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Best Australian cars of all time

  • By Stuart Martin
  • The Advertiser
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    Paul Gover has put Holden's first Australian car - the 48-215 - in top spot. Photo Gallery

We take a look at the best ever Aussie cars.

As Australians get ready to line up the sausages on the BBQ for Australia Day, we're looking back at the hey-day of Australian cars - when the Kingswood spawned a TV series and Hey Charger produced a two-finger salute that wasn't going to start a fight.

Ford, Holden and Toyota are the remaining car makers in Australia but Mitsubishi and Chrysler before them also built cars in Australia, with the Adelaide-built R-Series Valiant seen by some as a pivotal car for the Australian industry.

While it only sold just over 1000 cars before it was replaced the S-Series, it boasted a larger, more powerful engine, with comparable fuel consumption and a bigger boot.

Celebrating its 50th anniversary this week, the R-Series was built in Keswick and Mile End before Chrysler opened its Tonsley Park plant in 1964.

Geoff Chase has "sheds full'' of Valiants and has an R-Series six-cylinder as his daily drive car - the 74-year-old from the inner-southern suburbs of Adelaide bought them in the 1960s and has never felt the need to buy anything else.

"I knew the day I bought it new that I wouldn't need another car, the looks caught my eye but it will do anything, go anywhere in Australia, it tows a caravan, I've never needed anything different," he said.

Carsguide chief reporter Paul Gover has put Holden's first Australian car - the 48-215 - in top spot, ahead of Ford's XT Falcon and the 1969 Holden Monaro and the Falcon GT-HO Phase III.

Chrysler's Valiant, the Leyland P76 - "a great car that was badly built" according to Mr Gover - and the Mitsubishi Magna also make his list. The VB, Holden's first Commodore, as well as the Cruze and Ford's ground-breaking Territory SUV round out his top ten.

Adelaide-based author Gavin Farmer has spent much of his life in the automotive industry and has written books on some of the key cars - the Monaro, the Charger and even the ill-fated Leyland P76. 

Mr Farmer puts the two current six-cylinder cars from Holden and Ford firmly in the top 10.

"The current VE Commodore and FG Falcon are, to my way of thinking, world class cars - unfortunately politics is getting in the way where they are concerned, but as pieces of engineering and value-for-money, they are world-class," he says.

"The R-Series Valiant should also be up there, it changed the landscape in Australia and pushed Holden and Ford," he said.

Mr Farmer also nominated the Holden Monaro, AU-Series XR and 1960s Falcons as worthy vehicles and gave an honourable mention to two French cars. Politics has changed the automotive industry for the worse, according to the motoring author.

"I have never known Australia to be so bereft of leadership, our tradition has been the Holden/Falcon sized motor car, I personally think we need to put barriers up again to rekindle the Australian industry," he says.

"We're going the same way as the British industry, we're letting the world tell us what to do. I'm disappointed that a fully-imported foreign car is king of the hill," he said.

National Motor Museum senior curator Matthew Lombard suggested the FJ Holden might hold more significance than the 48-215 for Australian car buyers.

"The FJ is in some ways probably more important to Australian motoring than the 48-215 - although that started it but the FJ is the car a lot of people would have had new or second-hand,'' he said.

Mr Lombard also said one car that was forgotten by many was the 1936 Chevrolet Sloper, which was sold here with a Holden body. Chrysler and later Mitsubishi claim a place in motoring history, with the R and Series Valiant shaking up the Holden and Ford dominated marketplace.

The Sigma and Magna range should also be recognised as being significant Australian cars - "it started the whole change toward a smaller family car," Mr Lombard said. 

