logo
Remarkable story of first HSV and why it matters to Rachelle Childs murder mystery

Remarkable story of first HSV and why it matters to Rachelle Childs murder mystery

Daily Telegraph27-04-2025

Don't miss out on the headlines from Motoring News. Followed categories will be added to My News.
The rare 'Walkinshaw' Commodore that could hold the key to the tragic murder of Rachelle Childs is instantly recognisable to Australian muscle car fans as the first in a long line of 'HSV' Commodores.
Some investigators examining the death of Rachelle Childs believe she may have been lured to her death by the promise of driving an exclusive Holden Commodore.
Rachelle's burning body was found in scrub by the side of the road near Gerroa on NSW's south coast in June 2001.
Despite extensive investigations by police, Rachelle's murder remains one of Australia's biggest mysteries - we don't how she got there, who she was with, or why she was killed for no good reason.
What we do know is Rachelle's own 1978 Holden Commodore was found secure in the carpark of Bargo Hotel the day after her body was discovered.
In her final days, Rachelle told friends and family she would have the use of a Holden Special Vehicles VL SS Group A, popularly known as a 'Walkinshaw', for the upcoming long weekend.
The car had immense appeal to Rachelle, a proud Holden enthusiast., which has led some investigators to theorise the promise of access to a rare Walkinshaw was how the killer lured the 23-year-old to her demise.
But why do Holden Special Vehicles VL SS Group A 'Walkinshaws' matter?
The Walkinshaw story starts back in 1987, Peter Brock was the undisputed 'King of the Mountain' following dominant victories with Holden in the Bathurst 1000 race at Mount Panorama.
Listen now: The latest episodes of 'Dear Rachelle' at True Crime Australia
The 1988 Holden Commodore VL Walkinshaw SS Group S Sedan is a modern classic.
MORE: Was Rachelle Childs lured to her death by a rare Holden?
Brock cashed in on his fame with rare and expensive 'Holden Dealer Team' road cars built with Holden's blessing until he put a mysterious box into his cars.
Known as the 'Peter Brock Energy Polarizer', the device was said to reduce vibration by aligning molecules in a car's structure.
Brock defended it at time at the time, saying that 'there's never been any truly avant-garde invention that hasn't received derision'.
'I know I'm on the right track and I know I have something that works very well.'
Australian touring car motor racing driver Peter Brock holding controversial device the Energy Polarizer.
Holden banned Brock from fitting the devices to its cars, but he insisted on doing so.
When Brock and Holden divorced on February 20, 1987, it was front page news.
Holden said 'the company was given no choice but to dissociate itself from future HDT products', and it set about creating a new line of rapid road cars.
Motorsport rules required car makers to build at least 500 examples of any vehicle entered in events such as the Bathurst 1000.
Murdered Bargo woman Rachelle Childs was a Holden fan with an affinity for the 'Walkinshaw'.
Holden asked its top racers to dream up their visions for the ultimate Holden.
Scotland's Tom Walkinshaw believed V8 power alone was not going to be enough for Holden's VL Commodore to compete with the likes of Ford, BMW and Nissan at Bathurst and beyond.
He turned to aerodynamics to give the car an advantage, contracting McLaren F1 designer Peter Stevens to craft elaborate fibreglass bodywork intended to reduce drag.
The result was unlike anything Australians had seen before.
Unaffectionately known as the 'plastic pig', the car officially known as the HSV VL SS Group A was born. Only available with blue-tinted 'panorama silver' paint, the car known to fans as the 'Walkinshaw' or 'Walky' was one of the most recognisable cars on the road.
It was the ultimate Commodore.
Powered by an upgraded 4.9-litre V8 engine with twin throttle bodies, the car sent 178kW of power to the road through special Bridgestone RE-71 tyres.
It starred at the 1987 Sydney Motor Show and wore a $45,000 price tag.
MORE: What is a Walkinshaw Commodore?
Inside the 1989 HSV VL Walkinshaw Commodore.
Holden's first 'Special Vehicle' earned iconic status with victory in the 1990 Bathurst 1000, defeating all rivals including the Ford former partner Peter Brock.
Peter McKay wrote in the Herald Sun that the victory came 'against the odds'.
'It was a day of delirium at the mountain,' he said.
'There are no fans like Holden fans, and it's been a long time since they had something to get excited about.'
The original HSV Commodore won Bathurst in 1990.
Muscle Car Stables founder Chester Fernando says the Walkinshaw remains one of Australia's most iconic Holdens.
'It looked like HSV were trying to go to the moon,' he said.
'But once you realise that every single piece of fibreglass on the car is there for a particular reason, everything is functional, you start to understand and respect the car just that little bit more.
'For the first 14 or 15 years the values just dropped away. I've heard of cars changing hands back in the early 2000s for as little as $15,000 or $16,000.
'And then at the time Peter Brock passed away, the Commodore started punching up in price all of a sudden – $60,000, $70,000, $100,000 was being paid for low kilometre examples.
'And since then they've just kept climbing.'
Chester Fernando's HSV VL SS Group A 'Walkinshaw'.
Mr Fernando owns the first of 750 built and plans to sell this car this year for a price yet to be determined.
Public auction results for the 'Walky' include $221,000 with Collecting Cars in 2023, and $340,000 with Burns and Co. in 2018.
Other owners have asked for up to $1 million.
Originally published as Remarkable story of first HSV and why it matters to Rachelle Childs murder mystery

