Speedo reads 35 I'm actually doing 30 so it avoids speed cameras! Weird thing is the mileometer is exactly right. I did a 10.1 mile journey in a Polo that read exactly what it said on the dash cam yet my Astra read exactly 10.1 miles. I would have thought it would have recorded a higher mileage if the speedo was wrong?
I had a 92 J reg 1.4 merit as a company car. BRILLIANT car. over the next 3 yrs did 102,000 miles without a hitch. Driving to Strasburg with 2 tenage boys and luggage recorde 52 mpg and the Michelin tyres lasted 60,000 miles. I kid you not!
From 2011 - 2015 I first owned an Astra F 1.6 f. I can confirm everything positive you told about the car. That´s why I somehow fell in love with that car. In 2015 I unfortunately had to sell it because I had too many cars, no space and the Astra could be sold faster than any of the others (because it´s cheap, but reliable and practical). Soon afterwards I started to regret it and that feeling lasted on. So last year I bought the same thing again. Took me a while to find one with very good original paint and only few rust issues. I probably will drive it until it breaks completely or til I get too old, whatever comes first.
A few years ago I had an Astra F Classic, with an X14NZ engine. Year 1999. Manufactured in the GM factory in Gliwice, Poland. This silver sedan was probably the most honest car I've ever had. He did not promise more than he could give. It was comfortable enough, and the low fuel consumption sweetened the poor performance. It also proved to be reliable. The only failures are the clutch cable broken twice and that's it. I did 70,000 km with it and I regretfully sold it due to corrosion problems.
My dad had a 1.6i Astra in that same color and layout back in the 90's. In 1994 my family went for a tour of recently liberated Europe. Poland, Germany, Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary etc. At 180 km/h on the Autobahn, I remember a red Testarossa just flying past us. It had one big side mirror. Good times.
Great car! I have 1,4 MPI opel astra sedan from 95'. Only 146k on the clock. Most of it's life spent in a garage. Owned by an older man. Love the simplicity and easy to work on. Very dependable car! Cheap parts as well. Won't sell it!
Takes me back. My wife had the LS version of the astra in white and also M reg… bloody brilliant car and in the 6 years she owned it I think the only problem we had was with the temp sensor! A very reliable car.
My dad used to own the most basic spec 1.4 8v from 1992. It even lacked the radio/date and temperature display, no power steering, no ABS, carbureted. It rusted like hell, but served reliably for over 300k kms. The last ones were made in Poland from 1998 to 2002 and sold as Astra Classic. Rusted even more, but it saved many people from the horror of owning a Polonez.
Passed my test in my mum’s one! Nov ‘95 model, in a weird blue/purple colour. Registration IAZ 7781. As a 17 year old I never appreciated how good it actually was, sadly. Great review!
Great to see one of your usual type of reviews again. I've always liked the style of these and my dad and I were offered a lift in an automatic Holden badged unit not long ago (my only ride) and I appreciated the euro flair of it's interior plastics over my 80s 323.
Total agree with you on this one Ian. I ran a Mk3 Astra LS Diesel hatchback in metallic green, known as George the Green Dragon. It was a lovely, solid car 50 mpg and I didn't have any problems with it. Only thing was it did struggle as a tow car, and the caravan was only a 10 foot Monza 1000. I replaced it with a Mk4 Astra Merit estate diesel with was a better tow car, but one month into ownership the Izuzu fuel pump packed up and it cost me £700 for a replacement and it wasn't as rust resistant as the Mk3.
These were still known as the Opel Kadett here in South Africa, the 4 door of the same generation was called the Astra. Even won Car of the Year here in 1993.
Absolutely magnificent, I had one of these. My first company car, also as I was an apprentice engineer I got the estate version, in metallic green!!!Think it was on a L reg. Oh happy days lol. It even had alloys, living the dream!!!
Completely agree, this is peak car era. Always have a soft spot for the Mk3 Astra. My dad had a very early phase 1 Estate, GLS spec so had the luxuries of electric heated door mirrors and velour trim. It was the first car I ever drove at the age of 12/13ish on Southport Beach. It went on to do mega-mileage. Unfortunately, and despite trying to keep on top of it, rust got the better of it by the time it was 10 years old.
