The 'Opel Tigra' is a small coupe produced by
Opel (a subsidiary of
General Motors Corporation) based on its
Corsa supermini. It was originally available as a small
coupé, produced from 1994 to 2000, with a new
roadster model introduced in 2004. The Opel Tigra is sold in the
UK as the 'Vauxhall Tigra', in Australia as the 'Holden Tigra', and was sold in
Brazil and
Mexico as the 'Chevrolet Tigra'.
Tigra Mk I (1994-2000)

Tigra's different interior design
The Tigra was based on the
concept car of the same name and built on the platform of the second generation
Opel Corsa. However, it shared no body panels with the model it was based on, and the interior layout was different too, with a 2+2 seating arrangement. The production vehicle was introduced at the 1993
Frankfurt Motor Show, with production starting in early 1994.
The Tigra was available with two
petrol engines options, both from the
Ecotec family, a more affordable 1.4 L with 90 PS (66 kW), and a larger sportier version, powered by the 1.6 L engine with 106 PS (78 kW), sourced from the Corsa GSi. Both were
DOHC 16 valve engines with
electronic fuel injection. The smaller engine was available with an optional 4-speed
automatic gearbox.
Added to the mass-market underpinnings was a suspension tweaked by
Lotus. However, the car was overweight, with 150 kg (330 lb) over the equivalent engined Corsa models. Acceleration on the 1.6 L model was 10.5 seconds, one second slower than the Corsa GSi. However, a higher top speed of 203 km/h (126 mph) compensanted for its acceleration troubles. This speed increase was obtained thanks to the higher
gear ratios, a lower
drag coefficient of 0.31, and standard 15" wheels on the more powerful model.
The car was imported by
Chevrolet and sold as the 'Chevrolet Tigra' in
Brazil and
Mexico, and as the 'Vauxhall Tigra' in the
United Kingdom.

Brazilian Chevrolet Tigra depicting Chevrolet's emblem
The Brazilian Chevrolet Tigra was imported only for a few months, between late 1998 to early 1999, due to a sudden depreciation of the
Real, which forced
General Motors do Brasil to end importation. Only the 1.6 L model was imported, detuned to 99 PS (73 kW) for tax purposes. The 15" wheels were also exchanged for more affordable 14" wheels.
Tigra Twin Top (2004-2007)

2004 Opel Tigra Twin Top
After an absence of a four years, Opel resurrected the Tigra nameplate in 2004 for a new sports car based on the Corsa C. The 'Tigra Twin Top', as it was called, is a 2-seater
coupé convertible with a retractable hardtop in the fashion of the
Peugeot 206 CC. The Tigra is produced by French
coachworks Heuliez.
Like its predecessor, the Tigra Twin Top is available with two petrol-powered engines. The base model uses the 1.4 L engine with 90 PS (66 kW), but now from the
Twinport family, different from the previous generation's 1.4, while the top of the range uses the Ecotec 1.8 L from the Corsa GSi, with 125 PS (92 kW). An economic version, using
Fiat's
Multijet 1.3 Diesel engine, was introduced in 2005.
The second generation is marketed in
Australasia as the XC-series 'Holden Tigra', only with the 1.8 L engine.
External links
★
The European TwinTop communities startpage
★
Opel website