Ranger (automobile)

Ranger
Product typeAutomobile
OwnerGeneral Motors
Produced byGeneral Motors
CountrySouth Africa, Europe
Introduced1968
Discontinued1978; 46 years ago (1978)
MarketsSouth Africa

Ranger was an automobile brand of General Motors which was produced from 1968 to 1978. Used in three main markets, the original automobile was marketed as "South Africa's Own Car" and was built in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, from 1968 to 1973. The European model range was sold in two main markets, Belgium and Switzerland. It was produced by General Motors Continental SA from 1970 to 1978 in Antwerp, Belgium. General Motors Suisse SA in Biel-Bienne, Switzerland, also produced Rangers from 1970 until that factory's closure in 1975.[1] A few Rangers were also sold in the Netherlands.

The cars built in this period were a mixture of parts from other General Motors products and featured a body shell similar to the Opel Rekord but with a Vauxhall Victor FD grille, and internal parts from various large Vauxhalls and Holdens, although the European Rangers had very little to differentiate them from Opels. However, as the second generation cars became even closer to models marketed by Chevrolet in South Africa and Opel in Europe, it was decided that this kind of brand was irrelevant and thus the marque was discontinued. A 1972 Belgian road test of the Ranger 2500 even begins by calling the existence of the Ranger brand hard to explain.[2] The Ranger B was built only in Antwerp, and sold only in a few select European markets.[3]

  1. ^ "General Motors Suisse AG". Swiss Car Register. Archived from the original on 2020-09-25.
  2. ^ Toussaint, Philippe (1972-08-10). "Ranger 2500 (Opel Commodore): Classique, mais volontaire" [Classic, but willful]. Sport Moteur (in French). 10 (297). Brussels: 14.
  3. ^ Braunschweig, Robert; et al., eds. (March 14, 1974). "Automobil Revue '74". Automobil-Revue (in German and French). 69. Berne, Switzerland: Hallwag AG: 452. ISSN 0005-1314.