Vauxhall Amiga | |verified|

The "Vauxhall Amiga" does not exist as a production car. This appears to be a confusion between Vauxhall (a British automotive brand) and the Commodore Amiga (a 1980s/90s home computer). However, given Vauxhall’s history of naming cars after computers (e.g., the Vauxhall Nova —"Nova" also being a brand of computer, and the Vauxhall Astra —sharing a name with a computer brand in some markets), the idea of a theoretical "Amiga" model is plausible.

Below is a structured report on the , followed by a hypothetical design study for a car that would have been called the Vauxhall Amiga. Report: The Vauxhall Amiga (Fact & Speculative Concept) 1. Executive Summary No vehicle bearing the name "Vauxhall Amiga" was ever manufactured or officially announced by Vauxhall Motors. The name likely stems from a conflation with the Commodore Amiga personal computer, popular in the late 1980s and early 1990s—the same era when Vauxhall launched models like the Nova (coincidentally also a computer brand). This report clarifies the factual record and presents a conceptual retro-future design study based on the naming theme. 2. Factual Background: Vauxhall’s "Computer-Named" Models | Model | Years Produced | Computer Connection | |-------|----------------|----------------------| | Vauxhall Nova | 1983–1993 | Shared name with Nova (a brand of microcomputer by Datamaster/Digital Microsystems). | | Vauxhall Astra | 1980–present | Astra was a model of computer from Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) and later a German home computer. | vauxhall amiga