Tag Archives: C8 Corvette

[VIDEO] 2020 Corvette Battles the Nissan GT-R And Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S on Throttle House

[VIDEO] 2020 Corvette Battles the Nissan GT-R And Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S on Throttle House

After vanquishing the 808 HP Challenger SRT Demon and the 760 HP Shelby GT500 to establish the eighth-generation Corvette as the holeshot king of the RWD American performance landscape, Throttle House, who we are just going to start calling the best automotive channel on YouTube, is continuing to take advantage of their time with the newest ‘Vette in their possession. This time, they brought along two twin-turbo, AWD Axis powers to attempt to serve the mid-engine upstart some humble pie using the potent drag weapon of superior traction.

The four-corner powered foes that Throttle House chose to take on the Z51 Stingray are the aging, but still brutally quick Nissan GT-R, from the Land of the Rising Sun, and, hailing from Deutschland, the car that the hosts call, “the best sedan in the world,” the [deep breath] Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S 4MATIC+ 4-Door Coupé.

[VIDEO] 2020 Corvette Battles the Nissan GT-R And Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S on Throttle House

The deep blue Nissan is motivated by a 3.8L V6 with parallel Ishikawajima-Harima (IHI) turbochargers that help it reach a top horsepower figure of 565. Coupled with the all-wheel-drive system and a quick-shifting, six-speed dual-clutch transmission, “Godzilla” is good for sub-three second sprints to 60 all day long.

The four-door version of AMG’s flagship supercar brings a best-in-test (and likely underrated) 630 ponies into the ring. Its aluminum, 4.0 liter (actually 3.982) V8 is also force fed by a pair of turbos which result in a staggering 664 lb-ft of twist. Because of the excess of torque, it uses a traditional, 9-speed automatic gearbox and is rated as a dead ringer for the C8 and GT-R to 60 MPH.

[VIDEO] 2020 Corvette Battles the Nissan GT-R And Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S on Throttle House

Even with HP advantages of 70 and 135(!), respectively, neither of the Corvette’s adversaries in this test are quite as beach ready. Godzilla, never known for his physique, tips the scales at 3,933 lbs., 300 heftier than America’s sports car, while the AMG carries a staggering 4,682 lbs., or a C8 plus a half of a ton.

Unlike past tests where TH has attempted to keep the MSRP’s close, our domestic hero really flexes its value muscles in this test. With a base price around $60k and an estimated as tested price of $85,000, the Corvette looks like an absolute steal next to the $160,000 base AMG. Even the R35 GT-R, that won Motor Trend’s coveted Car of the Year award in its inaugural year on sale, over a decade ago, in 2009 (though, if you read that link, we think it’s pretty obvious that the C6 ZR1 was more deserving), on the back of a startlingly low, $77,840 MSRP, has ballooned in price to anywhere between $115,335 and $212,535, depending on trim level.

[VIDEO] 2020 Corvette Battles the Nissan GT-R And Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S on Throttle House

How does all of this information manifest itself in drag and roll races? Are we making excuses for our blog’s namesake automobile? Is it all misdirection? Watch the video to find out, and get your popcorn ready because you are in for a wild and entertaining seven minutes!

[embedded content]

Source:
Throttle House / YouTube

Related:
[VIDEO] Throttle House Takes a 2020 Corvette and the 2020 Shelby GT500 to the Track
[VIDEO] 2020 Corvette vs the 808-HP Dodge Demon on Throttle House
FCA Boss: ‘Corvette is Most Cross-Shopped Vehicle for SRT Muscle Cars’

For GREAT deals on a new or used Nissan check out Gardena Nissan TODAY!

QUICK SHIFTS: Base C8 Corvette Review, C8 Z06 Pipes, New Mustang and a Mercedes Wagon, C5 Corvette Lifespan and More!

QUICK SHIFTS: Base C8 Corvette Review, C8 Z06 Pipes, New Mustang and a Mercedes Wagon, C5 Corvette Lifespan and More!

Photo Credit: Brian Williams

Welcome to Quick Shifts. Quick Shifts is a content feature here at CorvetteBlogger featuring links to Corvette and automotive-related stories of interest. The content that we have hand-selected for you this week includes a new C8 Review, more on the upcoming Z06, a possible Tahoe spy shot, who killed the Blackwing, a new Mach 1 and AMG E63, market shortages, and the life of a C5.