Merit was a basic spec, I seem to remember. I think the black strip might well not have been standard. A very reliable engine, the GM one. Keep fit windows? Love it. The radio was built in, no way to nick it. Gone were the days of kits previously needed to modify your radio/cassette, where you could literally take the radio out of the dashboard and bring it to the safety of your home. In the mid 80s to mid 90s, smashing windows and nicking the radio was very much a growth industry. I was a victim of this for my company car, three times. In the end, we didn't bother replacing the radio for the last six months, before it went back to the leasing company.
My nan had a K-reg 1.4 Expression with CD alloys and a wonderful blue interior (it was pre-facelift). The 1.4 was available in two outputs - an 82bhp and ‘Hi-Torq’ 61bhp (don’t quote me on the exact figures) so it may have been the bigger output unit. To think there were so many yet you see none anymore. Great review Ian
Great video yet again - thanks. We had an Astra mk3 new and it was fine but a bit lacking in torque. Have you driven a mk1 nova? I grew up with these (my mums car) and the 1.2 saloon while looking awful was a great car and introduced us to 50mpg and reasonably quite motorway cruising! Weird offset steering wheel as I remember thou.
When I was still in school in 2010 my classmate had an Astra F 1.6 while I had a BX 16TZI. They where quite evenly matched, trust me we tried. As a Citroën owner you where supposed to hate opels, but I liked the Astra. It was indestructible, drove like It was on rails compared to the BX and felt a little more modern. Fond memories of all the shit we did with those cars...
Brilliant video Ian, and very surreal for me to watch my own car being tested. More so than watching the Super National video, as I was with you during filming for that one.
I actually only bought this car as my ratty diesel E-class was playing up so much. I went on Ebay to see what I could get for 500 quid, and this popped up local-ish. 69k and 11 months mot, 2 previous owners with the last owner having kept it from when it was a 3 year old ex mobility car, up to him giving up driving just before lockdown aged 94! It then stood for 2 years, a local trader recommissioned it on his behalf and sold it to me.
Just to add, the front suspension in this car is fairly tired, the shock absorbers were picked up on the last mot as not actually doing much. I have new ones, and new lower arms, track rod ends etc, ready to fit, but I still haven't got around to it. Naturally, I fixed the E-class the day after buying the Astra, but I decided to keep it anyway as its such a delightful car to drive.
She’s a keeper,might not set the world on fire but it will take you around the world no problem if you wanted it to
"ratty diesel E-class" lol
We had these as beat cars in West Yorkshire Police in the 1990's. They were slow, basic, handled like shopping trolleys on ice, but in the hands of a determined Bobby with far less regulation than they have today it could be forced to perform way beyond it's capabilities.
I was once on the way to an immediate call in Leeds on nights absolutely thrashing one of these to within an inch of its life when i went over a blind crest in the road with it bouncing off the limiter at about 80mph, completely took off and like the Duke boys landed , got behind a stolen car and forced it to stop and locked up a load of burglars inside. I'm sure the driver thought we'd landed from outer space. Funny times.
I think these were ubiquitous in 'The Bill', or was it the Mk. 4? So long since I watched that. Aussie police cars were somewhat larger (think AU :-) ) so the Astras always stuck out for me.
@@steved3702 from memory I believe the Astra on the bill was the generation after this one.
Never had a mk3 but my mk4 was so great at just being a car. Nothing fancy in it, just a good reliable plodder of a car. I miss the 90s and early 00, modern cars leave me so disenfranchised.
same, had two mk4's both eventually had engine issues (oil burning etc) but very easy nice cars.
Me too .
Still see plenty of mk4 Astras on the road, a testament to their reliability especially as theyre never looked after and just run into the ground..hardly ever see any rust on them either!
I had a mk4 from almost brand new to 9 years old, was a good solid car. The mk4 always reminded me as the mk3 cavalier, many of the same qualities.
I agree . My first car was an Astra mark 2 in white with a red stripe down the sides later I had an Astra GTE l loved that car I actually cried when I sold it . Loved all the Astras up until the more recent ones .
Ahhh memories. When I worked for Sainsbury's HQ they used to give us these as rental cars to drive around the country doing systems installations. Generally the 1.4, but sometimes you got lucky and got a 1.6 auto and, very occasionally, a Cavalier. These were pre-speed-camera days and I remember setting all manner of personal best speed records returning from whatever store back to home at silly-o'clock in the morning. Happy days.
I managed 115 from my brother's standard 1.4 SPi (67 bhp iirc) 😁
I worked for Alamo at the same time collecting and delivering cars in the south east (usually very quickly). I could be mistaken but didn't Sainsbury's have an office in Wallington? I'm fairly sure we had the contract to supply your cars. Do you remember where the ignition keys were hidden?
