Won't be bad as long as the big V8 is still an option.


Next Corvette Will Be Powered by Small, High-Revving Turbo V-8
Anxious to attract the sort of high-performance buyers increasingly drawn to European sports cars from the likes of Porsche, Ferrari and Lamborghini, General Motors is planning some major changes for the next-generation Chevrolet Corvette – starting with a high-revving, small-displacement powertrain, that will substitute for the big V-8s traditionally found under the hood of the Chevy two-seater.
GM has approved the use of a very European-style V-8 that will be only slightly larger than 3 liters in displacement. The engine will be an overhead-cam, rather than traditional overhead-valve design, using a dry sump oil system that’s particularly well suited to high-performance road courses rather than straight-line acceleration. The engine is expected to feature a narrow 80.5 mm bore and a long stroke, more like a Ferrari or Lamborghini powertrain than the approach used for traditional Motor City metal.
A very senior GM executive also confirmed that the new engine will be turbocharged, which will help yield a broad torque curve and maximum performance under a variety of driving conditions. The engine is expected to deliver in excess of 400 horsepower, which means a specific output in the range of 125 horsepower per liter. That’s the sort of number that would help the next-generation Vette stack up well against the likes of a Porsche 911 or Lamborghini Gallardo.
The engine is likely to be extremely high-revving, perhaps climbing to a near-Formula One-class 10,000 RPMs, suggested one source involved in the project.
The revelation tracks in line with a recent comment by General Motors’ North American President Mark Reuss, who recently promised that the so-called C7 Corvette, due to market in less than two years, will be “completely different” from the very American sports cars that have come before it. Since its launch in 1953, Corvette has been governed by the philosophy, “there’s no replacement for displacement.”
While Reuss and other senior executives have declined to discuss plans for the next Corvette publicly, several well-placed sources have given TheDetroitBureau.com a good sense of what’s to come. The small V-8 underscores what one of those insiders says is the desire to “target a very different sort of buyer for the next Corvette. Let’s face it, the current customer is getting old.” But without making significant changes, that source acknowledged, younger sports car fans will continue to be “conquested” by more modern, high-tech imports.
Significantly, Corvette won’t abandon its more classic powertrain roots entirely. There will be several different types of engines offered for the C7, including a more classic, big-block OHV V-8 designed to appeal to traditionalists.
In fact, some of the design cues of the new car will be borrowed from early generations. There have even been rumors of the C7 going with the split window of the very collectible 1963 Corvette, though TheDetroitBureau.com has not been able to confirm that that particular detail has been given the go.
Meanwhile, expect the interior to be much more modern than the current car’s, which GM’s global design chief Ed Welburn admits “is a disappointment.” The styling boss, a long-time Corvette fan himself, says he is personally overseeing the development of the C7 interior and promises it will be “absolutely world-class.”
Adopting a mid-engine layout, rather than the long-running front-engine design, is considered a strong possibility, though it would be a significant engineering shift for GM. Nonetheless, sources say that wouldn’t be entirely out of line, as the Corvette has often served as the technological test bed for the maker.
GM adopted the then-radical approach of using a fiberglass body when the original 1953 Corvette was launched. The sports car has introduced plenty of other features over the years, including the MagneRide suspension, which uses a magnetically controlled fluid to continuously vary suspension settings to match road conditions and driving behavior.
When migrating from the fifth-generation Corvette to today’s C6 model, GM trimmed weight and brought the sports car’s overall size down to something closer to that of a current Porsche 911. Anticipate further cuts in mass for the upcoming remake of Chevy’s halo car.
GM is investing $131 million in the Bowling Green, Kentucky plant that produces the Corvette to prepare for the C7 launch.
The use of the new small-displacement V-8 is likely to have some knock-on effects at GM, said one source. As with current Corvette powertrain technology, the high-tech engine will find its way into the Cadillac line-up, it appears, where it would help that brand’s V-Series evolve into a more sophisticated offering, rather than the brute-force line-up it is today.
The switch to a smaller, turbocharged V-8 isn’t exclusive to GM, incidentally. Ford made the move with its big F-Series pickup for 2011, offering a downsized EcoBoost twin-turbo V-6 — which delivers the same sort of towing power as the F-150′s biggest V-8, while yielding significant fuel economy improvements.
Next Corvette Will Be Powered by Small, High-Revving Turbo V-8 - Yahoo! Autos
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So a high revving 3L pushing out 400HP that's going to run hot...wow..wtf?
I train differently than most, my beef is with gravity the weights on the bar are just the medium...Thanks to Wall Street your slice of the American Pie has been reduced to a crumb.


Won't be bad as long as the big V8 is still an option.


100K+ for a 3L 400HP care is a joke especially when the Lambo's and Ferrari's are putting out 500+ HP out of their 5 liters so they are slightly heavier. it's all about the horsepower/torque to weight ratio. Chevy is fucking up
I train differently than most, my beef is with gravity the weights on the bar are just the medium...Thanks to Wall Street your slice of the American Pie has been reduced to a crumb.


Fuck the Obamavette. I currently have a '11 Obamahoe rental and that 5.3 POS can't even pull grades in 6th gear with the cruise set at 65 or 75 mph without losing 5mph at the top of the hill.
A 100k for a Chevy? Neva!!!!!![]()
The journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step.
That's a lot of duckets?
Are you happy with your investment?
How much does a tune up on that go for?
And how many speeding tickets have you amassed?
Back in the 90's, I had a Iroc, and used to get speeding tickets just about every weekend, going back and forth to 29 palms. Needless to say, I made my insurance co. richer than those scammers should ever be.
The journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step.


It's my first Chevy so I really don't have much to compare it with in those terms. I finally got one because of the interior (and I wanted to buy American), it's more Euro than ever before which I am used to from years of being in bmw's, etc.
performance wise it's a tad faster than my old Dinan S2 M5, although not quite as fast as my old man's '97 911 Turbo S.
the maintenance is all covered, not sure for how many years. I don't usually keep cars that long, I get bored of "things" very easily.
honestly I barely drive it, less than 3k miles on it...I haven't gotten a speeding ticket since '99. I'm good with speeding, mostly just get pulled over for dwb but the gf has a judge friend that loves to fix them for me.
this will probably be my last high dollar sports car for a while, after moving from PA out to the West it's just not the same. back home I could jump on a back-road or the turn pike and bust out 120-150mph and the only thing you have to worry about is a white tail on the road but they hide during hunting season anyway. out here in Vegas they are super ball busters when it comes to spending and the motorcycle cops can hide just about anywhere so it's just not worth it.
want to find some late model muscle cars (69-70 roadrunner, chevelle ss and GTO) and have them fixed up. I wish I had the skills to do it myself, I'd freaking never be bored.
I train differently than most, my beef is with gravity the weights on the bar are just the medium...Thanks to Wall Street your slice of the American Pie has been reduced to a crumb.
Nice, It's good to have friends with connections, especially a judge!
Do you fit in that car comfortably? cause that's a pretty small car, and you're not exactly a small guy!
And I also wish I was car saavy, that's a great hobby and skill to have.
I wanted to get an old muscle car too, and fix it up. Not dropping it and throwing chromed out wheels on it. Just make it stock, looking like it just rolled of the factory floor.
The journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step.
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