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New Lambton resident slept in car after landslide evacuation
New Lambton resident slept in car after landslide evacuation

The Advertiser

time43 minutes ago

  • The Advertiser

New Lambton resident slept in car after landslide evacuation

A New Lambton resident affected by the landslide said she was forced to sleep in her car for several nights after her home was evacuated and deemed unsafe. Cynthia Yang spent June 13 removing items from her home with the help of removalists after hearing through the media about evacuated residences being looted in the past week. She was at work when her home was evacuated due to the landslide on May 23, but was alerted by housemates when they heard "cracking sounds". "My housemate just texted me," she said. "I thought it must have been a neighbour having a party, so I didn't really pay attention. "It wasn't until later on they sent me a photo of the backyard that I knew something was serious." Ms Yang is a renter and said she wasn't contacted by authorities about the evacuation. When she returned she was told she couldn't go in the house. "So I was sleeping in the car for the first two nights," she said. "When they hosted the first community meeting, my name wasn't on the list, so they probably didn't even know I was a resident here." Emergency accommodation has now been sorted for Ms Yang, but she said the situation had been a "struggle". "They said initially it was for three weeks and we might get a chance to extend it, but I'm not 100 per cent sure," she said. "I haven't been told yet. "So every week we're just living week by week. I'm still trying to find property to rent, but until today they told me there was no access to get my stuff. "They have given us a few chances to go in, just for essential items but it's like 30 minutes minutes each time and they give you short notice. Also you have to really work around your work and study time. "I've actually spent more money than my regular week with moving - I've relocated to a motel where you can't cook, you can't do washing, you have to pay for it or you have to ask your friend to do a favour." Ms Yang was in the process of moving her belongings to a storage unit on June 13. "It is hard," she said. "I'm a migrant, so there's a lot of about the Australian system I don't really know. So, I'm just trying to find my way." The Newcastle Herald recently reported residents were facing months longer out of their homes as below-ground geotechnical assessment was expected to take about 20 weeks. An update on the City of Newcastle website on June 10 said the landslide said residents had been advised of the expected timeframe and process for the detailed engineering investigations that are required to determine a plan for the impacted properties. "We also confirmed that we will provide relevant information to insurers to support residents in their claims, including claims related to medium to long-term accommodation for the period while the investigations are carried out and recommendations are developed for the long-term safety and management of the site," the update said. "We will add further information when we can as we work through the emergency response, and as we transition to the recovery phase." A New Lambton resident affected by the landslide said she was forced to sleep in her car for several nights after her home was evacuated and deemed unsafe. Cynthia Yang spent June 13 removing items from her home with the help of removalists after hearing through the media about evacuated residences being looted in the past week. She was at work when her home was evacuated due to the landslide on May 23, but was alerted by housemates when they heard "cracking sounds". "My housemate just texted me," she said. "I thought it must have been a neighbour having a party, so I didn't really pay attention. "It wasn't until later on they sent me a photo of the backyard that I knew something was serious." Ms Yang is a renter and said she wasn't contacted by authorities about the evacuation. When she returned she was told she couldn't go in the house. "So I was sleeping in the car for the first two nights," she said. "When they hosted the first community meeting, my name wasn't on the list, so they probably didn't even know I was a resident here." Emergency accommodation has now been sorted for Ms Yang, but she said the situation had been a "struggle". "They said initially it was for three weeks and we might get a chance to extend it, but I'm not 100 per cent sure," she said. "I haven't been told yet. "So every week we're just living week by week. I'm still trying to find property to rent, but until today they told me there was no access to get my stuff. "They have given us a few chances to go in, just for essential items but it's like 30 minutes minutes each time and they give you short notice. Also you have to really work around your work and study time. "I've actually spent more money than my regular week with moving - I've relocated to a motel where you can't cook, you can't do washing, you have to pay for it or you have to ask your friend to do a favour." Ms Yang was in the process of moving her belongings to a storage unit on June 13. "It is hard," she said. "I'm a migrant, so there's a lot of about the Australian system I don't really know. So, I'm just trying to find my way." The Newcastle Herald recently reported residents were facing months longer out of their homes as below-ground geotechnical assessment was expected to take about 20 weeks. An update on the City of Newcastle website on June 10 said the landslide said residents had been advised of the expected timeframe and process for the detailed engineering investigations that are required to determine a plan for the impacted properties. "We also confirmed that we will provide relevant information to insurers to support residents in their claims, including claims related to medium to long-term accommodation for the period while the investigations are carried out and recommendations are developed for the long-term safety and management of the site," the