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The X-Treme not only became one of the fastest sportscars when it first turned a wheel, but even prior to this, in terms of rapid development work. Come the end of the first DTM race season the OPC engineers and Opel's designers needed only seven weeks, in close cooperation with the International Technical Development Center (ITDC) in Russelsheim, to create a ready-to-run car based on the DTM Astra Coupe.
The high-tech sportscars overall concept is based on the DTM car: the safety bodyshell has gull-wing doors, a spaceframe and various exceptionally rigid components reinforced with carbon fiber. Its 4.0-liter V8 engine, with four valves per cylinder, drives the rear wheels through a sequential-shift six-speed, transaxle gearbox. The wheels are suspended on double wishbones and there are carbon-fiber disk brakes at the front and rear. In the course of development work, however, at least half of the cars compo-nents were either modified or redesigned for road use. 'We shifted the accent from pure functionality for racing application to one that could embrace the new tasks that the car would face in its road-going form,' says Opel's design director for compact cars, Martin Smith. Of this project, which was brought to such a rapid conclusion, he says: 'I was highly impressed by the way the technical, design and marketing people worked together so constructively.'
The metamorphosis from racer to road car can be studied in detail on the restyled and more harmonious outer skin, which was the work of body designer Ulli Hochmuth. In-stead of the DTM cars, double-wing front spoiler, the X-Treme has an integrated single-section version flush with the body. Similar modifications have been made to the rear end of the Astra Coupe OPC X-Treme. The tail, with its built-in diffuser, is smoother and has a restyled spoiler. Similar rounding-off work has been performed at the body panel joints, the outside mirrors and the side panels, while the two twin exhaust tailpipes add symmetry and visual balance. 'The aerodynamics are still as effective as they ought to be on a car in this performance category', Martin Smith empha-sizes, 'but they were not the same governing factor to the styling as on the DTM racing car.'
In place of the 18-inch wheels called for by the DTM championship regulation, the X-Treme runs on 20-inch wheels of new OPC design; like their counterparts on the competition car, they have central fastenings. An equally dramatic visual aspect of this new high-performance car is its specially-created fiery red eight-coat paint finish.
Trimmed to a higher standard with the aid of Alcantara and brushed aluminum, the car's interior conveys a strong impression of high-grade technology, sports character and perfect workmanship. As with the DTM version that acted as a model for this car, the seat shells are reinforced with carbon fiber, but for the road user they are of course upholstered to a much higher level of comfort. The driver and front passenger are provided with five-point seat belt harnesses. The steering wheel is the same as used in the new Opel Speedster, and just as with the DTM racer, there is a central instrument display that keeps the driver informed of the car's principal technical functions.
The visual appeal of many prominent control knobs and levers, the gear shift gate and other details relevant to operation of the car have been enhanced with much feeling for style by interior designer Dietmar Finger, who has transformed the interior's spartan race going trim into a very distinguished techno style. This and other similar measures have increased the car's weight by 50 kilograms, but this is no curse to the Astra Coupe OPC X-Treme, which still has a power-to-weight ratio of 2.59 kilograms per horsepower, putting it among the elite in this rarefied area of sportscar design.
In order to give the car an ideally positioned center of gravity, the four-liter V8 engine in the X-Treme is located behind the front axle, as in the DTM racing version; the driver and front passenger seats have been moved back to accommodate. The engine, with four valves per cylinder, delivers its vast reserves of power to the rear wheels by way of a carbon-fiber reinforced clutch, a sequential-shift six-speed, transaxle gearbox and a mechanical-action limited-slip differential. As in the racing version, straight-cut gears are used and there is no synchromesh, but the gear teeth have chamfered flanks to make the shift action easier. The same form of ignition shutdown is provided, so that the driver of this civil version can make power-on shifts between the gears.
Most details of the road-going car's suspension are shared with the racing car. Double wishbone suspension at front and rear guarantees precise wheel location, and drivers can emulate DTM stars such as Manuel Reuter or Joachim Winkelhock by choosing their own personal suspension set-up, since the stabilizers and the shock-absorber bump and rebound settings can be varied. The immensely powerful brakes are another feature of the race car that have been applied unaltered. Ventilated, carbon-fiber reinforced brake disks and six-piston aluminum calipers are the secret of the car's amazingly short stopping distances.
It was important to ensure that such a potent vehicle could be driven on regular roads and not lack refinement. With this in mind the valve timing has been made less extreme, the compression ratio lowered, the flywheel mass increased and the engine-management software modified. OPC's head of engineering, Donatus Wichelhaus assures the potential buyer: 'In city traffic, the car can be driven at low revs in fifth or sixth gear, just like any other production car.' A glance at the torque curve bears out the car's suitability for trouble-free day-to-day driving: whereas the DTM racer can call upon approximately 510 Newton-meters of torque at an engine speed of 5250 rpm, the Astra Coupé OPC X-Treme pulls even more vigorously at moderate engine speeds, with its peak torque of 530 Nm available at 4800 rpm.
The engine, with its dry sump lubrication, doesn't have to withstand thousands of practice and race miles without any attention; as a result it is allowed to run up to a maximum speed 850 revolutions a minute higher than its competition counterpart, yet develops a maximum power output only 18 horsepower lower, namely 326 kW (444 hp) at 7350 rpm, more than enough to catapult this red-painted rocket's to a place among the extreme high performers', as its name implies. Acceleration from a standstill to 100 km/h takes no more than four seconds, and the top speed is beyond the 300 km/h mark.
Story by Opel
Specifications
Engine: 90 Degree V8
Position: Front Longitudinal
Aspiration: Natural
Valvetrain: DOHC 4 Valves per Cyl
Displacement: 3998 cc / 244.0 in³
Bore: 94 mm / 3.7 in
Stroke: 72 mm / 2.83 in
Compression: 12.0:1
Power: 328.1 kw / 440.0 bhp @ 7350 rpm
Specific output: 110.06 bhp per litre
Bhp/weight: 382.61 bhp per tonne
Torque: 530 nm / 390.9 ft lbs @ 4800 rpm
Driven wheels: RWD
Front tires: 265/30 ZR 20
Rear tires: 305/25 ZR 20
Front brakes: Vented Discs w/6-Piston Calipers
Front brake size: x 380 mm / x 15.0 in
Rear brakes: Vented Discs w/6-Piston Calipers
Rear brake size: x 340 mm / x 13.4 in
Front wheels: F 50.8 x 22.9 cm / 20.0 x 9 in
Rear wheels: R 50.8 x 27.9 cm / 20 x 11 in
Front suspension: Double Wishbones
Rear suspension: Double Wishbones
Curb weight: 1150 kg / 2535 lbs
Transmission: 6 Speed Sequential
Top speed: ~300 kph / 186.4 mph
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