Opel Commodore GS/E - The German Muscle-ish Car #blogpost

Commodore? Does that ring a bell? I guess so. Nowadays the name Commodore is reserved for cars that have thousands of dollars spent under the bonnet just so that they could do a burnout as big as possible. However, that wasn’t always the case.

Opel Commodore GS/E - The German Muscle-ish Car #blogpost

Commodore? Does that ring a bell? I guess so. Nowadays the name Commodore is reserved for cars that have thousands of dollars spent under the bonnet just so that they could do a burnout as big as possible. However, that wasn’t always the case. The first-generation Holden Commodore actually is equivalent to the third-generation Opel Commodore.
The car this post is about is the Opel Commodore A, more specifically the GS/E version.

The base model

Opel Commodore GS/E - The German Muscle-ish Car #blogpost

The Opel Commodore A was introduced in 1966 as a performance version of the Opel Rekord C. Both were mid-size executive cars, with the Commodore only being available as sedan or coupé with six-cylinder engines. The Rekord still received four-cylinder engines and had a number of different body variants to choose from.
All engines for the Commodore were SOHC straight-six engines ranging from 2.2 to 2.8 litres. All but one engine options had single-barrel (2.2) or double-barrel (2.5; 2.8) downdraught carburettor. As you may have guessed, the 1970 GS/E version didn’t rely on carburettors.

So, what makes it special?

Opel Commodore GS/E - The German Muscle-ish Car #blogpost

Opels didn’t quite have the reputation of building cars that were really quick, or exciting by any means. Did they ever have? Anyway, the Opel executive committee had one simple solution. They simply said “We want to drive on the left lane again”, and born was the Commodore GS/E.
The carburettors were thrown out in favour of a Bosch D-Jetronic. The Bosch D-Jetronic was a very early version of a multi-point EFI, the “D” stood for “drucksensorgesteuert” (pressure sensor regulated). It differed from the older Kugelfischer mechanical injection by also taking the pressure inside the intake manifold into account. Logically, the most important part in the D-Jetronic is the MAP-sensor (manifold absolute pressure), a part that’s commonly found in any modern car.
Bosch sold the patent to several Japanese companies that continue to produce injection systems based off the D-Jetronic.

Performance gains

Opel Commodore GS/E - The German Muscle-ish Car #blogpost

Such a very modern fuel injection must have a considerable performance gain, doesn’t it? The D-Jetronic was installed onto the 2.5 litre engine and without any modifications done to the engine, the power was instantly upped by 20 bhp, making it more powerful than the larger 2.8 litre engine. The fuel injected engine, named 2500 E, now pushed 150 bhp at 5800 rpm and 196 Nm at 4500 rpm with an unchanged compression ratio of 9.5:1.

The official advert for the car from 1970:

150 bhp at your right foot ... power to kick you ahead. Acceleration that pushes you into the seats. Six cylinders that receive their fuel served electonically. An engine that doesn't let a single octane go waste. GS/E: a lurking grumble in the two exhaust tubes.

150 bhp don’t sound alot today, but to put it into perspective, you need to see what other sports cars had under the bonnet. The Porsche 911 was 10 bhp weaker - and twice as expensive. 0-100 km/h was achieved in 9.5 seconds, a similar value as a contemporary Porsche 911. The top speed of 192 km/h was just shy of the magical 200 mark.
Well, calling it a true muscle car would perhaps upset a number of people, hence the title. The engine after all was lacking two cylinders to consider it a muscle car after all. But it’s one of the closest to a true American muscle car Opel ever sold - dirt cheap chassis and body from the high-volume production, a more powerful engine, some go-faster stripes and the performance to back it up. And, most importantly, the ability to outrun sports cars for a fraction of the price. Opel actually did sell a couple of cars with the General Motors smallblock V8 (Kapitän, Admiral, Diplomat), but these were luxury barges and way too expensive to be considered muscle cars.
So that’s pretty much it. A performance car that gives sports car a run for its money. Dear Opel, please do that again.

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Comments

Anonymous

Great post! As a guy who learned to drive in a Commodore (1977 D 2.8 GS) it’s great to a vintage Opel on CT’s front page. You’ve inspired me to find a RWD racing Opel to write about!

One small niggle though: only the Diplomat was ever sold with the 327 V8. The Kapitän and Admiral were straight six only.

03/31/2017 - 00:23 |
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Jakob

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

As for the Kapitän/Admiral/Diplomat B, indeed.
The Kapitän/Admiral/Diplomat A, on the other hand, were all offered as 4,6 (4.6 l, 283 cui) and 5,4 (5.4 l, 327 cui). Both are classic General Motors smallblock V8 engines with Powerglide automatic transmission.

03/31/2017 - 07:52 |
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Anonymous

Interesting

03/31/2017 - 00:50 |
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Loek 1

there was an opel commodore B that was modified by steinmetz to be a mad 550hp v8 powered racecar

03/31/2017 - 07:37 |
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Chris Mintjes

Muscle cars are not just from America. This is a Fiat!

03/31/2017 - 11:04 |
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Zweitakter

There were actually muscle cars made by Opel: The Admiral V8 and the Diplomat V8. They had either the 4 l V8 (Admiral) or the 5.4 l V8 (Diplomat) from Chevrolet.

03/31/2017 - 20:53 |
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I literally mentioned these in the post along with a reason as to why they aren’t muscle cars. They are large and, more importantly, much too expensive luxury cars. An AMG S-Class isn’t a muscle car either.

03/31/2017 - 21:00 |
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