HSV W427 News

HSV celebrates in many ways
By CarsGuide team · 09 Oct 2008
Holden Special Vehicles has launched two new models, revealing the ClubSport R8 Tourer and W427 Showcar to the Sydney audience. But there are also a couple of milestones for the brand, celebrating 20 years of the brand and 40 years of the first Australian Gran Turismo Sportivo (GTS).First appearing on a HK Monaro in 1968, the GTS nameplate has been part of the HSV lexicon since its return to the market in 1992 in the form of the 200kW VP GTS and has since been the hero car-line for the high performance car company.To commemorate 40 years of GTS, just 100 specially released models will be built, with black heritage stripes, tyre pressure monitors and a commemorative '40 years of GTS' logo embedded on the headrest, brake calliper, sill plate and rear panel.Priced from $80,170, the 40 years of GTS is only available in Sting Red and Heron White.Meanwhile a new Senator Signature SV08 introduces a new Tremec TR6060 manual gearbox to the range, which will become standard across the HSV line-up later this month.Twenty years on from the SV88, Holden Special Vehicles has released a limited run of 50 HSV Senator Signature SV08s.The luxury SV08 receives exclusive lower paint-outs, sill plates and additional chrome accenting on the side mirrors and door handles, along with 20-inch alloys.  Available in Nitrate (Silver), Sting Red and Voodoo (Blue), production is limited to 20 manual and 30 automatic versions priced from $82,700.HSV has also got its hands on the Holden Sportwagon and created the ClubSport R8 Tourer, HSV’s first wagon since the all-wheel drive 2003 Avalanche.Powered by HSV’s LS3 engine producing 317kW and 550Nm, the manual R8 Tourer is priced from $65,990 which is a $1000 premium over the ClubSport sedan.HSV has also brought to Sydney the W427 showcar finished in the same Panorama Silver as the original Group A SS VL Commodore, aka Walkinshaw. The modern day Walkinshaw 427 is powered by a 7.0-litre V8 engine with 500hp, that’s hand built at  GM’s Performance Build Centre in Detroit. The W427 retails for $155,500.
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HSV loses its head
By Karla Pincott · 01 Aug 2008
Holden Special Vehicles announced today that chief executive officer Scott Grant has resigned “effective immediately … to pursue other career opportunities”.
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HSV W427 in detail
By CarsGuide team · 24 Jul 2008
Click on the photo gallery link for more photos...  
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Will sales get to 427?
By Karla Pincott · 23 Jul 2008
This is the car HSV always wanted to build – the W427 -- and now we just have to wait and see whether they’ll get to build 427 of them.
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HSV W427 video test drive
By Paul Gover · 23 Jul 2008
Nothing as flat-out menacing as the W427 from Holden Special Vehicles has ever been seen before in Australian motoring and 90 punters with $155,500 for their new pet have signed for deliveries before the end of July.You have to get the W427 on a track to understand how good, and how bad, it truly is. It feels as fast as a recently-superseded V8 Supercar in a straight line, with a thunderous exhaust note like a warbird at take-off power.Just as good as the engine, the W-car has the first serious braking package on any HSV car and there is no sign of fade in repeated hot-lap stops. And the new six-speed manual gearbox is lighter and smoother than the usual truckie-style shift in a high-performance V8.The E-Series flagship is not as racey as the first 7-litre HSV car, the two-cars-only Monaro 427 which never cleared the bar for full-scale production, but this time around all the work has been done to create a car which is more than just a racer for the road.The W427 gets the LS7 engine from the Chevrolet Corvette, with 375 kiloWatts - that is 505 horsepower - and 640 Newton-metres. They are shipped from the USA and installed on a special mini production line at HSV in Clayton which makes the 165 individual changes from a 'standard' HSV GTS. Work includes a big-bore active exhaust, a special limited-slip differential, giant brakes and the latest TR6060 gearbox with local tweaks to the clutch.Every owner will be invited to travel to Clayton to watch their car being built.But no-one is sure exactly how many W427s will be built, with HSV chief Scott Grant now talking up to 427 - "but no more than 427" - after an initial build program for 200 cars.What is certain is numbers which will make the car the quickest quarter-mile and 0-100km/h sprinter in serious production, even if a potential top speed in the 290 range has been held back to 250km/h by a self-inflicted speed limiter.Grant is simple and direct as he sums up the reason for the W427, which takes its name from company boss Tom Walkinshaw - who is having car one shipped to his home in England - and its 427-cubic inch capacity."This is the car that HSV always wanted to build," Grant says.
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HSV W427 ... King of the Holdens
By Chris Riley · 23 Jul 2008
But at $150,000 plus, HSV's W427 “super car” goes where no Holden has gone before.
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VIP Fan orders W427
By Nick Dalton · 30 Jun 2008
'Chooka' is one of the first to order Holden’s most expensive production car – and was offered his choice of build numbers 1 or 427.
