San Francisco Chronicle

FIRST DRIVE REVIEW

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ative 2.7 on the track.

The four dampers together are about 23 pounds lighter than the 2014-2015 Z/28’s steel-bodied dampers. The rear subframe and its multilink suspension are insulated, if you want to call it that, by aluminum pucks, and the rear anti-roll bar is adjustable to three positions. Locking down the rear end and firming up the front communicat­es every crack in the road and even the slightest variation in lateral thrust with a sniper’s precision.

All of this variabilit­y was engineered into the car to allow owners to fine-tune their Camaros to their home tracks. At the Jacques Villeneuve-designed Area 27 in British Columbia, we ran 40-plus laps of the 3.0-mile circuit. It was the brakes — the iron-rotor units carry over from the regular ZL1 except for the ABS calibratio­n — rather than spent tires that prevented us from turning more than five hot laps at a time; the pedal gets a little long on the fifth lap. While we’d like to have seen the 1LE adopt the carbon-ceramic brakes of the Z/28, they’d be costly, and few cars feel as stable while braking in corners as the 1LE. Even when you throw in a downshift, the car never unsettles. The tires claw for grip in corners like a cat scurrying up a tree. Where you expect understeer, you get a neutral balance, and squeezing extra throttle on exit causes the rear end to step out gently — or aggressive­ly if you simply put the hammer down too quickly. We’re quite sure there isn’t a tire made that could contain the LT4’s 650 lb-ft of torque.

When one feels the desire, the car will accelerate in a straight line, too. GM claims the 1LE transforma­tion saves 60 pounds, so we don’t expect the manualonly 1LE to be all that much quicker than the manual-transmissi­on ZL1 coupe we tested. Call it 3.7 seconds to 60 mph and 11.9 in the quarter-mile. The ZL1 automatic will remain the quickest Camaro, despite being roughly 100 pounds heavier than this car.

ALL THAT AND A BAG OF CREATURE COMFORTS

While the chassis mods make it a fantastic track weapon, this car is somewhat compromise­d on the street. Not overly so, but you’ll want to avoid every pothole due to springs that are three times stiffer than those of the regular ZL1. Matt Scrase, the engineerin­g manager for the Camaro 1LEs and ZL1s, admits that he wanted to make the car a bit more extreme by ditching some creature comforts—the trunk lining, for example. He was thwarted by GM historians who wanted to keep the 1LE true to its roots as an additive option, not a give-andthen-take one, a philosophy that dates to the third-generation Camaro. Unlike the last-generation Z/28, this 1LE has all the features of the ZL1, including heated and cooled seats, a heated steering wheel, a head-up display, and an 8.0-inch infotainme­nt system. Options are limited, with Chevy’s Performanc­e Data Recorder ($1,300, it’s a forwardloo­king camera and data logger), a navigation system ($495), and carbon-fiber interior trim ($500) being the only factory extras besides a few $395 premium paint colors.

One thing you won’t see in a ZL1 1LE is an automatic transmissi­on. Its manual ’box is identical to the ZL1’s six-speed except for a shorter sixth gear (0.68:1 versus 0.54:1). The shifter is crisp and lacks any noticeable wiggle in the gates. Activating the automatic rev-matching downshifts turns heel-and-toe amateurs into profession­al throttle blippers, at least by appearance­s.

The shorter ratio in top gear equates to an engine turning 1000 rpm faster at racing pace. There are only a few tracks this side of Bonneville that need sixth, and one of those is the Nürburgring Nordschlei­fe. At that hallowed German track, a ZL1 1LE turned a lap in seven minutes and 16 seconds, which is more than 21 seconds quicker than the last Z/28 and 13 quicker than the current ZL1.

That ’Ring time puts the ZL1 1LE in the company of nearvaporw­are from carmakers such as Gumpert, Radical, and Donkervoor­t. The best part of this package is its asking price: $71,295. Very nearly anything else operating in this performanc­e stratum is easily two or three times costlier; the next closest performer is a Corvette Z06 with the Z07 package, and even that performanc­e value costs about $20,000 more. Just don’t tell Chevy’s accounting department it could charge a lot more for this track animal, okay?

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PHOTOS BY CHEVROLET
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