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Saw this on the C5 Forum and wanted to be sure you all saw it. It is one of the best written reviews I've read.
The Corvette Z06
By Eric Peters
Speed is no longer purely a question of money. The unreal 385-hp Z06 Corvette turns that axiom on its head. For a not-obnoxious $46,855, you can own the keys to a truly world-class exotic, a car that will brain-smash just about anything, irrespective of sticker price—whether the measure is quarter-mile, top-end or lateral acceleration/handling ability. And the meager handful of cars that can beat the overachieving Z06 in any category does so by the slimmest of margins—a few tenths of a second here, a couple of mph on the top-end there.
You’ll bleed green to secure those hair-thin advantages, though. For the price of a Viper GTS-ACR or Porsche 911 Turbo, you could get two, even three Z06 Corvettes. Even the Boxster S—no match at all for the Z06--sells for $50,200, about $5,000 more than the Z06.
Beyond the orbits of the Viper and 911 are silly machines such as the Ferrari 550 and Lamborghini Diablo. Monopoly-money levels of excess cash are necessary even to walk into the showroom, yet the Z06 can handle these exotics, even show them its defiantly raised-in-the-air muscle car rear end.
How fast is it? The Z06 will run to 60 mph in a searing four seconds flat. This level of performance upends history, effacing the achievement of the most brutal street cars of the 1960s. The LS6 SS 454 Chevelle of 1970 could not match this; no Hemi ‘Cuda could hope to follow in the 17-inch footprints of the Z06. Even the Shelby Cobra 427--for 30 years the quickest, fastest street-legal production car ever made—retires to the ranks of the second-bests and also-rans.
As for what’s available today, the Z06 is just barely slower than the twin-turbo, $120,000 Porsche 911. It guts and filets the V-10 Viper while making poor-quality chuck out of the six-cylinder BMW M3. Indeed, the Z06 absolutely annihilates whatever gets in its way, a true freight train of death with a bow tie and four jaunty exhaust pipes.
The Z06, of course, is a special high-performance version of the already high-performance Chevy Corvette. Its LS1 5.7-liter V-8 has been played with by the engineers to whelp another 35 hp above the standard 350-hp LS1 found in regular Corvettes. This might is routed to the rear wheels via a ZO6-only modified six-speed manual gearbox with different ratios to maximize forward thrust. The suspension is the ultra-stiff competition setup, with so much grip only the best drivers will begin to get close to the car’s limits before they slide past their own.
Because of the intended purpose of the Z06, it cannot be ordered as a convertible like other Corvettes. The Z06 is offered only in hardtop coupe form and only with the six-speed manual transmission. Like the also-no-foolin’ Dodge Viper, an automatic transmission is not offered.
But surprisingly—and unlike the legendary, limited-run high-performance Chevys of the past, such as the ZL-1 and L-88 ‘Vettes—the Z06 is both civilized and loaded. It has dual-zone air conditioning (the 1969 L-88 did not offer it; a heater was optional). It is comfortable (the L-88 was not). The car can be driven in the rain, on hot days—pretty much whenever you feel like going for a toodle.
It has everything to make the ride enjoyable: power windows, locks, memory seats, boombox Bose audio system with integral CD player, electric rear defrost, remote keyless entry and leather trim.
This is on top of the racecar-serious functional stuff: active handling and traction control, four-wheel high-capacity disc brakes with ABS, limited slip differential.
There are only a handful of options—little things like color-keyed floor mats with carpeted inserts. For your $46,855, then, you are buying a pretty nice package: a Ferrari-killer that doesn’t mind idling in traffic on the way to the office.
The best part is Chevy has done all this with "antiquated" push-rod engine technology. The LS1 V-8 has no overhead cams and just two valves for each of its cylinders. What it does have is gobs of power at any speed, and the near-bulletproof ruggedness of an understressed, large displacement and simple in design American V-8.
The bad part? A few years back, Chevy was selling a "King of the Hill" ZR-1 Corvette with a "state of the art" twin-cam engine for twice the price of today’s Z06.
But (ahem!) the budget-priced Z06 is a faster, quicker ‘Vette than the "King." And it is based on the far superior C5 chassis that replaced the C4 platform on which the old ZR-1 was based.
Ouch.
At least, it hurts if you were one of the unlucky ones who bought a ZR1
------------------
01 Z06-- Quicksilver, modified torch red interior, DRM long tube headers, cam, CNC heads, 11 to 1 compression ratio, Donaldson LS6, Corsa Indys, Euro tail lights, B&M Ripper
396 rwhp, 377.1 rwt Minneapolis,Mn
Ron M.