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PAUL GOVER'S TOP 10: 

1.    Holden FX 48-215
2.    XT Falcon
3.    '69 Monaro
4.    Falcon GT-HO Phase III
5.    Chrysler Valiant Charger (all of them)
6.    Leyland P76 (great car that was badly built)
7.    Mitsubishi Magna
8.    VB Commodore
9.    Holden Cruze (because it changes the game)
10.  Ford Territory

imageGAVIN FARMER'S TOP 10 AUSTRALIAN-MADE CARS:

1.    E38/E49 Charger (powered by a brilliantly engineered locally-made 6-cylinder engine)
2.    R Series Valiant (changed the face of Australian motoring forever)
3.    EH 179 Holden (a watershed car for Holden and Australia)
4.    XR6/XR8 Falcon (a brilliant combination of power, performance, handling and all-round ease of use)
5.    HQ Holden (best styling from Holden, still looks good today 40 years later)
6.    FG Falcon (a world-class car in every way, should be exported)
7.    VE Commodore (also a world-class car)
8.    XR Falcon GT (like the Valiant, changed the landscape forever)
9.    Austin 1800 (a much misunderstood car, brilliant concept, superb ride, very roomy, comfortable)
10.  Mitsubishi Magna V6 (best Japanese car made here by a mile)

imageNATIONAL MOTOR MUSEUM SENIOR CURATOR MATTHEW LOMBARD

1.  The Great Aussie Ute (in all its variations be it Holden, Ford or Chrysler)
2.   Ford Falcon GTHO III
3.   Holden FJ
4.   Holden HK Monaro
5.   Valiant Charger
6.   Mitsubishi Magna
7.   Leyland P76
8.   1989 Ford Capri
9.   The Panel Van in all its customized and shag pile glory
10. The Goggomobil

imageSTUART MARTIN'S TOP 10

1.   Holden FX/48-215
2.   Holden VE Commodore
3.   Mitsubishi Magna
4.   Ford XT GT Falcon
5.   Valiant Charger
6.   Holden Torana GTR XU1
7.   Valiant R-Series
8.   Ford Territory
9.   1934 Ford Coupe Ute
10. Leyland P76 Targa Florio

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 34 comments

  • Glad to see the Charger is in everybodies top 5! I have owned post 1980 Commodores and Falcons, Geminis, as well as a Magna and a variety of Japanese made cars and none of them have been as reliable as my 1967 VC Valiant, which is now in parts receiving a full resto! I've had 2 VC's, an AP5 pushbutton auto and a 1973 Charger (bought by parents and sold pre drivers licence unfortunately, but did a lot of learning in paddocks in it!) and all have been works of mechanical excellence! Only thing I could complain about, which many would, is the terrible braking to power ratio, and endmeicly Chrysler thing to have! The VC is receiving a full brkae upgrade prior to returning to road use, 4 wheel discs, multi-spot front calipers, bigger booster, updated master cylinder and a brake balance valve!

    John Wright of Hobart, Tasmania Posted on 27 February 2012 9:21am
  • Not too many arguements with most of the selections. Good to see Paul Gover recognize the 1968 XT Falcon - a better car than it XR predessor and there wasn't too many advances with subsequent Falcons for many years(certainly not the XA XB. HQ Holden was a good looker but later HJ HX were better cars(apart from post 76 engines with primitive EGR.) A 98 TF Magna was the best built Aussie car I have owned - Zero defects under warranty and until disposal at 120,000km. Surprisingly my early AU series 1 and Series 11 company cars were pretty good too over their 130,000 ownership period. A VC Commodore was the worst - appallling fit and finish and many quality issues - cheap parts though. My early build 2005 Ford Territory - brilliant car but quite a few issues over its 120,000 km life - well supported by dealer though.

    Stewart Eldridge of Qld Posted on 04 February 2012 7:23pm
  • 1800 land crab (but only mk1, bean counters at Leyland/BMC destroyed integrity of mk2) FG Falcon not appreciated 'til you put it on a hoist, a work of art by oz standards, style is not everything, TR Magna body strength almost as good as legendary land crab. 803cc morrie for its rack and pinion steering. P76 V8 but not for its panel gaps. There, I feel better now!

    David Pearn of Rye, Victoria Posted on 02 February 2012 9:15am
  • Definitely the R/S Series IMO. Still looks fantastic. I just may buy one.

    Brian Oh of WA Posted on 30 January 2012 9:25pm
  • From my experience the Austin 1800 (Land Crab) was the BEST Car I have ever owned The WORST Car I have ever owned is UNDOUBTEDLY the 2010 VW Polo 2 Door with DSG. Absolutely UNRELIABLE Dealer Service is ABYSSMAL - VW is in COMPLETE DENIAL - Couldn't Replicate the Multi-Problems - Must be the Way I'm Driving It! according to the CLOWNS at VW

    Quentin R of Sydney NSW Posted on 26 January 2012 7:44pm
  • My 75 XB Sky Blue Falcon was fantastic too even it was full of rust and was down right dangerous in the wet. Old cars are great to look at bring back great memories but driving them compared to a new car on todays cut and thrust traffic puts things into perspective.

