- More car for the money: Opel Insignia Grand Sport offers outstanding value for money
- Really spacious: Opel Insignia Sports Tourer available from €26,940
- All-new: Significantly lighter and more agile, clever package, latest generation powertrains
- Highly efficient: High-volume engines with WLTP driving cycle fuel savings of between three and ten percent
- Friction-optimized: Newly designed six-speed manual and eight-speed automatic transmissions
- Start of sales: Order books for sedan and station wagon open on February 20
New Opel Insignia Sports Tourer and Grand Sport: Order books open on February |
Dynamic duo: New Opel Insignia Sports Tourer and Grand Sport impress with their exciting design, top technologies and luxurious comfort, without any compromises in practicality. |
The second generation Insignia is based on an all-new architecture.
It weighs up to 175 kilograms less than the outgoing model as a Grand
Sport limousine, and up to 200 kg less as a spacious Sports Tourer
station wagon. This substantial mass reduction and the new, extremely
precise steering system are responsible for the improved driving
dynamics.
Furthermore, the all-new Opel flagship debuts with a wide range of highly efficient engines and friction-optimized transmissions designed to provide better efficiency and lower fuel costs. Fuel consumption of the expected volume engines available for the Grand Sport (gasoline: 1.5 liter Turbo; diesel: 1.6 CDTI) is down by three to ten percent compared with the equivalent outgoing models, according to the Worldwide Harmonized Light-Duty Vehicles Test Procedure (WLTP).
Furthermore, the all-new Opel flagship debuts with a wide range of highly efficient engines and friction-optimized transmissions designed to provide better efficiency and lower fuel costs. Fuel consumption of the expected volume engines available for the Grand Sport (gasoline: 1.5 liter Turbo; diesel: 1.6 CDTI) is down by three to ten percent compared with the equivalent outgoing models, according to the Worldwide Harmonized Light-Duty Vehicles Test Procedure (WLTP).
Opel already announced in December 2015 that the company will provide
consumption figures based on the WLTP driving cycle for future models.
The WLTP driving cycle will become legally binding as of the fall of
2017 and, compared with the currently applicable NEDC, is closer aligned
to real driving behavior. Starting with the new Astra, Opel already
began providing CO2 and fuel consumption data gathered in
accordance with WLTP driving cycle in addition to the official NEDC data
as of June 2016. This gives Opel customers a more realistic estimate of
the daily consumption of their vehicle. Tests conducted by renowned
publications such as Italian magazine Quattroruote already show that the Opel data collected in accordance with the WLTP driving cycle comes very close to real-life consumption.
Extremely efficient gasoline unit: 1.5 liter all-aluminum, turbo-charged direct injection engine is available in two output levels with 103 kW/140 hp and 122 kW/165 hp. |
Compared to the already very efficient 1.6 liter Turbo (125 kW/170 hp) used in the outgoing model, the new engine reduces consumption in accordance with the WLTP driving cycle on average by around another three percent.
The 1.5 liter all-aluminum, turbo-charged direct injection unit has the largest displacement of all the ultra-modern three and four-cylinder members of Opel’s small gasoline engine family. The new 1.5 liter high-tech four-cylinder also impresses with sharp throttle response and ample torque in every situation – two typical features of these units. A further highlight is the top-of-the-range gasoline engine for the new Opel Insignia.
The 2.0 liter turbo delivers 191 kW/260 hp and maximum torque
of 400 Nm between 3,000 and 4,000 rpm (NEDC fuel consumption Grand
Sport: urban 11.5 l/100 km, extra-urban 7.0 l/100 km, combined 8.6 l/100
km; 197 g/km CO2). The 2.0 liter, four-cylinder unit comes
in combination with the completely new eight-speed automatic
transmission, which shifts smoothly, and a highly sophisticated
all-wheel drive system with torque vectoring
– a unique feature in the midsize segment. On this high-tech all-wheel
drive system, two multi-plate clutches replace a conventional rear axle
differential and can accelerate the wheels individually in a
split-second depending on the driving situation.
The propulsion offering is rounded off by the new six-speed manual transmission for the popular 1.6 liter diesel engines with outputs of 81 kW/110 hp (NEDC fuel consumption Insignia Grand Sport: urban 4.6 l/100 km, extra-urban 3.6 l/100 km, combined 4.0 l/100 km; 105 g/km CO2) and 100 kW/136 hp (NEDC fuel consumption Insignia Grand Sport: urban 5.1 l/100 km, extra-urban 3.9 l/100 km, combined 4.3 l/100 km; 114 g/km CO2).
This new combination of friction-optimized manual transmission and
refined 1.6 CDTI with 81 kW/110 hp results in average fuel savings in
the WLTP driving cycle of ten percent compared to the outgoing model.
In addition, Opel will offer the refined 2.0 liter diesel with 125 kW/170 hp and maximum torque
of 400 Nm (NEDC fuel consumption Insignia Grand Sport: urban 6.7 l/100 km, extra-urban 4.3 l/100 km, combined 5.2 l/100 km; 136 g/km CO2).
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