Opel Ascona | |
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Overview | |
Manufacturer | Opel (General Motors) |
Production | 1970–1988 |
Body and chassis | |
Class | Large family car (D) |
Related | Vauxhall Cavalier Holden Camira Isuzu Aska |
Chronology | |
Successor | Opel Vectra |
The Opel Ascona is a large family car (D-segment in Europe) that was produced by the German automaker Opel from 1970 to 1988. It was produced in three separate generations, beginning with rear-wheel-drive and ending up as a front-wheel drive J-car derivative. The Ascona was developed to fill the gap in the Opel range as the Opel Rekord was gradually growing in size.
The Ascona took its name from the lakeside resort of that name in Ticino, Switzerland, and already in the 1950s a special edition of the Opel Rekord P1 was sold as an Opel Ascona in Switzerland, where the name was again used in 1968 for a locally adapted version of the Opel Kadett B into which the manufacturers had persuaded a 1.7-litre engine borrowed from the larger Rekord model of the time.[1] The Opel Ascona A launched in 1970 and sold across Europe was, however, the first mainstream Opel model to carry the name - departing from Opel's long standing convention of using German naval rank designations for its models .
The Ascona was introduced in September 1970, lasting for 18 years and 3 generations and ended production in August 1988, to be replaced by the Opel Vectra A. The second and third generations of the Ascona were developed as global platforms by Opel's then parent General Motors, with various derivative versions manufactured by other GM divisions around the world.
In motorsport, Walter Röhrl won the 1982 World Rally Championship drivers' title with an Ascona 400.