@@antman5474 Hah - yes, Alamo. I was in Hampshire at the time and our regional office was in Woking - I guess their South-Eastern region was Wallington. Were the keys up the exhaust? It was a long time ago....
@@Hebbers Yes they were up the exhaust, well there's a blast from the past lol. I was based out of Gatwick and ragged it round East and West Sussex and South London. We drove it like we'd nicked it, we operated as a pair, one car was the office and usually a 2.0l or a Senator and later the Omega (most customers rented cheap motors but we did have the good stuff on our fleet) and the other car was whatever we were to collect clean and deliver, usually a slow piece of shit. But damn we had fun in the pre camera smart motorway days. The operation collapsed in '96 and we ended up driving vans. White ones. Thanks for the reminder. Keys up the exhaust. Fuck yeah, the 90's rocked.
Good solid dependable cars, my sister had one. I had a 1.8LS Cavalier from the same year and it is still one of the best cars we've ever had. Engine and gearbox were bullet proof. Normal services plus track rod ends and two sets of rear shocks and that was it over 140,000 miles! Nothing broke or fell off. 1990's were definitely peak motoring and probably peak Vauxhall too.
The estate was, in my opinion, the best of the bunch for both looks and practicality. We had one as our works pool car, so it got abused for the ten years it was with us, often driven off road, often overloaded with tools and machinery parts in the back, often asked to tow more than it should (loaded Ivor Williams 16' trailer or a small cattle box). It did well over 100,000 miles and was still going strong. As someone who has never liked fwd Vauxhalls, I thought it was a great car.
We had a few of these at work in estate form, both petrol & diesel. They all got hammered and clocked up starship mileages. But they never let anyone down. We found them to be reliable and fairly inexpensive to run.
You had to hand it to Vauxhall that their cars of this era just felt right, they were simple underneath and the engines unburstable and efficient.
Perfectly drivable today and cheap to run without being boring
Nice review of a nice and simple car. My dad had a 1.7 D at the end of the 90s from his work. It had already run over 300.000 km and it was still going strong. I have driven it too and it felt very durable and safe.
The izuzu diesel engine was the key .
@@davidgibson4840 I think the 1.7 was an Opel Diesel, only the Turbo Diesel was by Isuzu, right?
Apparently so. Hadn't realised that. Just confirmed it.
Great cars. I’ve worked on so many of these as a Vauxhall technician and owned them too. Like a little Cavalier. Rear wheel arches went a bit scabby and the galvanised Astra G was a massive improvement but these were streets ahead of the crappy Escort of the time and a safe bet in its day.
they are ugly , handled badly and the interior was narrow very little room in them , vile cars
This era of small family hatchbacks was fantastic, the Golf, Astra, ZX, R19 and Tipo were all good and very modern cars at the time I remember. Ford shot themselves in the foot with the 'new' Escort.
VERY TRUE - they all had character, now its just samey old eurobox dullness. Loved my R19 and my mate at school who had a ZX Reflex 1.4i !
Good call on the Tipo. All but forgotten now but was really nice roomy car.
The Rover R8 was also of that era and that car was absurdly good.
@@SpitfireFortyFour Wouldn't say it was absurdly good but it was another good family hatch and had its own personality. It was a bit small inside compared to the competition though.
The Focus is an amazing car and is certainly a contender for the top of this list. Won't find a better fun handling family hatchback.
Fun fact, in the 90's, no matter what car you were driving or how fast you were going on a motorway, at some point you would always be passed by an Astra hire car or van leading many people to mistakenly believe that the MKIII Astra was the fastest car in the UK.
Basic Vauxhalls in the 90s all felt fast and nippy, the Joy Riders loved em.
Em it was an astramax van. My mate had several , the 1.3 was actually faster than the 1.6. solid 115mph I seen on the a9 at Aviemore
The 1.7 diesel vans were rapid when empty in the back
An Astra works van on a Friday afternoon was the fastest vehicle in the world
Got to agree. World land speed record holder, without a shadow of a doubt, will allways be an Astramax.
Another one of those cars that were absolutely everywhere and then somehow wasn't anymore. Had the chance to test one back when they were new and liked it a lot. Also like the look - one of the better looking Astras, in my opinion.And yes - you got to love a 3-spoke!