update said. "We will add further information when we can as we work through the emergency response, and as we transition to the recovery phase." A New Lambton resident affected by the landslide said she was forced to sleep in her car for several nights after her home was evacuated and deemed unsafe. Cynthia Yang spent June 13 removing items from her home with the help of removalists after hearing through the media about evacuated residences being looted in the past week. She was at work when her home was evacuated due to the landslide on May 23, but was alerted by housemates when they heard "cracking sounds". "My housemate just texted me," she said. "I thought it must have been a neighbour having a party, so I didn't really pay attention. "It wasn't until later on they sent me a photo of the backyard that I knew something was serious." Ms Yang is a renter and said she wasn't contacted by authorities about the evacuation. When she returned she was told she couldn't go in the house. "So I was sleeping in the car for the first two nights," she said. "When they hosted the first community meeting, my name wasn't on the list, so they probably didn't even know I was a resident here." Emergency accommodation has now been sorted for Ms Yang, but she said the situation had been a "struggle". "They said initially it was for three weeks and we might get a chance to extend it, but I'm not 100 per cent sure," she said. "I haven't been told yet. "So every week we're just living week by week. I'm still trying to find property to rent, but until today they told me there was no access to get my stuff. "They have given us a few chances to go in, just for essential items but it's like 30 minutes minutes each time and they give you short notice. Also you have to really work around your work and study time. "I've actually spent more money than my regular week with moving - I've relocated to a motel where you can't cook, you can't do washing, you have to pay for it or you have to ask your friend to do a favour." Ms Yang was in the process of moving her belongings to a storage unit on June 13. "It is hard," she said. "I'm a migrant, so there's a lot of about the Australian system I don't really know. So, I'm just trying to find my way." The Newcastle Herald recently reported residents were facing months longer out of their homes as below-ground geotechnical assessment was expected to take about 20 weeks. An update on the City of Newcastle website on June 10 said the landslide said residents had been advised of the expected timeframe and process for the detailed engineering investigations that are required to determine a plan for the impacted properties. "We also confirmed that we will provide relevant information to insurers to support residents in their claims, including claims related to medium to long-term accommodation for the period while the investigations are carried out and recommendations are developed for the long-term safety and management of the site," the update said. "We will add further information when we can as we work through the emergency response, and as we transition to the recovery phase." A New Lambton resident affected by the landslide said she was forced to sleep in her car for several nights after her home was evacuated and deemed unsafe. Cynthia Yang spent June 13 removing items from her home with the help of removalists after hearing through the media about evacuated residences being looted in the past week. She was at work when her home was evacuated due to the landslide on May 23, but was alerted by housemates when they heard "cracking sounds". "My housemate just texted me," she said. "I thought it must have been a neighbour having a party, so I didn't really pay attention. "It wasn't until later on they sent me a photo of the backyard that I knew something was serious." Ms Yang is a renter and said she wasn't contacted by authorities about the evacuation. When she returned she was told she couldn't go in the house. "So I was sleeping in the car for the first two nights," she said. "When they hosted the first community meeting, my name wasn't on the list, so they probably didn't even know I was a resident here." Emergency accommodation has now been sorted for Ms Yang, but she said the situation had been a "struggle". "They said initially it was for three weeks and we might get a chance to extend it, but I'm not 100 per cent sure," she said. "I haven't been told yet. "So every week we're just living week by week. I'm still trying to find property to rent, but until today they told me there was no access to get my stuff. "They have given us a few chances to go in, just for essential items but it's like 30 minutes minutes each time and they give you short notice. Also you have to really work around your work and study time. "I've actually spent more money than my regular week with moving - I've relocated to a motel where you can't cook, you can't do washing, you have to pay for it or you have to ask your friend to do a favour." Ms Yang was in the process of moving her belongings to a storage unit on June 13. "It is hard," she said. "I'm a migrant, so there's a lot of about the Australian system I don't really know. So, I'm just trying to find my way." The Newcastle Herald recently reported residents were facing months longer out of their homes as below-ground geotechnical assessment was expected to take about 20 weeks. An update on the City of Newcastle website on June 10 said the landslide said residents had been advised of the expected timeframe and process for the detailed engineering investigations that are required to determine a plan for the impacted properties. "We also confirmed that we will provide relevant information to insurers to support residents in their claims, including claims related to medium to long-term accommodation for the period while the investigations are carried out and recommendations are developed for the long-term safety and management of the site," the update said. "We will add further information when we can as we work through the emergency response, and as we transition to the recovery phase."

