2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

After all of the rumors, blurry leaked magazine covers and artist renderings, the 2014 Chevrolet Corvette C7 is finally here. OK, so is the Corvette Stingray (as it is officially called) worth all the hullabaloo surrounding it? Short answer, yes. Long answer, absolutely, positively, without a doubt, yes. But, as LeVar Burton was fond of saying in Reading Rainbow, you don't have to take my word for it. The design and specs can speak for themselves.

Let start with the most important bit, the powerplant. The 2014 Corvette Stingray is still powered by a 6.2 liter LT1 V8 engine, but now it is churning out an estimated 450 horse and 450 lb-ft of torque. 450 & 450 for the base Corvette. Yeehaw! At 2,000 rpm when other cars, such as the Ferrari 458 Italia and the Porsche 911, are putting out about 200 lb-ft, the Corvette's LT1 is cranking at 400, an increase of about 50 lb-ft over the C6. That's quite a bit of grunt. While there's no word on the base C7 Corvette's weight, we do know that it will sprint from 0 to 60 mph in under four seconds. The prevailing wisdom puts that number closer to 3.7 or 3.8 seconds. Yeehaw, again! And, you can have flawless 0-60 runs all day long because the 2014 Corvette has launch control. Yeehaw, a third time!

And, it sounds good too. The exhaust diameter has grown from 2.5 inches to 2.75 inches over the last generation and is far less restrictive to the tune of a 13 percent improvement on the standard exhaust and 27 percent on the active exhaust system. A pair of butterfly valves refine the exhaust note further when cruising in V-4 mode through the cylinder deactivation. By the way, I'm not entirely sure that true cylinder deactivation has ever really played well with a manual transmission. I look forward to seeing it work here.

Did I mention it should get nearly 30 mpg? Not too bad for a car that will give the Millenium Falcon a run for its money. The fuel efficiency comes due to the integration of a few new-to-Corvette technologies. For the first time, Active Fuel Management, cylinder deactivation, continuously variable valve timing, an advanced combustion system that will deliver more power with less fuel, direct injection, less overall weight and better aerodynamics all contribute to give the Stingray the Corvette's best ever fuel economy.

All the power, torque and crazy fuel saving technologies mean little if you can't get the generated power to the wheels. That's where the new -->TREMEC TR6070 seven-speed gearbox with Active Rev Matching comes into play. There have been a few cars where the engine's CPU will automatically match the revs on a downshift. It was a big deal with the current iteration of the Camaro a few years back, if you recall. The C7 will actually rev match on both upshifts and downshifts, a first. The Corvette's brain will actually "sense" which gear the driver is shifting into and match the revs accordingly on the fly. No more throttle blipping. If stick shift isn't your thing, a Hydra-Matic 6L80 six-speed automatic with steering wheel mounted paddle shifters is also available.

Now that the power is to the wheels, it has to get to the ground and get there in such a way that you stay on the road. In a move that is a bit at odds with the rest of the auto industry, the 2014 Chevrolet Corvette's wheels and tires are smaller than those on the current base 'Vette. At 18 inches in the front and 19 inches in the rear, the wheel diameters are unchanged. However, at 8.5 inches in width up front and 10 inches out back, the Michelin Pilot Super Sport tires are an inch and two inches narrower, respectively. The helps the car in two main ways, better road feel and better aerodynamics. Overall grip should stay the same due to a stickier rubber on the Pilot Super Sports.

On the road, Chevrolet has added the creatively named Drive Mode Selector that tailors 12 vehicle attributes (active fuel management, automatic shift points, throttle, steering effort, Magnetic Ride Control suspension compliance, exhaust note and stability/traction control intervention points, etc, etc). to the driver's driving needs and wants at any particular moment. The Drive Mode Selector has five modes, Weather, Eco, Tour, Sport and Track. Each has differing and customizable degrees of vehicular freedom and electronic nannying. The Drive Mode Selector is operated through a twitsty knob very conveniently located just aft of the gear shift lever.

In keeping with the 2014 Stingray's trend of trying to anticipate a driver's needs, the Drive Mode Selector also changes the information the driver gets on their gauge cluster. In Tour, Eco and Weather modes, the display shows info for trip data, audio and navigation. Sport mode shows traditional sports car gauges. Track mode is trying to be straight up racecar with a lap timer and everything.

The 2014 Corvette Stingray is quite the handler, too. It will hit 1g on the skidpad. That is thanks to some serious thought put into the cars overall design as it relates to handling. The new Corvette's wheelbase is about an inch longer than the C6 with its front a rear tracks stretching about an inch each. Not only does this offer a more stable feel on the road, but the turning radius has shrunk about two feet. The new Corvette is a model of maneuverability.

As standard, the C7 comes equipped with 35mm-piston Bilstein monotube shocks that connect to dual-path aluminum shock mounts. Opt for the Z51 Performance Package and you get 45mm-piston Bilstein dampers. For those who go all in, the Z51 is available with the third-generation Magnetic Ride Control that is 40 percent faster reacting than in previous generations, enabling improved ride comfort and body control.

The new electric power steering system allows for variable effort, feel and ratios depending on driving situation. Also, due to a steering column increase in stiffness of 150 percent and a shaft torsional increase in stiffness of 600 percent, the new steering system is five times stiffer overall, and hopefully more precise, than in the C6.

Going faster means you need to be able to stop. The 2014 Chevrolet Corvette comes standard with Four-piston fixed caliper Brembo brakes derived from racing. Up front, 13.3 inch rotors and 12.6 inch in the back. Stopping distance has been improved by nine percent from the C6 to the C7. With the Z51 Performance Package and you get dual-cast, slotted 13.6-inch front rotors and 13.3-inch slotted rear rotors.

It can pretty much go without saying that the past few generations of Corvettes have had somewhat lackluster interiors. As a matter of fact, they were downright cheesy. Thankfully not anymore. The designers were given a blank slate to change all that. The new interior is a very driver oriented spaces full of Napa leather with fine stitching, carbon fiber, micro-suede, real aluminum trim (not that painted plastic crap) and is fully-wrapped in soft surfaces. So much better. As a matter of fact, according the GM, the new interior tested better in focus groups than that of the Audi R8 and Porsche 911.

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

2014 Corvette Stingray

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