FIRST GEAR:

The Only Corvette That Matters” is where we will begin this weekend. Hagerty frontman, Jack Baruth recently spent some time piloting a non-Z51 2020 Corvette 2LT. Without much in the way of optional tech and go-fast goodies, it doesn’t initially seem like an overly interesting way to spec a C8 but this car’s lack of “street cred” is exactly why Jack thrusts extra importance upon it. Be sure to check out the full review for yourself and if you have a mid-engine Corvette on the way and didn’t tick the box marked “Z51,” get your device ready because this excellent piece comes with a full-gallery of wallpaper-worthy photography, courtesy of Andrew Trahan.

C8 Corvette Review By Hagerty

SECOND GEAR:

This week’s big Corvette news was the glorious return of the camouflaged C8 Z06 mules. We first covered the sighting here and got an encore performance that included a peek at the center-mount exhaust, which was rumored just last week, here. Autoevolution featured a video that was shot from the opposite side of the convoy from our footage and it seems to show camo-clad C8s with two distinct exhaust positions; one at the corners, like the Stingray’s, and the more newsworthy return of the C5-7 center-exit setup.

AE speculates that these are two separate C8 variants (Z06 AND ZR1) being tested alongside each other. We aren’t too sure about that but it is interesting to think about!

While we are on the topic of the new exhaust position and the funky mixed pipe sizes, we believe that it could actually be a pretty similar look to what we will see on the production version. The Corvette team could possibly be taking a page directly out of their favorite benchmark, the Ferrari 458 Italia’s book. When the Italia debuted in 2010, it paid homage to the legendary F40 by adapting its three-exhaust tip look. Much like the familiar valved exhaust seen on the past two generations of America’s sports car, the 458 had two modes. From idle up until 3,000 on the tack, the smaller-diameter center pipe ousted all of 4.5L V8’s fumes but beyond 3k, those gasses exited through the two larger, outside pipes for a louder, more exotic sound.

2022 Corvette Z06 Exhaust

Photo Credit: Brian Williams

THIRD GEAR:

Speaking of our spy shots of the Z06 Convoy, we think we got a special two for one special because in the background of picture #19, we caught a camouflaged fifth-gen Tahoe. The camo strikes us as somewhat odd as the 2021s have already had a full reveal. This mysterious truck might not amount to anything or, perhaps, we caught a new member of the Tahoe family hiding in the shot. Our biggest hope is that it signals GM’s long-awaited return to the performance SUV market that they created with the GMC Typhoon, bring on the LT powered Jeep Trackhawk fighters!

On that note, our friends at Road & Track did a great investigation of what went wrong for GM’s ill-fated LTA “Blackwing” V8 this week. Be sure to give this one a read, it is one of the best clips of the week!

2022 Corvette Z06 Testing

Photo Credit: Brian Williams

FOURTH GEAR:

The automotive industry is finally waking up from a month’s long slumber! Friends, this week had reveals, debuts, disclosures, unveilings, and intrigue, starting off with a new Mustang that will slide into the space previously occupied by the Bullitt. The Mach 1 officially returns for 2021 with a 480 HP version of the 5 Liter Coyote V8 and a slew of aerodynamic upgrades borrowed from the top-tier Shelby models. Car and Driver calls it “the perfect blend of Shelby and McQueen.” We think the vehicle they describe would just be a GT350R painted Highland Green, but it does seem like a nice car that makes us wish GM would give some more love to the Corvette’s little brother. While Ford and FCA continually tweak, make special editions, add power to, and bestow new and classic colors upon their pony cars, the Camaro has been left on the vine to die while resting on its best-in-class driving dynamics. If rumors of the Camaro not spawning another generation (or, who knows?) prove to be true, here’s hoping that the General sends it out with a bang. They can keep the fast SUVs that we mentioned earlier, what we really want is a three-tier send-off to the sixth-generation Camaro that includes an upgraded ZL1 embued with LT5 power, a 427/570 IROC-Z, and a final run of Z/28s with the C8Z’s glorious, high-revving LT6; all instant classics that the nameplate deserves before being sent out to pasture.

Ford Mustang Mach 1

Photo Credit: Ford

FIFTH GEAR:

As a gearhead and a father of two, my fantasy daily driver is the AMG E63 Wagon. My only complaint about the most recent edition was that it just wasn’t that good looking but after a look across the showroom at the halo AMG GT-R (now available sans top) and a quick rhinoplasty, it is perfect! Check it out here, and see how it compares to the M5 Competition which was also lightly updated this week, here.