Had 5 of these in a row. Finally ended up with a 1993 Gsi 2.0 16v, absolutely loved them all. My first car was a 3 door 1.4 merit. 👍
I had the GTE 16 v with the unique lcd dash .
@@spellbound4383 that would have been a Mk2 astra. I had that dash in one of my novas. ☺
@@bigerch85 Yes mark two loved the shape of it and to be honest I still do.
@@spellbound4383 had a Mk2 Belmont sxi briefly but it was so rotten the fuel tank fell off it on the way to work 😂
@@bigerch85 😆
Had 4 of these. Really solid reliable cars. The Arctic trim was nicest we had with lovely velour seats.
Ian, May I say "Thank you" . This video took me back to my Late Mother's MK3 Vauxhall Astra SRI (3door, in White with Plastic Wheel Trims). It was nice to see you driving a MK3 Vauxhall Astra, which as you say are thin on the ground these days. I look forward to seeing your next test drive video.
Still running a 1.7 TDL van version of this car , if everything in life was this undemanding and fuss free the world would be a better place, I doubt I will ever part with it.
This was my first car! I had one in this exact spec but in metallic green. It was fantastic! Stayed in the family from new right up until it was sadly scrapped. Loved that car so much. So lovely to see it getting some love on hubnut - thank you Ian
I had a 1.3L mk2 Astra for a good few years. Got it up to 250,000 miles on the same engine and clutch before the rot got too bad. Brilliant workhorse of an engine, poor interior build quality with lots of rattles. I even used it to tow a berth caravan all over the South of England! I look back in amazement that it managed that with such a small engine😊
A friend from school had a 1.4 Merit for a few years, was reliable but very sluggish and body roll was like piloting a boat. My brother had a Mk3 SRi for quite a long time which was quite nice to drive, but not a patch on my Mk2 GTE 16v.
Those were the first and last GM products that any of us owned which probably says something for that era of Vauxhall.
ye they handled badly and for 1.6 it was slow
Had one fully loaded 1.6 convertible. Not a very dynamic drive, but really comfartable, frugal and - being a convertible - great joy to drive when thge rain stopped. Heating was so strong, you could easily drive it open in the coldest of winter!
I had one of these
P reg 1.4 merit with the HT engine (single point injection)
Only bought it for £500 in 2009, had it for 3 years running it from 72,000 miles to 236,000 miles without any major problems
Only got rid of it because I fancied a newer car
Thanks for the review Ian, had many of them in the past. Brought back great memories!
They were still called a Kadet in South Africa.. Astra was the sedan and estate.. great vehicles indeed! We got a 2.0 turbo version called the 200ts (C20LET engine if memory serves) and they were absolute beasts in their day.. hens teeth these days of course.
This was the generation of good cars, simple and solid.
My dad had one of these. He passed it to me and I passed it to my daughter. Lovely basic comfy car.
My father had one of these in dark blue when I was a kid. I think it might’ve been the facelift of it.
I remember being amazed at the aerial popping up from out the rear quarter panel near the window and thinking it was magical, then my father changed the volume on the radio without touching it and my mind was confused and blown by that.
Vividly remember asking him how he was doing that and he always told me “I’m using the force, feeling the presence. It’s magic!”
We got rid of that car years later for the newer model in 2003 in white and we’d went to France and back in it. Neither of those cars had ever let the family down and were super reliable and comfortable to be in.
Good cars are the Astra. I had a 2012 about 4 year ago and absolutely loved that thing, only thing it ever needed was brakes, tyres, coil springs in the rear once and that was it. Good on fuel and never left me stuck at the side the road. Imho Vauxhall cars get too much flack from badge snobs, they’re good dependable cars.
I get excited seeing the ever so rare saloon booted variants of these as they are rare to see. The MK4 Astra saloon booted versions are also rare to spot.
I've always liked this generation of Astra. It's a shame they seem to have almost disappeared
Had 2 of these, k reg1.4 merit 3dr, then upgraded to a n reg 1.7 td ls (Isuzu) absolutely loved it, far superior to a mk5 escort
The FWD Escorts were pretty nasty things in general tbh, hard to believe they got away with making them all the way up to 2002.
My uncle was area manager at Vauxhalls EllesmerePort he took me into the factory once at a weekend , he also brought me back the Vauxhall badges from the 1980’s used to place them on my window ledge , great childhood days .
This is a car that does what it says on the tin etc.. had a few and never let me down! Great Hub Nut Hair cut as well!! Always enjoy your videos.
