1990 Holden Apollo Reviews
You'll find all our 1990 Holden Apollo reviews right here. 1990 Holden Apollo prices range from $1,930 for the Apollo Slx to $4,070 for the Apollo Executive.
Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.
The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Holden dating back as far as 1989.
Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the Holden Apollo, you'll find it all here.
Holden Reviews and News
Cars will never be built in Australia again
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By John Law · 24 Jun 2024
New-vehicle manufacturing will never return to Australia – at least not as we knew it. Setting up full-scale production of a new car – as we saw with the Holden Commodore or Ford Territory – would be a $2 billion exercise today, says Engineering Director and Premcar partner Bernie Quinn. Having been involved with Ford’s FPV program and Premcar’s latest remanufacturing operation producing Australian-focused off-road capable Nissan Navara and Patrol Warriors, Quinn is intimately aware of the challenges.When CarsGuide asked about the viability of a full-on new-vehicle program, Quinn summed it up simply: “That’s not where the future lies. That would be awesome, but I just don’t think that’s going to happen.“What we are proposing – and what we’re doing – is secondary manufacturing. Taking global products which have been manufactured in low-cost countries, like Thailand, and adapting those to the Australian market. “There’s no reason why that can’t apply to EVs. And there’s no reason why that couldn’t apply to an EV conversion of a dual-cab ute, for example,” says Quinn.You might have spotted the ROEV project that had aspirations of taking HiLuxes and Rangers and converting them to electric vehicles – Premcar was involved on the engineering side. “We were working with ROEV but they’ve since changed their strategy and they’re not going to go ahead with that conversion.”ROEV has pivoted into artificial intelligence-driven software that can predict the most efficient vehicle type and powertrain for certain use cases. But Bernie still sees a future in localisation projects.“There’s 20,000 dual-cab utes in the Pilbara. The companies that work in the mining industry in the Pilbara have ESG requirements – corporate requirements – that are beyond government legislation.“So if they want to say ‘we’ve got to be all-electric by 2030’, well, there’s no vehicle that can do that. How would you service that market? Well, you might do an EV conversion. That’s what that project was all about,” explains Quinn. He notes that it would cost “a few million” to service that demand, far less than the $2 billion to engineer and produce a ground-up vehicle here. Only LDV offers a basic electric ute in Australia with manufacturers like Toyota and Ford dragging their heels on this type of vehicle. And when Australian vehicle manufacturing ended for good in October 2017 with the final Holden Commodore ‘VF II’ the people with knowledge didn’t necessarily disappear from the scene. Many remain here, now being employed by companies such as Premcar, Walkinshaw and RMA automotive to work on conversions, upgrades and localisation programs.Premcar has delivered 10,000 Warriors since 2018, while EV ute conversions have gone a little quiet, although SEA electric is still around.In simple terms, Australian manufacturing isn’t dead. The future just looks very different to Holden Commodores and Ford Falcons.
What a 2025 Commodore might have looked like
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By Byron Mathioudakis · 05 May 2024
Is this what next year’s Holden Commodore would be if General Motors hadn’t pulled the plug in 2020?
This is the Holden Colorado we could’ve had
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By Chris Thompson · 10 Apr 2024
The Chevrolet S10 ute - a Brazilian-built relative to the Holden Colorado once sold in Australia - has been updated for its home market, giving us a look at how the ute could have looked in 2024 here.
How does GM fit into a post-Holden Australia?
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By Chris Thompson · 06 Apr 2024
It’s been more than four years since February 2020 when Holden announced it would shut its doors in Australia, and for Lion-badged die-hards there’s still some hurt - but General Motors is rebuilding, and there’s a lot of optimism around the future.
The cars we want to make a comeback
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By Stephen Ottley · 29 Mar 2024
Easter is a time of rebirth and new beginnings, and naturally that turns our mind to cars (what can I say, we have a one-track mind).
Are utes changing Australians forever?
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By Byron Mathioudakis · 16 Mar 2024
Are utes changing the fabric of modern Australia? Are they contributing to the affordability crisis? Are we moving too closely towards American values?
A Holden treasure trove going up for auction!
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By James Cleary · 25 Jan 2024
After 30 years of operation in the historic Victorian Murray River town of Echuca, the contents of the National Holden Motor Museum is set to be auctioned off on Saturday, May 18 this year.
Here are the new-car sales winners of 2023
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By Tim Nicholson · 14 Jan 2024
Last year was a record year for new-vehicle sales in Australia, which was welcome news for carmakers following years of pandemic-related uncertainty. But aside from the dominant Toyota, there were some other sales surprises that didn't make the podium. These are the sales winners of 2023.
Holden at 75. A quick season summary!
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By Byron Mathioudakis · 02 Dec 2023
Some 75 years on from November 29, 1948 – when Australian Prime Minister, Ben Chifley, proclaimed “She’s a beauty!” as that very first production 48-215 ‘FX’ came off the Fishermans Bend assembly line – we revisit Holden’s past through the lens of hindsight, while holding on hope that GM resumes the narrative in the future.
Why these GM EVs might have saved Holden
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By Byron Mathioudakis · 25 Nov 2023
Could a pair of advanced General Motors midsized SUV electric vehicles (EVs) have given Holden an effective one-two right-hook against the Tesla Model Y if it had held on for three more years?