When the hybrid 'Vette goes on sale later this year, it will be the quickest of them all.
See full article...
See full article...
I'd just love it if the V8 aficionados in my neighborhood could go to work, or wherever it is they're going, without announcing their intentions to everyone.
Probably wouldn't do any good. See TFA but more importantly, I don't imagine any red blooded Corvette owner would want to silently motor about for more than a few miles. Otherwise it really would be a big Prius with a really tiny cargo compartment.Just like a Prius but with a V8. I'm thinking they should have gone with a plugin hybrid setup to get more electric miles.
That would have added more weight to the vehicle and where would they put the batteries (without sacrificing room elsewhere)?Just like a Prius but with a V8. I'm thinking they should have gone with a plugin hybrid setup to get more electric miles.
The c6 z06 is my dream car. There's just something about that 505 HP 427 small block that really sings to me. They're actually not as expensive as I was expecting either. Low milage examples are around $40k. They really hit it out of the park with that carIt's still exciting to me that it's exciting to read about Corvettes. 20 years ago I'd have asked if you were seriously talking about the car for retirees and the mulleted. Something good got into the water back around the C6.
I think we're both getting old, but it's worth remembering that 20 years ago the Corvette C5-R was absolutely dominating the GTS class at Le Mans and all the other endurance racing series. So for anyone who was an enthusiast at the time, that generation of Corvette leaving all the Porsches and Ferraris in its dust was certainly a good way to change perceptions.It's still exciting to me that it's exciting to read about Corvettes. 20 years ago I'd have asked if you were seriously talking about the car for retirees and the mulleted. Something good got into the water back around the C6.
It will be interesting to see what a dedicated BEV sports car looks like coming from a mass manufacturer. We can obviously see the extraordinary potential that the concept has (see Rimac), but the Tesla Roadster is complete vapourware (and is targeted at the same supercar price points, so not as relevant). Even the Porsche Taycan is a "practical" 4-door 2+2 despite it's silhouette.The C8 is a handsome, handsome car, and by most accounts a really good performer. Would love to see a BEV one down the road.
No mention of how much weight the hybrid system adds?
There was a one-off (ok, 2) created for a Japanese racing series. Not very much Prius was left but they did use Toyota production car hybrid systems.Just like a Prius but with a V8. I'm thinking they should have gone with a plugin hybrid setup to get more electric miles.
Can that be right? My 1993 Corvette (just a regular coupe, not a ZR-1 or anything special) stickered for $39k.Price feels steep, having bought that Z06 brand new for mid-$40K's in 2003
FWIW-- my 1993 has a digital dash and it is all original and everything still works fine.Wow this looks amazi- wait. Is that a digital dash? Eww. Gross. I remember digital dashes. They break on you. Do not want this 100k dumpster fire now thanks.
Way to ruin it GM.*
(* Obviously I'm joking here. I could never afford this. If I won the lottery, this would be my car. I have a Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo. AWD cars are my favorite. I wish I had one of these. If anyone wants to donate one to me PM me and I'll give you the details on where to send it please.)
I almost reached back to the C5. I think my oldest race day swag shirts have C5 branding on them, if they haven't disintegrated. While growing up though, the Corvette was more the butt of a car culture joke than a technological marvel and bargain supercar. I might need to reach back more than 20 years but I'll fess up to that being my own faulty memory.I think we're both getting old, but it's worth remembering that 20 years ago the Corvette C5-R was absolutely dominating the GTS class at Le Mans and all the other endurance racing series. So for anyone who was an enthusiast at the time, that generation of Corvette leaving all the Porsches and Ferraris in its dust was certainly a good way to change perceptions.