Brings back memories, I drove around in a quite tatty R-reg mk3 1.6 Astra from 2011-14, it was a mid spec so had alloy wheels, (broken) air conditioning, (broken) motorised radio aerial, power steering and yet still had keep fit windows for some reason. And the red paint had faded to a lovely salmon pink colour. Drove lovely though, until the head gasket went. £300 for nearly 3 years of motoring though. Replaced it with a mauve Fiat Punto that cost the same and lasted 6 months. I started buying modern cars on finance after that. Funnily enough I'm in an Astra again, though a mk6 now.
Never had an F, but grew up loving the way the F sedan looked. My first car was a South African built Astra G hatch and had several (Opels) since. Currently driving a German built Astra J sedan.
I loved these back in the day, and especially the 3 door. Nice styling, decent stereo and minimal faff. I much preferred Vauxhall of this era to Ford too
In my opinion the MK2 and MK3 styling was a step back from the original MK1. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
We had a mk4 1.6 Sport for over 17 years. It was brilliant.
Could not agree more. Bought an estate 1.7 TDi L reg for my wife’s 30th birthday present back in ‘96. She was supposed to get a Golf GTi but smashed up her Golf C Formel E 3 months before so the insurance sky rocketed. March this year I paid £553 for another L reg Estate, 1.4i this time, from the car auction site I work at. Defo saved it from the scrapman. Rear wheel arches borderline perfect, one careful gentleman owner, garaged and polished, caribic blue. Drives a treat, I love it. And registered on my birthday. It was fate that it should be mine. Primarily bought to share daily duties, and keep the mileage down, with my other nicely coloured estate, a 5 litre, 572bhp, RS6 monster in sepang blue, my actual dream car, had for 6 years now. Love them both.
My grandfather had a Mk3 Astra van with the diesel engine when I was young. Never appreciated it then but it served its purpose.
I love a mk3! Had many! My favourite one was a 1.6 arctic auto! It's name was Fust! My last one was a 1.8 sport- that went like a stabbed rat!
That automatic gearbox was a doddle indeed.
These do have a nice reputation here in Asian countries too, especially where GM offered locally produced versions which made prices pretty competitive.
My uncle had a GSi, and I believe that's the reason why my dad decide to pick up an Omega B when I was born. Still commuting with it today, really nice car.
Had that exact engine in my first car, a P reg Corsa, loved that car. No power steering, electric nothing but was a great first car, and cheaper to insure as a 17 year old than 1.1 saxos and 106s (probably because it made the same power- a measly 60hp) while being much more dependable than either of those! Sadly rust killed it, like most Vauxhalls of the 90s
We ran a couple back in the day, the wife had a 1.6 saloon and I had a diesel estate, the other cheap to service item was the ability to replace the clutch with the gearbox in situ, great design.
Yes, I still have the set of C clips they gave you to hold the clutch compressed to go through the letter box!
I’d forgotten about the excellent clutch replacement design. I had the swap down to 20 minutes on a two poster ramp.
@@dougowt Yes very handy, the 1.6 in particular suffered from regular clutch judder.
There’s one locally I’ve always wanted to save. 1.4 Hi-Torq with Mk3 Owners Club stickers. Sadly being left there just sitting.
Given my Mk4 is needing a new alternator though I should really get around to that first.
My first car was a mk3 astra 1.4, will definitely get one again
I've driven an Astra F 1.6 and 1.7D a couple of times in 1995-1996. The 1.6 felt very wrong geared and the 1.7D was painfully slow, but for cruising on the motorways they were excellent and they offered a much more comfortable ride than the Mk2 Golf I owned at the time and didn't rust like its Kadett E predecessor.
The issue with the windscreen wipers/washers is that it's probably had the washer pump replaced. I had to do that on my Mk1 Focus, and had the same issue. The polarity of the replacement aftermarket pump was reversed in relation to the original Ford pump, so the two-way pump was working the opposite way to the Ford one. A simple snip of the two wires to the pump, reverse them and solder them up again, and insulate them, had it sorted.
Drove one of these as a rental car in 1999 (1.6 Holden Astra sedan). Once I got used to the offset steering wheel, it proved to be a nice drive from Hobart to Launceston and back.
My Son has a very Hub nut car, a 2009 Fiat Panda (169) 1.1 Active Eco. Electric front windows, C.D.L., P.A.S. and no cigar lighter/12v power outlet? But actually really fun to drive, almost impossible to speed, but economical. We brought of first owner at 3 years old 72k on clock it now has around 95k Drives lovely.
