To think I had an Australian mate at school who went back home and got a job for HSV. Last I heard he was playing with their version of the dodge viper. Should have kept in touch with him. 
Kevin
Caw, that is a shame, would have been interesting.
Just a thought over the last couple of days, yes it took that long, where does economy fit in with all this omega state of tune business? Bear with me i can hear terribly sorry old boy, I am a little tireding.
More air flow will mean more fuel to balance the mixture, but less pedal for the same amount of go if you have the restraint(ish?), depending on the tune presumably?
With ref to the manifolds, as Kevin says, they must be restrictive in some way with a right angle exit, but what is the effect of that restriction? does that give the flat torque curve or is it over square piston "width/stroke" dimensions that give this smooth effect if thats what the omega has, or simply is the result of a big low reving v6? A result of a combination of all of those things to meet a design brief of a smooth executive, possibly chauffer driven saloon perhaps? But add in fuel economy, which lets face it is fairly poor, at this point my uneducated brain is telling me something is a bit miss matched. A high reving, peaky, race tuned, lets assume v6 to keep things simple for comparison, would presumeably be the least economical tune. The opposite of that tune would be whats in the 3.2 now, for comfort for instance, yet it still drinks the stuff like its got a hole in the fuel tank by comparison to most other similar cars . Why? V6s are thirsty, why would it be over other engine configs, and why esp. is the omega more thirsty than most V6s in my limited experience at least? I dont have figures of v engine economy with the omega dead bottom of the table but something seems disproportionate to me. Weight of the mig dont help but even so...
If thats fair comment? And if so whats the missmatch? Manifolds? Presumably these are compromised by cost/ease of manufacture and could give a more "efficient" engine over all if that compromise was removed? Depends on the design i suppose, which, i think, brings me full circle right back to where we started. Anyone?
Alot of assumptions in there again so go steady...