RE: Chevrolet Corvette C7 Stingray: Spotted

RE: Chevrolet Corvette C7 Stingray: Spotted

Wednesday 20th March 2019

Chevrolet Corvette C7 Stingray: Spotted

The next Corvette is going to be quite something. Still, there's no school like the old school...



If the internet is to be believed, the top version of Chevrolet’s next Corvette is too powerful for its chassis. Apparently, the C8’s mid-mounted, twin-turbocharged V8 is capable of twisting the structure to the point of breaking the rear screen. As cool and Murica-worthy as that sounds, an engine that wants to escape its surroundings is not necessarily what you want in a car that's expected to go head to head with supercars as polished as Ferrari’s F8 Tributo and McLaren’s 720S.

Such issues were never present during the development of the C7 Corvette. The current version of America’s best-known sports car has evolved through various guises to produce up to 755hp and 715lb ft of torque (in most aggressive ZR1 form), but its 6.2-litre small block V8 has remained quite happy to do that while nestled under the car’s nose. It’s one of the reasons we’ve come to love the C7; it’s consistently punched above its weight and what it’s lacked in exoticness it has more than made up for with brute force.


The regular Stingray can’t offer the savage performance of its better endowed siblings, yet it still possesses all of the most desirable C7 Corvette hallmarks. There’s that broad and purposeful body and the four exhaust pipes, which project the muscular vocals of a proper US-built eight. Without any form of forced induction, power is far below what the best models produce, but few people would claim 460hp and 465lb ft to be underwhelming.

While the turbo motor of the subsequent C8 will undoubtedly have far more power, don't expect it to offer quite the same tone of voice as its predecessor. Many of us will have been drawn to the Chevvy sports car for its sound alone, but as we’ve found out on numerous occasions, this generation of ‘vette also took such a stride forward elsewhere, too.

The aluminium chassis, for example, was 45kg lighter than the C6’s structure but also 60 per cent stiffer, plus it used a rear leaf spring that – despite being labelled horse and cart technology – were made of composite material and worked alongside magnetic dampers. This alternative 21st century setup, which also had a centre of gravity lower than a higher-placed coil-spring design, gave the front-engined C7 immense mechanical grip. Pressure from the Corvette’s exotic rivals appears to have encouraged a switch to coils for the C8, which helps makes the final front-engined Corvette the last in a very long line.


It's not impossible that the Stingray might one day be valued for its simplicity precisely because it is more easily associated with Chevvy’s 1953 original. That’s why today’s Spotted is an example of the C7’s base model, although it comes in the frankly awesome colour scheme of Long Beach Crystal Red exterior paint and Adrenaline Red leather inside. It really looks the part, don’t you think? And with only 4,000 miles on the clock, it’s in fine condition all over. The seller says it’s “like new”.

Fitted with that pulsing naturally aspirated V8 - mated to a seven-speed manual gearbox - you couldn’t ask for a more old school C7. There is some modern technology inside this 2014 car, such as a DAB radio, a colour instrument display and satnav, but such features are unlikely to play a part in convincing the next buyer to hand over their £47.5k, because, well, they’re pretty basic. Instead, turning the key and pressing the loud pedal should probably do it.


SPECIFICATIONS - CHEVROLET CORVETTE C7 STINGRAY

Engine: 6,162cc, V8
Transmission: 7-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 460@6,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 465@4,600rpm
MPG: 34.8
CO2: N/A
First registered: 2014
Recorded mileage: 4,000
Price new: £61,495
Yours for: £47,495

See the original advert here.

Author
Discussion

macky17

Original Poster:

2,212 posts

190 months

Wednesday 20th March 2019
quotequote all
Lovely. Wonder how good long term residuals will be. If the c8 really self-destructs then possibly pretty good smile

macky17

Original Poster:

2,212 posts

190 months

Wednesday 20th March 2019
quotequote all
Except the corvette is faster, lighter and handles massively better. Build quality on my c6 was very good and I'm guessing it's improved since then.

macky17

Original Poster:

2,212 posts

190 months

Wednesday 20th March 2019
quotequote all
Agreed, I owned one too.

I think it's ironic that the very thing which once made US cars a laughing stock is now their unique strength: they are old school. In this day and age of dual clutch boxes, wall to wall turbo charging and technology seemingly designed to isolate you from the experience of driving, a newish car with a huge, naturally aspirated engine, manual box and an analogue feel is a wonderful thing. I think I may buy a grand sport c7 later this year as there is nothing else for sale around £70k I'd rather have as a toy. Even a gt4 is too sanitised for me.

macky17

Original Poster:

2,212 posts

190 months

Wednesday 20th March 2019
quotequote all
BlackPrince said:
macky17 said:
Agreed, I owned one too.

I think it's ironic that the very thing which once made US cars a laughing stock is now their unique strength: they are old school. In this day and age of dual clutch boxes, wall to wall turbo charging and technology seemingly designed to isolate you from the experience of driving, a newish car with a huge, naturally aspirated engine, manual box and an analogue feel is a wonderful thing. I think I may buy a grand sport c7 later this year as there is nothing else for sale around £70k I'd rather have as a toy. Even a gt4 is too sanitised for me.
I live in N America and have driven the Vette, Mustang (the last few generations), Challenger and Camaro, and my pick would be the Mustang GT350. Far far more precise than the Vette and with a sweeter sounding engine
I believe you but we don’t get the gt350 over here (at sane prices). Besides, have you driven the grand sport or just the regular stingray? Big difference according to Motor Trend and everyone else.

macky17

Original Poster:

2,212 posts

190 months

Thursday 21st March 2019
quotequote all
BlackPrince said:
macky17 said:
I believe you but we don’t get the gt350 over here (at sane prices). Besides, have you driven the grand sport or just the regular stingray? Big difference according to Motor Trend and everyone else.
It was a Z06, which is why I was surprised that the GT350 felt more precise. Perhaps the ZR1 is a lot better, but it costs $x0000 more.
I bet the Z was a handful! Very, very fast aren’t they? I believe the grandsport is much better tied down than the z06 as well. Anyway, whether the GS or the GT350 is better, it supports my theory about US cars: this is the time to enjoy them before the latest trends and ‘improvements’ spoil these as well.

LHD in the uk takes some getting used to it’s true. My c6 z06 felt large on B roads and I always had to hold back slightly. You do adjust however and there’s plenty of scope to get stuck in and have fun. I believe the c7 is a more wieldy thing. Besides, no one (not me anyway) is suggesting these cars are daily driver material in the uk. They are excellent weekend toys and the LHD only adds to the theatre imo.

Edited by macky17 on Thursday 21st March 08:03