Skip to main content
RedlineArchive
BrowseCarsTimelineMapDecadesSubmit

RedlineArchive

The ultimate curated collection of automotive video content. From barn finds to hypercars.

BrowseCarsClassesDecadesSubmit a ClipAboutContact

© 2026 RedlineArchive. All footage remains the property of its original creators.

Privacy PolicyTerms of UseSupport

Developed with love as a personal project by Jamie McDonnell

ui-ux-design.comai-consultancy.company
Lonsdale (car) — Rare Clips — RedlineArchive — RedlineArchive
Lonsdale (car)

Lonsdale (car)

About Lonsdale (car)

Lonsdale was a marque of car sold in the United Kingdom by the Colt Car Company between 1982 and 1983. It took its name from the industrial suburb of Lonsdale in Adelaide, South Australia, where Mitsubishi Australia had an engine production facility. The only car sold under this brand was the Lonsdale, a badge engineered Mitsubishi Sigma (GJ). It was sold as the Lonsdale YD41 and the Lonsdale YD45. 700 were produced, although no cars have been proven to survive. The car was powered by one of three four cylinder engines of 1.6, 2.0 and 2.6 litres, producing respectively 81, 95 and 103 bhp. The largest of these power units produced a maximum torque of 192 Nm., and was one of the largest post-war four cylinder engines produced. Although the Sigma was merely an Australian version of Mitsubishi Motors' Colt Galant which was already available in the UK, the company's plan was to circumvent the "gentlemen's agreement", a voluntary import quota which limited Japanese-manufactured imports to 11 per cent of the market (which typically amounted to fewer than 200,000 cars per year).

Read more on Wikipedia →

No clips for Lonsdale (car) yet.

Keep Exploring

All CarsAll ClassesAll DecadesBrowse by Type