Dayton Daily News

2020 Corvette goes high performanc­e, mid-engine

- By Tom Krisher

When you first WARREN, MICH. — lay eyes on the new 2020 Corvette, a modern version of the classic American sports car isn’t the first thing that pops into your head.

Instead, you think Lamborghin­i, Lotus, McLaren.

The eighth-generation ’Vette, dubbed C8, is radically different from its predecesso­rs, which for 66 years had the engine in the front. This time, engineers moved the General Motors’ trademark small-block V-8 behind the passenger compartmen­t. It’s so close to the driver that the belt running the water pump and other accessorie­s is only a foot away.

Also gone are the traditiona­l long hood and large, sweeping front fenders, replaced by a downward-sloping snub nose and short fenders. In the back, there’s a big, tapered hatch that opens to a small trunk and the low-sitting all-new 6.2-liter, 495 horsepower engine. So why change the thing? “We were reaching the performanc­e limitation­s of a front-engine car,” explains Tadge Juechter, the Corvette’s chief engineer, ahead of Thursday night’s glitzy unveiling in a WWII dirigible hangar in Orange County, California.

With a mid-engine, the flagship of GM’s Chevrolet brand will have the weight balance and center of gravity of a race car, rivaling European competitor­s and leaving behind sports sedans and ever-more-powerful muscle cars that were getting close to outperform­ing the current Vette.

“We’re asking people to spend a lot of money for this car, and people want it to be the best performer all around,” Juechter said.

GM President Mark Reuss said the C8 will start below $60,000, 7% more than the current Corvette’s base price of $55,900. Prices of other versions weren’t announced but the current car can run well over $100,000 with options, still thousands cheaper most than European competitor­s.

Corvette sales aren’t huge. Through June, the company sold just under 10,000 of them. But industry analysts say the car helps the company’s image, showing that it can build a sports car that performs with top European models.

GM says the new version, with an optional ZR1 performanc­e package, will go from zero to 60 mph in under three seconds, the fastest Corvette ever and about a full second quicker than all but one high-performanc­e version of the outgoing Vette.

The “cab forward” design with a short hood looks way different, but GM executives say they aren’t worried that it will alienate Corvette purists who want the classic long hood and the big V-8 in the front.

 ?? KEVORK DJANSEZIAN / GETTY IMAGES ?? Mark Reuss, president of General Motors Company, unveils the 2020 mid-engine C8 Corvette Stingray during a news conference on July 18 in Tustin, California.
KEVORK DJANSEZIAN / GETTY IMAGES Mark Reuss, president of General Motors Company, unveils the 2020 mid-engine C8 Corvette Stingray during a news conference on July 18 in Tustin, California.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States