Mercedes AMG E63 Wagon

Photo Credit: Mercedes AMG

SIXTH GEAR:

Finally, we would like to point out a massive shortage of recent desirable Corvettes (and similar) currently afflicting the used car market. Saved Cars.com and Autotrader searches turned up just six manual transmission 2019 ZR1s (three newly listed), two updated (’17+) manual Z07s, 17 C6 ZR1s, another 17 C6 Z06s with a possibility of their own Z07 package, only four of that car’s successor/engine partner, the ’14-’15 Camaro Z/28, and surprisingly, only 22 of the still in production, ZL1-1LE. If you are looking to unload any of these vehicles to make room for a new, mid-engine example of the plastic fantastic, now might be a great time to test the waters as used prices have largely rebounded from the “Corona-dip” and newcomers have been selling quickly.

Save the Manuals!

REVERSE:

In this week’s first gear, Mr. Baruth may have struck the curiosity chord with some of our more methodical readers when he mentioned the lone Corvette in his personal car history. The car in question was a first-year C5 and it has an interesting and very well documented saga of its own that we thought you would enjoy.

PART I:
This C5 trilogy starts off in the summer of 2016 when Jack, who earned a living as a driving instructor and Road & Track columnist at the time, had to have what he calls “the talk” with a budding performance driver who just so happens to be his wife, simply known online as “Danger Girl.” This talk is one that he has with many of his students when they get tired of living in a constant state of having their well-driven Miata passed on track days. In a move that will surprise no one in our little corner of the internet, he spends the rest of the piece explaining that she should get the best track day hero for the money, period, a C5 Z06. Read the full write-up here, and if you already own a C5Z, start taking notes once you see an ’04 Commemorative Edition. That’s the point when Jack starts to go in-depth about how to make the LS6 bargain “fry all of the bacon out there” (he is talking about beating the other cars on the track with you. Unfortunately, having a C5 Z06 won’t gain you access to mass quantities of perfectly cooked bacon).

PART II
The Empire Strikes Back of this series is told by another one of your author’s favorite auto-journos, Matt Farah of /Drive on NBC Sports and the Smoking Tire. Here, Farah chronicles his 20 years of 1997 Corvette ownership which began on his eighteenth birthday, less than 12 hours after gaining access to his Bar Mitzva savings account. His humorous retelling features gems like “The C5 was perfectly timed to take a big ol’ American dump right on the hood of the E36 M3” and “…scattering my cars about Los Angeles like an elephant farting on a dandelion.” It all culminates in his parting with the car that signified 32,000 miles of his youth to someone looking for “something SHE can take to the track” (emphasis, mine).

PART III
Wouldn’t you know it? Farah’s buyer was none other than Danger Girl, herself! Our little C5 series wraps-up with Jack driving his wife’s ‘Vette to NCM Motorsports Park to see how well someone on a budget could do on track with the high-dollar metal that R&T assembled for the 2018 edition of Performance Car of the Year. In another superb read, peppered with professional tips and thought processes on how to make your C5 even more of a terror on the track, Jack reveals that his C5 wasn’t the car responsible for the slowest time at the event! The C5 continues to make people “without rich uncles,” feel great about the amount of car that could be had for $20 grand! Be sure to polish off the final article right here.

Appendix:
If you are curious about what happened to the C5 at the center of this saga; Jack and DG moved on from the Torch Red coupe in 2018, after amassing another 7k miles. 22 years and nearly 40k miles after a young Matt Farah bought the car new from site sponsor, Kerbeck Chevrolet, the famous C5 sold on Bring a Trailer, still retaining more than 50% of its original MSRP!

The disappointing car that Matt replaced his beloved C5 with? It also sold in a BaT auction in 2018 (this time for charity). As for our human protagonists, both continue to put out some of the best automotive content on the web; Corvette, or otherwise.

After years of casting his PCOTY vote for visceral American cars like the Viper ACR or Camaro ZL1-1LE, Jack finally got his way and had a large hand in the 2019 ZR1’s PCOTY win (scroll to the grand finale for his part). As you probably surmised from first gear, he is now a honcho over at Hagerty Media, which has become one of the net’s finest car sites and a staple of our weekly sharing of all things Corvette.