I suspect this is a preview of the near-future of supercars. They'll all be hybrids just to eke out that barely-legal fuel economy figure they'll need to have. We all know that no one is going to actually see those numbers of course, because the testing cycle requires the driver drive like a grandma, but at least in theory they'll be compliant and that's exactly what the car manufacturers want.I wonder about the thinking that goes into creating a low volume, halo product like this in the social milieu of urgent climate change. Yes, car makers love halo products. Or at least the marketing departments do. And it is an interesting bit of technology - hybrid ICE / electric vehicles as performance rather than fuel efficiency.
There was a one-off (ok, 2) created for a Japanese racing series. Not very much Prius was left but they did use Toyota production car hybrid systems.
So, you don't understand the point of a Toyota Prius either?I'm still not sure what the point of a hybrid that can only get power from the standard combustion engine is (and has practically no battery, at that)
I wonder about the thinking that goes into creating a low volume, halo product like this in the social milieu of urgent climate change. Yes, car makers love halo products. Or at least the marketing departments do. And it is an interesting bit of technology - hybrid ICE / electric vehicles as performance rather than fuel efficiency.
But when consumers are apparently clamoring for BEVs that they can actually purchase, where does this vehicle fit in? I suppose GM can do more than 10 things at time and the Corvette People probably aren't the folks that should create the next mass market BEV, but it just looks odd.
It's the same capacity as the battery in a Toyota Prius, which weirdly no one seems to complain about or make fun of. I wonder why?That's a tiny battery, I have a 1.7kWh battery in my ebike![]()
Less than half the capacity of a set of Segway batteries....That's a tiny battery, I have a 1.7kWh battery in my ebike![]()
For the Prius, I thought the argument was that the hybrid can run with more efficiency than direct ICE and thus cleaner (always in the max mpg mode essentially), but it doesn't seem like this vehicle has that advantage- am I wrong?So, you don't understand the point of a Toyota Prius either?
![]()
Any modern "analog" dash is plenty digital, I guarantee it. The dials haven't been directly connected to whatever they're displaying in quite awhile.Wow this looks amazi- wait. Is that a digital dash? Eww. Gross. I remember digital dashes. They break on you. Do not want this 100k dumpster fire now thanks.
Way to ruin it GM.*
(* Obviously I'm joking here. I could never afford this. If I won the lottery, this would be my car. I have a Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo. AWD cars are my favorite. I wish I had one of these. If anyone wants to donate one to me PM me and I'll give you the details on where to send it please.)
It's the same capacity as the battery in a Toyota Prius, which weirdly no one seems to complain about or make fun of. I wonder why?
Any modern "analog" dash is plenty digital, I guarantee it. The dials haven't been directly connected to whatever they're displaying in quite awhile.
Having the instrument cluster implemented on a screen instead of physical dials is a great improvement. You can emulate dials if you want, but it gives you the freedom to do anything. That means the instrument cluster can change to fit specific use cases. Flying around the track? Have a huge tachometer front and center. Cruising down the highway on a long road trip? Get navigation updates right in front of you.
Yes, you're wrong, and we should expect this Corvette to be much more efficient than the Stingray.For the Prius, I thought the argument was that the hybrid can run with more efficiency than direct ICE and thus cleaner (always in the max mpg mode essentially), but it doesn't seem like this vehicle has that advantage- am I wrong?
Happy to be educated...
Do you not think an additional ~160HP and ~120ftlb torque added by the electric motor is an advantage? The engine alone makes the same power as the regular C8. The huge bump in specs comes from the electric motor. That's not efficient enough for you?For the Prius, I thought the argument was that the hybrid can run with more efficiency than direct ICE and thus cleaner (always in the max mpg mode essentially), but it doesn't seem like this vehicle has that advantage- am I wrong?
Happy to be educated...
In my Wrangler, the act of turning off the headlights also triggers the fog lights to turn off, so the only way to accidentally leave the fog lights on for next time is if you chose to also leave the headlights on (which would have some issues of it's ownAlso something that gives the driver 1 hour of explosive diarrhea the first time they enable fog lights in non-foggy conditions, and doubles each time thereafter.