Dear Omega fellows,
I have an 1995 Opel Omega with an X20XEV engine and for the past 8 years I had no significant problems.
The only problem I had with was the faulty camshaft sensor that had to be replaced twice, but I read this is a common issue for this engine.
Why twice, maybe you wonder...

With the second sensor, every time I started the engine, the MIL light turned on and the car ran in LIMP mode, but if I quickly took the ignition and turned it on, the MIL light turned OFF and the car worked as it should, or at least that's what I believe.
I compared it's values with the Autodata ones and there were big differences in it's resistance across it's pins and the error was stored as an intermittent fault according to "My Naff Code Reader".
Thinking that this is not very safe for my car, I gone further and replaced this sensor with a third one.
That being set, I bought a new sensor, aftermarket of course, and for the past 2-3 months everything was fine, but in the last week I began having strange issues with the first cold start of the day.
The engine turns, the pump from the tank pumps, I have pressure on the rail, the spark plugs are sparking, but the engine just won't start up if it doesn't crank for about 10 seconds.
This only happens with the first start-up of the day, no matter if it's warm or cold outside, sunny or raining, morning or noon, what can I say, my car has it's own personality

As a strange workaround I found that if I pop the positive lead from the battery for half a second and then crank the engine, it starts in a blink.
The workaround works even if I do this before cranking, or after a long 3-4 seconds crank, or a couple of tries.
I checked the values of the new sensor and are the same as the ones from Autodata.
I connected the tester to my car, "My Naff Code Reader", but there are no codes stored and I don't see any changes within the values.
Thus I think this is an electrical problem, but I currently don't know where to begin from.
I even redone the connection between the short wiring loom from the sensor's plug and the wiring harness of the car.
Tonight I'm going to replace the new sensor with the old one to check if there's any improvement, or at least a quick start-up, but if nothing changes, that doesn't look very good.
The next step will be checking the ignition coil, but I'm not sure if that's a problem since it makes the spark plugs spark, and it responds fine to the "My Naff Code Reader" tests for the two bank coils.
I just cannot explain this workaround, if I disconnect and reconnect the battery lead [even before putting the key in the ignition barrel] and after then I crank the engine, it starts immediately.
Given these, did anyone here had the same issues/symptoms as above and found a fix?
Thank you in advance for your help and ideas,
George
P.S.: I know I wrote a lot, but hope I didn't got you bored yet