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HSV W427 super Holden to cost $150,000
By Neil McDonald · 27 Jun 2008
Exclusivity doesn't come any better than the most expensive sedan ever built by Holden Special Vehicles, the W427.It is destined to become an instant classic despite its $150,000 price.Originally expected to cost $170,000, Tom Walkinshaw, the Scottish owner of HSV, has confirmed the car wearing his name will be $20,000 cheaper, subject to any changes in the luxury car tax.“With the LCT it will be $156,000,” Walkinshaw says.Despite the price, HSV has been inundated with inquiries since the wraps came off the car at the Melbourne Motor Show.The company has 1500 “expressions of interest”, 70 per cent of which have come from owners of high-end European brands, including BMW and Mercedes-Benz, according to Walkinshaw. The rest already drive HSV cars.He says the car is a credit to HSV engineers.“It's one of the best four-door performance cars I've ever driven.”HSV used high-end European cars as benchmarks for performance and handling.“Everything from Audi, Mercedes and BMW . . . it can hold its own against any of those,” he says.Only 427 examples will be built, a number that refers to the 7.0-litre V8's old-fashioned cubic-inch capacity.Only 90 W427s will be delivered this year and 110 next year.Low-volume production has started at HSV's factory in Clayton. Each customer will be flown to Melbourne to visit the factory to see the production line. They can also go online to follow the progress of the cars.HSV managing director Scott Grant says the company is also looking at performance driving courses for W427 customers.Walkinshaw is modest about the first HSV to officially have his name on it.“A lot of people liked the original Group A car (Commodore VL) which was never called the Walkinshaw in the beginning but everyone called it that,” he says.“So for the 20th anniversary of the company, Denny Mooney said why don't you make something special.”He says that without the help and guidance of Mooney, the previous GM-Holden chief, the car may not have been built.“He said, `Well, I think I can get the 7.0-litre engine from America',” Walkinshaw says. “Mooney was the driving force.“The work in making the car fast and reliable has been enormous. Almost everything from the engine to the wheels is new.“The entire drivetrain has been updated and redesigned to take the power and torque.”The W427 shares its V8 engine with GM's Chevrolet Corvette sportscar. The V8 engine is hand-made on a separate production line at GM in Detroit. It is then shipped to Melbourne to be slotted into the VE Commodore body.In the W427 it develops 375kW at 6500 revs and 640Nm at 5000 revs.HSV undertook extensive modifications to put the Corvette V8 into the VE and make sure it could cope with the power and torque. The car's cooling, suspension, gearbox, differential and wheel bearings were all upgraded.The previous most expensive HSV was the $100,000 VT GTS Series II in 1999. It had a 300kW Callaway V8, the first 300kW production car in Australia at the time. INSIDE VIEWHSV W427PRICE $150,000AVAILABILITY NowEXPRESSION OF INTEREST 1500 potential buyersNUMBERS Built to order up to 427POWERTRAIN 7.0-litre LS7 V8 with HSV calibrationPOWER 375kW at 65000 revsTORQUE 640Nm at 5000 revsSUSPENSION New springs, 30 per cent stiffer than GTS, 20mm lower ride height than GTS, stiffer rear bushings, new magnetic ride-control calibrationBRAKES New six-piston front brakes with 50 per cent greater pad area, two-piece floating front rotors (380mm x 35mm) compared with 365mm x 32mm one-piece on GTS Related storiesOrders race in for HSV's hot W427HSV Series: size countsHSV now a roaring successHSV powers up with LS3 
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Orders race in for HSV?s hot W427
By Neil Dowling · 03 Jun 2008
There is much interest about the car dubbed Australia's fastest production vehicle. HSV managing director Scott Grant has 1500 expressions of interest and yet has production plans of only 200 of the hand-built special sedans. Prices are now being crunched but Grant sees it falling in the $150,000 to $170,000 slot, a bit higher than the $125,000-plus hint dropped by HSV at the model's Melbourne Motor Show debut. But the price could be even higher. What won't change is the 200 production run though Grant won't rule out a second-tier model line using the same drivetrain. Only six W427 — for Walkinshaw and the imperial-measure cubic-inch capacity of the engine — cars will be made each week. “We can only manage six a week,” Grant said. “We're saying 200 today. But when we fix the price, we'll also confirm production numbers. “We'll stick at 200. But we could produce variations on that theme.” The W427 celebrates the 20 years of HSV that started in 1988 using the VL Commodore donor. Only 421 sales were made in 1988 compared with 5222 in 2007. Grant is aiming at 80 builds of the GTS-based W427 this calendar year and the remaining 120 in 2009. The 427cublic inch (7-litre engine) produces 370kW at 6500rpm and 640Nm at 5000rpm to be the most powerful HSV road-going model. The engine is based on the US-made LS7 though fine-tuned by HSV with cold-air induction, ceramic-coated 4-into-1 extractors and active twin-mode rear mufflers. Inserting the 7-litre V8 has proved to be a shoehorning exercise made awkward because of the engine's dry-sump design that requires a separate oil canister under the bonnet. The battery has been relocated to the boot to make some room. The W427 gets a new face to distinguish it from other HSV sedans, a carbon-fibre rear lip spoiler, 20-inch “cookie cutter” wheels, uprated springs that are 30 per cent stiffer than HSV's GTS and new adjustable MRC suspension settings. It sits 20mm lower than the GTS. It also uses six-piston brake calipers.
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MIMS 2008 all new HSV
By Paul Gover · 29 Feb 2008
The King Kong of Commodores is being unveiled this morning at the Melbourne Motor Show.
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