The Corvette Z06
By Eric Peters
Speed is no longer purely a question of money. The unreal 385-hp Z06 Corvette turns that axiom on its head. For a not-obnoxious $46,855, you can own the keys to a truly world-class exotic, a car that will brain-smash just about anything, irrespective of sticker price—whether the measure is quarter-mile, top-end or lateral acceleration/handling ability. And the meager handful of cars that can beat the overachieving Z06 in any category does so by the slimmest of margins—a few tenths of a second here, a couple of mph on the top-end there.
You’ll bleed green to secure those hair-thin advantages, though. For the price of a Viper GTS-ACR or Porsche 911 Turbo, you could get two, even three Z06 Corvettes. Even the Boxster S—no match at all for the Z06--sells for $50,200, about $5,000 more than the Z06.
Beyond the orbits of the Viper and 911 are silly machines such as the Ferrari 550 and Lamborghini Diablo. Monopoly-money levels of excess cash are necessary even to walk into the showroom, yet the Z06 can handle these exotics, even show them its defiantly raised-in-the-air muscle car rear end.
How fast is it? The Z06 will run to 60 mph in a searing four seconds flat. This level of performance upends history, effacing the achievement of the most brutal street cars of the 1960s. The LS6 SS 454 Chevelle of 1970 could not match this; no Hemi ‘Cuda could hope to follow in the 17-inch footprints of the Z06. Even the Shelby Cobra 427--for 30 years the quickest, fastest street-legal production car ever made—retires to the ranks of the second-bests and also-rans.
As for what’s available today, the Z06 is just barely slower than the twin-turbo, $120,000 Porsche 911. It guts and filets the V-10 Viper while making poor-quality chuck out of the six-cylinder BMW M3. Indeed, the Z06 absolutely annihilates whatever gets in its way, a true freight train of death with a bow tie and four jaunty exhaust pipes.
The Z06, of course, is a special high-performance version of the already high-performance Chevy Corvette. Its LS1 5.7-liter V-8 has been played with by the engineers to whelp another 35 hp above the standard 350-hp LS1 found in regular Corvettes. This might is routed to the rear wheels via a ZO6-only modified six-speed manual gearbox with different ratios to maximize forward thrust. The suspension is the ultra-stiff competition setup, with so much grip only the best drivers will begin to get close to the car’s limits before they slide past their own.
Because of the intended purpose of the Z06, it cannot be ordered as a convertible like other Corvettes. The Z06 is offered only in hardtop coupe form and only with the six-speed manual transmission. Like the also-no-foolin’ Dodge Viper, an automatic transmission is not offered.
But surprisingly—and unlike the legendary, limited-run high-performance Chevys of the past, such as the ZL-1 and L-88 ‘Vettes—the Z06 is both civilized and loaded. It has dual-zone air conditioning (the 1969 L-88 did not offer it; a heater was optional). It is comfortable (the L-88 was not). The car can be driven in the rain, on hot days—pretty much whenever you feel like going for a toodle.
It has everything to make the ride enjoyable: power windows, locks, memory seats, boombox Bose audio system with integral CD player, electric rear defrost, remote keyless entry and leather trim.
This is on top of the racecar-serious functional stuff: active handling and traction control, four-wheel high-capacity disc brakes with ABS, limited slip differential.
There are only a handful of options—little things like color-keyed floor mats with carpeted inserts. For your $46,855, then, you are buying a pretty nice package: a Ferrari-killer that doesn’t mind idling in traffic on the way to the office.
The best part is Chevy has done all this with "antiquated" push-rod engine technology. The LS1 V-8 has no overhead cams and just two valves for each of its cylinders. What it does have is gobs of power at any speed, and the near-bulletproof ruggedness of an understressed, large displacement and simple in design American V-8.
The bad part? A few years back, Chevy was selling a "King of the Hill" ZR-1 Corvette with a "state of the art" twin-cam engine for twice the price of today’s Z06.
But (ahem!) the budget-priced Z06 is a faster, quicker ‘Vette than the "King." And it is based on the far superior C5 chassis that replaced the C4 platform on which the old ZR-1 was based.
Ouch.
At least, it hurts if you were one of the unlucky ones who bought a ZR1
------------------
01 Z06-- Quicksilver, modified torch red interior, DRM long tube headers, cam, CNC heads, 11 to 1 compression ratio, Donaldson LS6, Corsa Indys, Euro tail lights, B&M Ripper
396 rwhp, 377.1 rwt Minneapolis,Mn
Ron M.