Peak motoring, is a very good description, I pretty much thought that with my MK 1. That was a 1300s with the OHC engine, the 1275 pushrod MK 2, I had later was very similar in ride etc. I then had 2 Mk3s. The turbo diesel with the intercooled Isuzu engine pulled very well.
My mom had a grey saloon. Great car I stil remember the very nineties seats.and the huge boot. There used to be one on every street.
Drive one in France 1992 when it was new (1,4 80 hp I believe, Opel of course) and really liked it. My dad looked on a second hand 2 L a couple of years later and took it for a drive to his local mechanic to get a verdict. The mechanic said: it’s probably a nice car but have you seen the rust spots? The car was 3 years old, 3000 miles on the clock, my dad returned the car quickly to the dealer. The rust problems where solved with the next generation Opel Astra, and no, the Golf didn’t rust to the same extent!
Was so busy watching the Betty diaries, I missed this one.
Nice vid again. Great work!
I used to have an identical one to this 17 years ago, so nice to see another base model in such nice condition all these years later.
My God Ian your intro is hysterical! Thanks for this review, it is indeed peak Hubnut - for this month in any case.
My mum always had Astras, she had a Mk2 and a Mk3. Both lasting over 10 years a piece with very little problems. Her last one a 1997 Astra Arctic 1.6 was a lovely car. Thanks for this.
My first car was a poverty spec mk2 three door with the 1.2 ohv engine as seen in the Chevette.
It was Beige with a brown interior. It only had a 4 speed gearbox MW/LW radio with no cassette and no near side mirror.
That last one was resolved by a trip to Tan Y Groes.
my dear old grandpa had his astra f 1600 from 1997 till his death in 2018, it was a 1995 model, did many miles, never had any problems, rusted but not scaringly so.... a good reliable cheap car. my brother bought a 1996 1600 as a banger, thrashed the hell out of it, it did throw a conrod -admittedly whilst he was doing a burnout so big you couldnt see the car 😛
a simple car and all the better for it - the perfect comment Ian - Congrats on your sub numbers!
I had a K reg 1.4i estate. good car, reliable and had a sunroof. Mine was a LS version, with electric front windows.
I had a 1.6 Arctic edition in my early 20s and loved it, right up until a van went into the side of me and wrote it off. Having air con and rear head restraints was a total luxury to me at the time
Always preferred the exterior of the Mk2 personally, but these I feel had a better dashboard look than both the Mk2 & Mk4. Performance wise these always felt a tad worse than the Mk2 too, probably down to a bit of extra weight & the higher roofline leading to more roll (as the chassis was essentially the same as before)
MK2 far better by a long way I absolutely despise the mk3
My dad had the 1.7 turbo diesel with the Isuzu engine , so good it was
I bought one of those brand new on an L plate. It was a 1.7 diesel Merit 3 door, my first AND LAST diesel. It was non turbo and it would NOT get up the hills around Clovelly without dropping into first gear. Got rid after 18 months and bought a new 1.6 petrol cabrio which was miles better.
I loved those Astras and I agree the estate was super. I had one of the last MK2 1.4 Merit and it was great.
I had a 1.4 LS saloon as a stop gap recently. I was very impressed with the build quality and ride of these things.
3:12 the all new Vauxhall As(h)tra(y)!
I drove loads of these back in the day. The ones without power steering were much less pleasant to drive. The 1.4 8v single point injection engine was ok, the mpi 82ps was nicer. The 1.6 8v was great on petrol, but very dull spread of power. The natural aspirated diesel were also great on mpg, but not quick! 2.0 GSi was pretty quick. Turbo diesel was a good choice.
Vauxhall did produce some really decent vehicles. I’d want one with the 1.7 DI engine. Unkillable. I did many miles with that engine in a corsavan and never serviced it. Oil leaked a bit so used oil went in to top it up
Great to see a review of the Astra. Our family had one of these in the 90s, a white pre-facelift one which did have electric windows but was otherwise nearly identical to the one in the review. Immensely practical and reliable car. The only thing I can remember going wrong with it was one front wheel bearing. I remember severely testing the limits of its practicality by loading three bikes on the roof, five people inside and a boot full of luggage. It coped surprisingly well, though fuel economy got down to 30mpg!
