I was at the Ferrari Racing Days at the Nürburgring last weekend and saw a camouflaged exotic on the backroads twice. From the Jalopnik pictures it's now clear to me that it was the new Corvette. With the white and black 'wallpaper' camouflage it was hard to tell how the details look, but the overall shape I think is quite nice. At first I thought it was maybe a Ferrari 488 derivative or a Lotus.
The order guides were just put on the Corvette forum, at least that what it appears to be. They look about right to me.
If the price starts in the 60s they will sell tons of these. Good looking or not, thats a lot of fun for a lot less than any Ferrari, even used when you factor in insurance and maintenance. Theres a ton of vettes here in Vegas and these cars are not bought for the same reasons Ferraris are.
With the exodus of the Stingray, it seems GM has not been able to hire anyone who could design a decent looking rear end for the Corvette. It would appear that the C8 is no exception. Ponderous is a word GM needs to remove from its lexicon.
I guess another thing that makes me different, I see every car as what it could be not what it is, because to me they are all wanting for something right out of the box. As far as the moron who said he would not sell a corvette to you because of your age, he would have lost his job that day if he said that to me, he obviously should be selling produce, not cars.
I’m in agreement with the round tails being a Vette design element that needs to return. But that also goes double for the new Ferrari SF90 Stradale! What were they thinking?
Every reputation is made, every cliche has a basis. It's why I'd never make it as a Corvette salesman myself: I would presume that anyone who appears to be under the age of 50 is there for a joyride... and most actual buyers have grey hair. (how accurate an assumption would this be?)
Maybe the salesman was just joking? Regardless, he still made a 458 sale that day. This thing will have great sales if it's priced right. The performance will be there. Hopefully they make a manual.
Well the age comment may have been a little tongue in cheek but it is the reality with regard to the age of Corvette owners . The Corvette is so iconic that this may be the boost it needs . There's a lot of difference in a 100k sticker and a 300k sticker.
I think we buy Ferrari’s to enjoy often, but look at lots, whereas with a vette, you can drive it ALL the time, park it anywhere, instant power in every circumstance without having Think about the he last time, or the next time, it needs a service, and looks very special. Finally, the cost of a new one isn’t even the same as a pre-owned Ferrari! That’s where the vette for me is a winner, it looks so much more than it maybe is, and it’s good that it does. I’m a bit reluctant looking the pictures I’ve seen to say the C8 will comtinue with the ethos, but I bet it does, and they will send thousands and make a good profit from them.
It looks like it’s too hot in the factory and the car is melting. But, every mid-life crisis 60-year-old redneck will be standing in line and sell their Harley to get one, then vetts will do what vetts do best..... depreciate like a BOSS. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
This redneck bought his Vette at 31 and still has it....and I could sell it today for the same price I bought it for. What a jackass comment.
I'm going to have to disagree there. I've become pretty interested in Corvette's lately. The C6 peaked my attention, the C7 became a vehicle I cross shopped my F430 with, and depending on the C8 I may just end up owning one. Point is, I've looked around and aside from the initial depreciation hit any car would get running off the lot, it appears to hold it's value well relative to it's sales price. I wouldn't say it's too different from the more "mass produced" Ferrari's. The percent depreciation may not be far off, it just seems that way because of the difference in the initial sales price.
The Corvette is the best bang for the buck car ever built. Slag it all you want, but it will leave any ferrari (short the million plus ones) gasping for air. And even that considered, they are not to far behined. That said, I took a 2019 vette apart for mods, and as you would expect, it comes apart the same way a cavalier does. Its was disappointing in that respect. However, all that went away after the road test. It was indeed a monster, and very much a performance car.
I'm watching the introduction. So far they're trying mightily to analogize the new corvette with........the moon landing! Puhleeeeeeeeeeezzzz. Buy a corvette and you can be an astronaut too!