Matt’s LA car storage brainchild, mentioned in part II above is now becoming a reality and he continues to push various pieces of vehicular entertainment across the internet and television. You can watch his C8 “One Take” here.

2004 Corvette on Bring A Trailer

Previous Quick Shifts:
C8 vs Shelby GT500, C8 Markups, Buy Your Own Racetrack, C8 Z06 Rumors, Tesla Domination, and More!
C8 Style with Brett Golliff, C3/C6 Buyers Guides, Jordan Taylor, GM Corporate Espionage, and more!
C8 Review, LS Swap, Business Case, British ZR-1 Sedan, 2010 Grand Sport Reveal, and more!

Click Here!

[VIDEO] Sigala Designs C8RR Corvette Widebody Kit Coming in Fall of 2020

[PICS] Sigala Designs C8RR Corvette Widebody Kit Coming in Fall of 2020

There’s no doubt that the C8 Corvette Stingray is just begging to be customized by owners.

Ernie Sigala of Sigala Designs has been busy over the past few months and has just unveiled a rendering showing his widebody kit for the Stingray called the C8RR, coming this fall.

We love the look of the stock C8 but have always wished the designers had pushed the envelope further. Maybe it’s the boy racer in us, but we love the look of this kit.

[PICS] Sigala Designs C8RR Corvette Widebody Kit Coming in Fall of 2020

Included in the 32-piece package, the cost of which is said to be “coming soon,” are:

  • Sigala Vented Hood
  • Front Bumper Extensions
  • Sigala Front Lip Extended
  • Twin Front Splitter Extensions
  • Sigala Wide Body Fenders
  • Side Skirt Extensions (2)
  • Side Splitter Extensions (4)
  • Wide Body Quarter Panels (4)
  • Rear Diffuser (1)
  • Rear Bumper Extensions (2)
  • Rear Winglets (2)
  • Hi Rise Wing (3 pcs)
  • RR Roof
  • RR Halo
  • RR Rear Hatch Extensions (2)
  • Engine Vents

The kits, which can be pre-ordered now at www.sigaladesigns.com, are available in Full FRP (Fiberglass), Full Carbon Fiber, and Partial Carbon Fiber/FRP (Fiberglass). You can also preview the C8RR kit with a variety of colors that include Torch Red, White, Black, Blue, Silver, Orange and Green.

No word on the cost of the custom wheels and aftermarket exhaust in the rendering, as well as the LED light strips and brake calipers painted in Italy’s colors.

[PICS] Sigala Designs C8RR Corvette Widebody Kit Coming in Fall of 2020E

In case you don’t want to go this wild or can’t afford such extravagance right now, Sigala also offers some pretty nifty and reasonably priced upgrades by the piece for all C8s, including:

  • Carbon Fiber Door Molding – $799.99
  • Carbon Fiber Quarter Panel Molding – $799.99
  • Carbon Fiber Roof Panel – $1,299.99
  • Carbon Fiber Mirror Triangle Bezels – $349.99
  • Carbon Fiber Front Bumper Grille Insert Bezels – $999.99
  • Carbon Fiber Rocker Panel Extension Kit – $599.99
  • Carbon Fiber Mirror Kit (Caps) – $549.99
  • Carbon Fiber Engine Appearance Package – $799.99
  • Carbon Fiber Front Splitter – $799.99
  • Carbon Fiber Engine Cover – $549.99
  • Carbon Fiber Engine Cover Molding – $279.99
  • Carbon Fiber Front Bumper Emblem – $139.99
  • Carbon Fiber Rear Stingray Emblem – $139.99
[PICS] Sigala Designs C8RR Corvette Widebody Kit Coming in Fall of 2020E

The company also posted this video showing the design work behind the creation of the C8RR widebody kit to their YouTube channel:

Like all Corvettes, the C8 has a wild and distinctive style all of its own but that doesn’t mean we couldn’t turn up the heat more with our new design… We introduce to you the new Corvette C8RR Widebody Kit! Coming Fall 2020

[embedded content]

Source:
Sigala Designs

Related:
[PICS] Rendered Widebody C8 Corvette Shows Potential of Mid-Engine Layout
[PICS] Sinister Widebody Rendering Pushes the C8 Corvette’s Design Envelope
C8 Corvette Widebody Rendered with a Split Rear Wing and More

Click Here!

For GREAT deals on a new or used Toyota check out South Coast Toyota TODAY!