I had a new Kadet in 1981 and a total of 6 Vauxhalls culminating in a J reg Astra. The steering constantly pulled to the left with some force and despite repeated visits to the dealer was never improved. This was the last Vauxhall I ever bought, I was lucky to sell it. The buyer said he had a garage and even though he noticed it pulling to the left he thought he could fix it, I was just glad to offload it.
As ex GM employees (UK) my Dad & I had a variety of Vauxhalls over the years. My Dad had one of these Astra's just before he passed. Prior to that Viva's (Mk1, 2, 3), Magnums, Chevette's etc. I had a 1969 Viva GT for a while & have fond memories underneath it most weekends modifying the suspension & engine. Astra GTE's were great & are now quite rare & sought after now.
I went to the launch year motor show for these. They were making a big show of the "Pre restraint" seat belts, that in the event of sudden braking would automatically pull you backwards. They were demonstrating this at the show, putting people in seats and photographing their reactions as the belt snapped back.
I liked the styling, but I found many of the 90's designs seemed rather flimsy until they started adding doorbars and extra safety equipment later on. I remember my village taxi driver hanging onto his Mk2 Cavalier for as long as possible because he preferred it to the Mark 3 they had just bought.
Great vlog, had Astra 1.4 LS had electric windows at the front, not a bad engine in most circumstances, barring regular family trips to Scarborough when four up with buckets and spades, notorious Staxton Hill on the way home was a challenge. Thx for posting.
Later versions were also called the Saturn Astra in the US and Canada. My youngest daughter had one, it was a very decent car.
I had 2 different MK3 Astras. One was an 1800, in red, and it went like a scalded cat. The other was a 2.0 in white which was also fairly rapid.
They had pretty generous gearing in this era. My friends mom had a 87hp Omega (Carlton) and it was pretty good in the traffic light GP.
I had an estate version of this 1.4 merit as a company car when I was a field service engineer. I did 100,000 miles in 18 months and it never failed. It's interior design was perfect for my job. Only "issue" I had was that the speedo could be very generous. Reported it every time it went for a service, but dealer could not find anything. It read 95 when you were doing 80...........on a private road.
Apparently this one has the same fault! Thought people were blasting past when I thought I was doing 70...
Yes the speedo is way out on this car. 70 on the speedo is 60 in reality. Not helped by having fractionally smaller tyres, it has 165/70R13's, it should have 175/70's.
If my Speedo reads 35 I'm actually doing 30 so it avoids speed cameras! Weird thing is the mileometer is exactly right. I did a 10.1 mile journey in a Polo that read exactly what it said on the dash cam yet my Astra read exactly 10.1 miles. I would have thought it would have recorded a higher mileage if the speedo was wrong?
I had a 92 J reg 1.4 merit as a company car. BRILLIANT car. over the next 3 yrs did 102,000 miles without a hitch. Driving to Strasburg with 2 tenage boys and luggage recorde 52 mpg and the Michelin tyres lasted 60,000 miles. I kid you not!
Excellent cars had 1 of these as my first car 1.4 merit crashed it and bought a mk3 1.7 turbo diesel 1 of the only cars av ever missed
I had a mk3 1.4 ls as my 2nd ever car and paid £50 for it as it was a trade in at a garage I worked at. They were really good cars tbh
From 2011 - 2015 I first owned an Astra F 1.6 f. I can confirm everything positive you told about the car. That´s why I somehow fell in love with that car. In 2015 I unfortunately had to sell it because I had too many cars, no space and the Astra could be sold faster than any of the others (because it´s cheap, but reliable and practical). Soon afterwards I started to regret it and that feeling lasted on. So last year I bought the same thing again. Took me a while to find one with very good original paint and only few rust issues. I probably will drive it until it breaks completely or til I get too old, whatever comes first.
A few years ago I had an Astra F Classic, with an X14NZ engine. Year 1999. Manufactured in the GM factory in Gliwice, Poland. This silver sedan was probably the most honest car I've ever had. He did not promise more than he could give. It was comfortable enough, and the low fuel consumption sweetened the poor performance. It also proved to be reliable. The only failures are the clutch cable broken twice and that's it. I did 70,000 km with it and I regretfully sold it due to corrosion problems.
My dad had a 1.6i Astra in that same color and layout back in the 90's. In 1994 my family went for a tour of recently liberated Europe. Poland, Germany, Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary etc. At 180 km/h on the Autobahn, I remember a red Testarossa just flying past us. It had one big side mirror. Good times.
