Sam's Corvette Z06 |
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An unfortunate accident: |
![]() This of
course begged the question: "What car?". I have always wanted one thing and
one thing only: Performance. And not just speed in a straight line; that's
fun and all, but the roads I drive in do have corners. To make a lot of horsepower with low octane gas you need one thing and one thing only: a big engine. I figured 5.7litres would do :) |
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The Goal: |
My friends all told me they could never see me driving a Corvette; I had started out as an "import" kind of car guy, and I liked that. Furthermore, I really don't like American built cars; I've had the displeasure through rentals and borrowed friend's cars to drive several of the more mundane ones and they made me decide I would never buy one. The Corvette, however, was different... It was light, powerful, and made to handle like a real sportscar. The looks of it always caught my eye, and when I witnessed a completely factory one take 1st place at a national autocross event in Milwaukee, WI, I knew I might just have to buy one some day. Thus, cash in hand, I begun my search for the perfect car... I looked at everything; Nissans, Subarus, Mitsubishis, BMW, Mercedes, I checked cars on Ebay, autotrader, carmax, I asked questions on car forums, asked people in the tuning industry.. I even contemplated buying a couple of different not-so-fast cars and modifying them (for example, buying a Nissan 350Z and twin turboing the factory V6 motor). I concluded that, for the price, nothing could touch the Corvette in speed, braking, and handling. That was it; it was time to buy one.... But I didn't want just any Corvette... Coming from the boosted world where 2litres can net you 400 horsepower, I had a real problem with buying a car that had an engine displacing 5.7 litres of air and only making 355hp from it. Plus 355hp was old news to me; my RS was already making more than that, and that car weighted considerably less than a 'vette. Nah, I had to have the Z06.
Like all my previous vehicles, I found the one for me on Ebay, at a hugely discounted price. Also, like both my previous cars, I had never even sat in a Corvette before I bought one. I won the auction and got a plane ticket to Talahasse, FL, where my car would be waiting for me. I looked it over carefully; it had 18000 miles and had been kept in a garage all its life; never even been driven in the rain. The seller asked me if I wanted to take a test drive... "Nah, its OK", I said. "I'll call you if I have any problems". I got in, started it up, and proceeded to drive 500 miles back to North Carolina, where I was living at the time. |
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The Car: |
On the road, the Z06 was fearsomely fast. I though I had a fast car when I drove the STI, but this was on an entirely new level! Dropping it down to 3rd gear and flooring it would result in the kind of acceleration that could take my radar detector off its mounts!
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The Engine |
![]() The pushrod design makes the engine lighter and more compact, allowing it to fit under the Corvette's low slung hood, creating a very aerodynamic shape 405 horsepower, 400 foot pounds of torque. On 91 octane. 6500RPM redline. Unlike my highly boosted 4 cylinders, it also doesn't tend to blow up at regular intervals if you drive it hard. In fact, during development GM drives several Corvettes full throttle, at their maximum speed, for an entire tank of gas. This engine is actually designed to make 405HP all the time, not 405HP for a short burst of time like most modified engines; it is strong, well built, and supremely reliable. I blew up 4 engines on my RS to end up with something that made less power, less reliably than this, so I can definitely appreciate this aspect of the engine. Because it makes so much torque, the car is geared to run very low RPMs in 6th gear (about 2000RPM at 70MPH). Because of this, it gets 28miles to the gallon on the freeway. This is almost unheard of in the sports car world. I still think the architecture is archaic and the specific output sucks (71Hp/L), but if you could find a way to get 405hp out of a couple mice on a treadmill and get it to run reliably all day, consume very little fuel and sound like this, I might complain, but I would buy it just the same :) |
Brakes, Tires and Traction: |
![]() This much rubber up front does result in a fair amount of "tramlining": the car's tendency to follow ruts, dips, and other imperfections on the road. On the Z06 it was bad enough that I always had to drive with both hands on the steering wheel on anything other than perfect asphalt. You would think that with this much rubber the car would hook up pretty well. It doesn't. I found that even in 2nd gear at 50 miles an hour I could come down hard on the gas and break the tires lose. Fortunately the Z06 comes equipped with a very good traction control and active handling system. |
Interior: |
Corvettes are notorious for their cheap
interiors... This is a common trend with American cars, and the Z06
definitely didn't escape it; it never bothered me in particular; I
wouldn't expect supercar performance for this little money without having
to cut some corners somewhere... But I figured I'd mention it here since
everybody else does... The door panels and dash are made of some really
cheap looking plastics, the climate control and the radio look like they
were pulled out of an early 90s truck: Because they were! And the leather
seats bob back and forth because they don't feel like they are attached
quite right. The shift knob was terrible, so I had that replaced. There is also a lot of interior noise; tire noise, engine noise, wind noise, transmission noise... This is a sporstcar and it feels and sounds like one. The noise never bothered me, but it might bother some. What I did like was the dashboard though. Very informative and well laid out. |
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Heads Up Display: |
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Mods: |
The Hurst resulted in incredibly short throws (almost too short I would say) and improved the shifter feel somewhat. As a trade-off though, it transmitted some more noise into the cabin (not really enough to bother me though), and required a LOT more force to shift into gear. In fact the shifting effort became so high that I am not sure this shifter could be moved any faster than the factory one. |
The Journey: |
The day I bought this car in Talahasse, FL, I drove it up to Ralleigh, NC where I was living. A month later I drove it up to New York, to meet my parents, and then New York to LA, by way of Chicago. The NY - Chicago drive took exactly 10 hours and 9 minutes (from 42nd street in Manhattan to Michigan Avenue in downtown Chicago). Aside from Nebraska, which was painfully boring, this was the greatest drive I've ever taken. It took 37 hours :)
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The End |
![]() But also, since buying this car, had been eying up something else... Something... Newer :)
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Comments? Mail me. Last updated 11/02/10 |
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