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Stories and Reviews
Corvette stays true to its roots as 2-seat sports car
By Rick Popely and Jim Mateja, Chicago Tribune 10/11/2003
CHICAGO — In an industry that changes its mind more often than a politician running for re-election, the Chevrolet Corvette has steered the same course as America’s sports car for 50 years, making it one of the world’s most recognizable automobiles.

Whether the original 1953 roadster, a 1963 Sting Ray split-window coupe or a 1993 ZR-1, most people instantly know it’s a Corvette.

Only a handful of other model names have survived longer, among them the Chevrolet Suburban, which dates to 1935, and the Cadillac DeVille, which arrived in 1949.

Scores of other cars have disappeared or morphed into something else, while Corvette has stayed true to its roots as a two-seat, rear-wheel-drive sports car.

Corvette has cruised through two fuel crises, survived attacks by safety advocates and the insurance industry and outlasted a procession of domestic and foreign rivals.
Ford followed Corvette with the 1955 Thunderbird, which soon took a different route. Within three years, the Thunderbird grew from two seats to four to broaden its appeal, later added four doors and eventually lost every link to the original except the name.

Ford resurrected the Thunderbird roadster in 2001 as a luxury cruiser, but sales failed to meet expectations, and the car is destined for a second retirement in a few years.
Corvette, meanwhile, rolls along as an automotive icon. Chevrolet built the one millionth ’Vette in 1993 and will roll out the sixth generation in January at the Detroit Auto Show.

"There are three things that keep Corvette alive after 50 years," said Dave Hill, chief engineer of the Corvette since 1992. "One is value.

Corvette still has outstanding value for what you get. The others are its tremendous performance and a passionate design that is timeless. It doesn’t wear out quickly."

Since its inception, it has been a blue-collar Ferrari, priced well above run-of-the-mill Chevrolets yet within reach of the modestly affluent and alluring enough to appeal to the very rich.

"We have owners who have worked a lifetime to be able to afford a Corvette, and we have those who can afford to buy anything they want," Hill said.

Base price on the 2003 coupe is around $44,000 and the "extreme performance" Z06 is $52,000, versus $81,000 for the Dodge Viper, its main domestic rival.

"When we introduced the Z06 in 2001, we forecast it would be about 15 percent of sales, but it has turned out to be 25 percent. People who want the best are willing to pay more, but we’re not going to get giddy and really move the price up because of that," Hill said.

One concern is volume. Jacking up the price would put the car out of reach of more buyers and make it harder to justify Corvette, which has sold 30,000 to 34,000 units in each of the last four years.

Another reason for the price ceiling on Corvette is that the sixth generation — internally designated C6 — will share major engineering features with the Cadillac XLR, a $76,000 two-seat roadster that arrives in summer.

Maintaining a significant price gap makes it less likely one will steal sales from the other, what the industry calls "cannibalizing."

The 2005 Corvette will share its basic design with the XLR to reduce cost and generate higher volume from the same platform. That idea was kicked around as a cost-saving measure some 20 years ago, when John DeLorean was in charge of Chevrolet.

"DeLorean tried to find a joint platform to build the ’Vette on and suggested the ’Vette, Camaro and Firebird be built off the same platform," recalls Dave McClellan, Corvette chief engineer from 1975 until he retired in 1992. "But they were different and distinct cars that didn’t meld together and his idea didn’t work, and it never happened."

Long before then, when Ford bulked up Thunderbird to a four-passenger car in a quest for more volume and profit, some within GM suggested similar treatment for the Corvette. GM even showed a four-seat Corvette Impala coupe concept car in 1956.

However, McClellan said GM’s top management recognized Corvette’s role as a "halo" sports car that cast a glow over the rest of Chevrolet’s lineup and rejected ideas to make it more mainstream.

"No one gave us a hard time because they recognized that low volume and a limited audience was a given, that this wasn’t a Cavalier for heaven’s sake, that it was meant for sales of 25,000 to 40,000 annually and not 1 million units," McClellan said.

"As for profit, oh, yeah, they complained about that, but the only way to solve the profit problem was to cut cost or raise the price. So over the years, we raised the price and that settled down complaints about profit by a bit."

GM unveiled the Corvette at its 1953 Motorama, a traveling display of "dream cars" and technology, and the racy-looking roadster with a toothy grille and fiberglass body received rave reviews.

Chevrolet hurried the original into production that year, but McClellan said early quality gaffes nearly killed the car, which debuted with a $3,498 base price.

"The ’53-’54 original ’Vettes came to market with great euphoria, but the car basically bombed because of quality," McClellan said. "It was rushed to market to come out a year earlier than planned. But the consequence was serious problems with such things as body and panel fits and painting the plastic body."

The early models also survived despite a modest 6-cylinder engine (Chevy did not offer a V-8 at the time), when any number of alternatives were available with a V-8.

Chevrolet’s famed small-block V-8 became available in 1955, and since 1956 all Corvettes have come with V-8s.
Talk to Corvette owners and the discussion turns to performance.

"I don’t race, but I like the speed, I like the acceleration," said Bruce Johnson, who commutes about 100 miles round trip daily for work. "But it’s also the price-value."

Johnson paid roughly $52,000 for his burgundy 2003 Corvette 50th anniversary model and can’t see spending $100,000 for a Porsche 911 or twice that for a Ferrari.

"I don’t think you’re going to get much more out of a car like that," he said. "Why would I want to spend $100,000 or $250,000 when I get so much in a Corvette?"

Johnson became hooked as a teen-ager when his boss gave him a ride in a Corvette with a 427-cubic-inch engine.

"I fell in love with it, but couldn’t afford it," he remembers.

He bought his first in 1984 and has owned several since. Until last year, he drove Corvettes year-round, though he acknowledged the wide tires made for "tough sledding" in the winter.

Don Buchholz was in medical school when he bought his first Corvette, a 1967 Sting Ray coupe with 425 horsepower that was stolen twice. The second time, he didn’t get it back, but he remained devoted to the breed.

He has a Z06 for street use and an older model with a 750-horsepower engine for racing. The Z06 packs 405 h.p., and Buchholz said, "It needs another 150."

Besides the performance, Buchholz said Corvette appeals with its styling and handling — the ability to zip around turns — and he, too, cites the price.

Chevrolet has said little about the 2005 Corvette, but spy photographs of test models indicate the styling will be evolutionary and rumors persist that it will have more power.

"We’re doing our best to keep the suspense until we unveil the car," Hill said of the C6. It won’t be retro or a "heritage" model like the Thunderbird or 2005 Ford Mustang.

"People are getting a little carried away with retro. We could easily have done that Corvette," he said. "We respect our heritage but we’re always looking for the next breakthrough, always looking to the next Corvette, not to the past."

Hill also brushes off assertions by Viper owners and Dodge that the Viper is the top American performance car.

"I wouldn’t say that. Viper can put down some big straight-line numbers, but in overall performance and balance on a racetrack, the Z06 does very well. We think the totality of the car is better than the individual numbers," he said.

McClellan, the retired chief engineer, said Corvette’s steady course makes it one of the top sports cars in the world.

"Will there always be a ’Vette? Actually, there’s no reason for it to disappear," he said. "Three makes of sports cars have survived over the years, Ferrari, Porsche and Corvette. The Japanese have been in and out and come and gone but haven’t survived like these three have."

   


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