Great car! I have 1,4 MPI opel astra sedan from 95'. Only 146k on the clock. Most of it's life spent in a garage. Owned by an older man. Love the simplicity and easy to work on. Very dependable car! Cheap parts as well. Won't sell it!
Takes me back. My wife had the LS version of the astra in white and also M reg… bloody brilliant car and in the 6 years she owned it I think the only problem we had was with the temp sensor! A very reliable car.
My dad used to own the most basic spec 1.4 8v from 1992. It even lacked the radio/date and temperature display, no power steering, no ABS, carbureted. It rusted like hell, but served reliably for over 300k kms.
The last ones were made in Poland from 1998 to 2002 and sold as Astra Classic. Rusted even more, but it saved many people from the horror of owning a Polonez.
Passed my test in my mum’s one! Nov ‘95 model, in a weird blue/purple colour. Registration IAZ 7781. As a 17 year old I never appreciated how good it actually was, sadly. Great review!
Great to see one of your usual type of reviews again.
I've always liked the style of these and my dad and I were offered a lift in an automatic Holden badged unit not long ago (my only ride) and I appreciated the euro flair of it's interior plastics over my 80s 323.
I had one of these. Never let me down, comfy too
Total agree with you on this one Ian. I ran a Mk3 Astra LS Diesel hatchback in metallic green, known as George the Green Dragon. It was a lovely, solid car 50 mpg and I didn't have any problems with it. Only thing was it did struggle as a tow car, and the caravan was only a 10 foot Monza 1000. I replaced it with a Mk4 Astra Merit estate diesel with was a better tow car, but one month into ownership the Izuzu fuel pump packed up and it cost me £700 for a replacement and it wasn't as rust resistant as the Mk3.
These were still known as the Opel Kadett here in South Africa, the 4 door of the same generation was called the Astra. Even won Car of the Year here in 1993.
Brilliant video Ian 👍they were brilliant cars and engines were amazing and easy to work on
A lot of love for these. Whilst there isn't lots left, it held up much better than the god awful MK5 Escort.
Absolutely magnificent, I had one of these. My first company car, also as I was an apprentice engineer I got the estate version, in metallic green!!!Think it was on a L reg. Oh happy days lol. It even had alloys, living the dream!!!
Completely agree, this is peak car era. Always have a soft spot for the Mk3 Astra. My dad had a very early phase 1 Estate, GLS spec so had the luxuries of electric heated door mirrors and velour trim. It was the first car I ever drove at the age of 12/13ish on Southport Beach. It went on to do mega-mileage. Unfortunately, and despite trying to keep on top of it, rust got the better of it by the time it was 10 years old.
Merit was a basic spec, I seem to remember. I think the black strip might well not have been standard. A very reliable engine, the GM one. Keep fit windows? Love it. The radio was built in, no way to nick it. Gone were the days of kits previously needed to modify your radio/cassette, where you could literally take the radio out of the dashboard and bring it to the safety of your home. In the mid 80s to mid 90s, smashing windows and nicking the radio was very much a growth industry. I was a victim of this for my company car, three times. In the end, we didn't bother replacing the radio for the last six months, before it went back to the leasing company.
I absolutely adore these, my first car was a mk3. Very reliable and Very good visability
My nan had a K-reg 1.4 Expression with CD alloys and a wonderful blue interior (it was pre-facelift). The 1.4 was available in two outputs - an 82bhp and ‘Hi-Torq’ 61bhp (don’t quote me on the exact figures) so it may have been the bigger output unit. To think there were so many yet you see none anymore. Great review Ian
Great car -I had one for 3 years and had no problems with it at all.Mine was a 1.4 but slightly higher spec with power front windows.
Great video yet again - thanks. We had an Astra mk3 new and it was fine but a bit lacking in torque. Have you driven a mk1 nova? I grew up with these (my mums car) and the 1.2 saloon while looking awful was a great car and introduced us to 50mpg and reasonably quite motorway cruising! Weird offset steering wheel as I remember thou.
When I was still in school in 2010 my classmate had an Astra F 1.6 while I had a BX 16TZI. They where quite evenly matched, trust me we tried. As a Citroën owner you where supposed to hate opels, but I liked the Astra. It was indestructible, drove like It was on rails compared to the BX and felt a little more modern. Fond memories of all the shit we did with those cars...
Hmm, something wrong with you BX maybe?