    Rocket of Brisbane Posted on 26 January 2012 1:17pm
  • No mention of the ford laser? That's disappointing :-(

    Daniel K of Melbourne Posted on 26 January 2012 12:05pm
  • Best for various reasons, the 48-215 was awlful but first aussie car after the war, the XT GT was fast, looked good and great to drive, for GM fans, the 327 Monaro had go and real chrome, Mini cooper S was unbeatable A to B, I loved them all, owned most of them too. Sorry to say the British cars went weird, TR 7, Rubber nose MG B, the ugly XJS etc. Aussie cars had visual appeal but handling and mechanically were not that great. I believe the GT Falcon was probably the best all round package. I describe my 350 Monaro as a screaming bucket of bolts, I sold it before it killed me, I loved it but so dangerous.

    bob Wood of Sydney Posted on 25 January 2012 5:10pm
  • The holden cruze is a peice of plastic, the old v6 magnas are good strong cars and built to last.

    nathan of gc Posted on 25 January 2012 3:22pm
  • Gagde - The definition of "Aussie car" is one built in Australia, with substantial Australian input, and fitted with an Australian ID plate, compliance plate, or VIN plate. Few people understand that Australia had a major industry associated with car-building from the 1930's. Once Ford built its Australian factory in 1925, and GM bought Holdens Body Builders to form GMH in 1931, then we were producing cars with up to 80% Australian content from those dates, and these cars were fitted with Australian ID plates.The Govt insisted on high local content even in the 1920's. 60% Australian content was usually required to get tariff benefits, and local manufacturers and assemblers were encouraged to increase that figure. The true definition of Aussie car is one that was 100% designed and entirely produced in Australia. Only a few models achieved that status. Even the 48-215 Holden was designed overseas - but the car was 100% Australian-built, which made it a first. The later Holdens and Falcons of the 70's and 80's came close to 100% Australian-designed-and-built, but they still had some American input. The Chrysler Hemi 6's were a totally Australian engine, with no American input.

    Ron N of Perth, W.A. Posted on 25 January 2012 3:04pm
  • Not one of the 4 included the Mini which revolutionised small cars with FWD and transverse engine. If its excluded as an overseas design, so are the Cruze, Magna, R/S series Valiant and 48/215 Holden. The Mini 'changed the game' by far more than the Cruze ever will.

    Bob of Sydney Posted on 25 January 2012 11:33am
  • 1972 Falcon GTHO the only car to pull a 25 ft caravan at over 100 mph and blowing out the vans windows ... Great car.

    mal longmore of QLD Posted on 25 January 2012 9:32am
  • Can anyone explain to me what they mean when they say " Aussie car "?

    gagde Posted on 25 January 2012 7:24am
  • Great article and great lists of Aussie vehicles all. Whilst I can appreciate your professional opinion Paul Gover, the Holden Cruise has to rate as one of the worst modern Aussie? cars, that I have had the displeasure to drive. Particularly the the diesel model which tends to have to pause and think about what to do in the event of the accelerator pedal is being depressed. While I believe the exterior styling makes them look good from a distance, the built quality is at best average and the body seals don't work very well and easily allow dust ingress. The instruments seem awkward and appear to be designed to be backward and upside down in an attempt to be original rather than functional. Makes for one dirty and dangerous Granny car I think.

    Rob Mac of Perth Posted on 25 January 2012 4:10am
  • GO the FX!!!!!!! hell yer I own one and proud of it!!!

