True. And afraid to say Nick's sentiments are so close to the truth. I have access to a mint....
mint Omega, only a 2.2, or whatever, but all unmarked body panels, the drivetrain and back axle will be gone, bumper has had a poor respray in its time, but the shell is stunning. I offered it on here a few weeks back, anyone who fancies a bit of a 're-shell' project (or, for that matter, take their engine, box and back axle and wheels off their own car, and drop in into this'n) and you've got a mint condition Omega, with whatever engine/interior/diff combination you want. Not a single reply. The guy will just want basically thruppence ha'penny above what he will get from the scrap man for it, that's it.
If not I'll be chopping some repair panels off it for myself, for the future. But that makes the car a bit terminal, then. Not as attractive a proposition for a 'simple re-shell' when a 3 foot section of the sill is missing!

They're sadly wandering in the misty, unfriendly limbo purgatory between just an old car and classic car. And, like any old Vauxhall, will never achieve the same kudos and allure as MX5s, MR2s, BMWs, etc etc are set to, either. Only Crestas and HP Firenzas hit real money, due to horrific rarity, but the Omegas most powerful weapon in its arsenal - best-selling executive saloon car - now proves its downfall, as they're
relatively common, still.