‘Noble savage' and ‘ritual spearings': Melbourne University race row re-ignites
‘Noble savage' and ‘ritual spearings': Melbourne University race row re-ignites

Sydney Morning Herald

time15 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

‘Noble savage' and ‘ritual spearings': Melbourne University race row re-ignites

Melbourne University has offered counselling to staff and students after a racially charged email from an academic at the prestigious institution went public. University officials say the material written by law school academic Eric Descheemaeker in 2023 was leaked and posted around the Parkville campus this week, and that it may have upset or offended people who read it. The law professor wrote to his boss, Matthew Harding, who was then dean of the law school, in August 2023 in response to news of an Indigenous cultural safety review, which Descheemaeker described as 'an ideological re-education camp'. 'Celebrating the 'noble savage' is already the main, if not exclusive, thing [Melbourne Law School] appears to exist for – with just a bit of space to spare for every possible sexual or gendered minority vying for claims to victimhood,' Descheemaeker wrote. The cultural safety review at Melbourne Law School was ordered after a series of resignations of Indigenous academics, culminating in the high-profile departure of former Northern Territory discrimination commissioner Eddie Cubillo from his role as associate dean of the nation's top-ranked law school, which he described as 'the most culturally unsafe place I've worked'. Loading Descheemaeker, who is also a visiting research fellow at Oxford University, claimed in his email to Harding that it was 'Blak activists' who were dictating the direction of the school. 'They have made us start every meeting with ritual prayers,' Descheemaeker wrote. 'Their (non-existing) claims to land are now 'acknowledged' about every 10 feet in our corridors. They want me to teach that Australian law is only 'settler law' and that there exists a rich body of 'indigenous law' alongside (what are indigenous private-law remedies, I wonder. Ritual spearings?).'

‘Noble savage' and ‘ritual spearings': Melbourne University race row re-ignites
‘Noble savage' and ‘ritual spearings': Melbourne University race row re-ignites

The Age

time15 hours ago

  • The Age

‘Noble savage' and ‘ritual spearings': Melbourne University race row re-ignites

Melbourne University has offered counselling to staff and students after a racially charged email from an academic at the prestigious institution went public. University officials say the material written by law school academic Eric Descheemaeker in 2023 was leaked and posted around the Parkville campus this week, and that it may have upset or offended people who read it. The law professor wrote to his boss, Matthew Harding, who was then dean of the law school, in August 2023 in response to news of an Indigenous cultural safety review, which Descheemaeker described as 'an ideological re-education camp'. 'Celebrating the 'noble savage' is already the main, if not exclusive, thing [Melbourne Law School] appears to exist for – with just a bit of space to spare for every possible sexual or gendered minority vying for claims to victimhood,' Descheemaeker wrote. The cultural safety review at Melbourne Law School was ordered after a series of resignations of Indigenous academics, culminating in the high-profile departure of former Northern Territory discrimination commissioner Eddie Cubillo from his role as associate dean of the nation's top-ranked law school, which he described as 'the most culturally unsafe place I've worked'. Loading Descheemaeker, who is also a visiting research fellow at Oxford University, claimed in his email to Harding that it was 'Blak activists' who were dictating the direction of the school. 'They have made us start every meeting with ritual prayers,' Descheemaeker wrote. 'Their (non-existing) claims to land are now 'acknowledged' about every 10 feet in our corridors. They want me to teach that Australian law is only 'settler law' and that there exists a rich body of 'indigenous law' alongside (what are indigenous private-law remedies, I wonder. Ritual spearings?).'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store