    Mark Kneubuhler Posted on 24 January 2012 11:07pm
  • Australian engineered and built.great cars actually built to suit this country with only the media not understanding the product. ...the Camira was big at the time selling buckets more than the commodore with lots of happy owners that drove these to deathwith lots of clever ideas--like quick change clutches and low line load deck..the dealer i worked in was flat out to supply camira-too small to do the job intended because they read it in the paper they needed a FWD for the 80's for engineering P76,Kimberly EH-HT 68/71-XD falcon, CAMIRA wagon .FC-HT-HQ ute/van The P76 was based on the HT with all the items that should have worked on the holden but with falcon and valiant performance.Its a shame the VE isnt based on a HT mentality AU/BA XR6--XU1-SLR-charger performance build quality- pulsar-MAGNA. Australian family car XD-AU falcon wagon-TP/TS magna. ??????? why did it get built and why did it get media interest- holden cruze/vectra/astra HB torana.pintara magna's 2.6. MY favorite P76 Skyline/VL 4.2 LH SLR

    Dave Waters of newcastle Posted on 24 January 2012 10:19pm
  • I think what this article really points out is that we made heaps of cars here - some assembled from CKD kits, but still substantial Aussie input. There were other brands as well - Triumph, Standard, Rambler, Volvo, Vauxhaul, Nissan, Desoto, Dodge, Pontiac and Mercedes. We still make Vauxhauls and Chevrolets - for export.

    Alan of Logan City Posted on 24 January 2012 8:42pm
  • I'd have to nominate the VT Commodore and it's progeny. It genuinely moved the game on in a number of important ways (styling, body stiffness, handling), and led to Holden products being sold in the UK, USA and the Middle East.

    Peter of Newcastle Posted on 24 January 2012 7:46pm
  • Cruze? I want some of what he's smoking

    MattW Posted on 24 January 2012 7:28pm
  • I cannot separate my list of all time greats (11) but they have one thing in common .... they were or are very unique cars! GTHO Phase 3, Ford XC Cobra GT 351, Falcon XR6 Turbo (pick any one), Ford Territory (F6X), Valiant Charger, Torana SLR 5000, HJ GTS Monaro, Commodre Group A (anyone), HSV W427, and to top off the list ... the very first Ute, "1934 Ford Coupe Utility 302" and the my latest favourite, the "2012 Ford Ranger 4x4 XLT Double Cab Pick-up 3.2L"!

    Manny of Australia Posted on 24 January 2012 7:23pm
  • The current Australian made Cruze is significantly different to the one previously imported from Korea. A significant amount of R & D went into it and although a large percentage is imported much is also produced in Adelaide and other parts of Australia. Every car currently made in Australia is made up of both locally manufactured and imported parts. Check where Ford V8 engines come from (no not Australia) check where many Camry and Aurion parts come from! If the local content increases, so does the price because of our high wage rates. Our high $A encourages the importation of cars and components. Blame the world economy and our great economy for such a dilemma.

    Max W. of Aldinga Beach SA Posted on 24 January 2012 7:06pm
  • Cruze - Badly built Korean crap rebadged as Holden. Nothing but problems with finish and reliability. On a par with the forgettable Camira. P76 - Couldn't sell them to anyone but Poms, or believers in the British Empire, who firmly believed that anything British origin had to be tops. Put together like $100 washing machines and the build quality showed it. Valiants - Good motors, shame about the cheap-arse bodies. Door handles that came off in your hand, doors that sagged, seats that pulled out of the floor. I don't want to see the pics again, of the Valiants that hit trees or power poles, and fell to pieces. FJ Holden - I agree, probably the fondest memories for most people of any Australian car. The bugs of the 48-215 were fixed by the time the FJ was in full swing. The '36 Chev sloper - Definitely a front runner in styling, and outright, great Australian engineering work. Shame about the fibre timing gear that crapped itself regularly, just like all the 6 cylinder Holdens that followed. HQ-WB Holdens - The peak of Australian car building quality and general owner satisfaction. The solid front end, the roominess, and the total number sold, leaves these models as my favorites.

    Ron N of Perth, W.A. Posted on 24 January 2012 7:05pm
  • Those first FJ's used to break in half in a prang, so did the FJ utes. A pic of a better car would have been good to start off this article.

    pinkmini of Perth Posted on 24 January 2012 6:51pm
  • Hey Don't forget the Infamous Giocattolo I had one and loved it and its till going strong but had to succeed to a Lotus Exige ,better handling grin

    alan lane of CBD Melb. Posted on 24 January 2012 6:32pm
  • I am such a loser, Magna and Cruze. I must have been on some serious drugs that day!

    Paul Gover Posted on 24 January 2012 6:11pm
  • Aussie cars? huh? Wow they get made here... woot woot "NOT" I mean seriously how can you call a car Australian when firstly its all made from left over old American parts? At least Japanese car makers like Nissan actually build and buy all there parts locally and are designed and built from the ground up for each project. Although some marketing and designs are done in various places the cars and all parts are japenese... even down to the hose pipes through to the headlights all have made in japan. Unlike a Holden, which probably is half american and half chinese parts.

    der okay Posted on 24 January 2012 5:55pm
  • Nikk, there was a world of difference between the Opel Rekord/Senator donor cars and what eventually became the VB. It made a much tougher, if cruder vehicle than the original Opel product. Yet despite it's relative crudity (not least the live-axle rear and old Kingswood engines), it was streets ahead of the then XC Falcon and much better packaged than the HZ Kingy. As for the Cruze, yeah the ones built here are better than the Daewoo built originals, especially the diesel, but it does mostly come from imported past.

    shebs Posted on 23 January 2012 9:58am
  • Paul Gover LOL - Cruze a game changer?? Bahaha. Assembled in Australia from imported parts.

    Carbo Posted on 23 January 2012 9:37am
  • Cant believe Gover is nominating the Cruze as an Aussie car. Because it's not. You might as well nominate Kia as one of the best Australian cars... because it uses Australian ore for the steel

    herb Posted on 23 January 2012 7:47am
  • P76? Still laughing, and yes I do remember it, 8 track cartridge stereo system, bare metal seat belt buckles that would burn a small childs fingers, and tummy, when fastened in summer, sickening ride, vomited in one once, but roomy, yep very very large. I think one way to judge iconic Australian cars would be to look at how many are still driving - it gives an indicator of both reliability and the dedication the owners have had to the car. For that there is only one, its gotta be the HQ-HZ range of Holden sedans- well loved, and many still on the road despite the perol prices, cheap to maintain too as long as you can use a socket set - which many Australians bought at Kmart .. ha, not my way, but still, look at what the Kingswood gave us! Transport, and a weekend hobby.. Baby I'm ready to go.

    Dave of Canberra Posted on 23 January 2012 12:47am
  • Holden Cruze Lol wtf?

    sab of Australia Posted on 22 January 2012 4:33pm
  • The R Series Valiant dragged the Australian motoring industry away from basically pre WWII upgrades. The allocation for R series was sold out straight after being put on the market. The 48-415 was a dumbed down Chevrolet especially specified for the Australian market by the Australian Government of the time. Even G.M. U.S.A wanted to provide a heater and some other basic amenities, the government didn't want extras.

    Bone idle Posted on 21 January 2012 4:46pm
  • How could Gover mention the VB Commodore and Holden Cruze in the top ten? Cruze is a rebadged daewoo/chev, and the VB was just a Opal Commodore C... What the hell?

    Nikk Macrae Posted on 21 January 2012 2:26pm
  • I agree that the P76 was a good car made badly.My father had to sell his Range Rover,one of the first in Australia,when the credit crunch in building happened.His company had to downsize to survive and the P76,a 4sp 6cyl was a spare reps car that we used as a builders hack.That boot was enormous and was always full of heavy tools.It had to tow a heavy compresser,which it did well except for 3 clutches as 1st gear was a bit too tall for slow manourves.We were surprised how well it handled the abuse as dad was peeved off loosing the RR and wasnt going to change his use even if it wasnt a sturdy 4X4.We travelled to the Snowy Mountains one holiday in 2 cars,the other a HT Kingswood S/W 186 powerglide.The P76 was much more comfy to travel in,but you can guess which one didnt make it home.The P76 cracked its block.The 6cyl version at 2.6lts just wasnt powerful enough for the size of car.Wish it had been the V8.I still have very fond memories of that car and the Kingswood,they were my learner cars and I can assure you the P76 was a far superior car to drive with its disc brakes and rack and pinion steering.If only they had made them better.

    Andrew Willis of Brisbane Posted on 21 January 2012 10:12am
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