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Would you want to see an automated top on the C6 convertible? Yes or no, and why?
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Why?Gorgon said:But it wouldn't bother me to keep the manual top that the C5 has.
Leon
Rob said:Why?
Not to get side tracked here, but I can tell you that based upon what Dave Hill said at his C5 Seminar this morning, the C6 Z06 will remain a hardtop model and will debut in 2006 as a 2006 model.78SilvAnniv said:...but I don't see how they could do it and keep the weight down.
But if they offered it as an option...THEN we would be getting into the realm of "lets water this sportscar down and camoflage it into a luxury car by making sacrifices to its' sportscar image".
Maybe if they keep the Z06 as the power car, the coupe as standard muscle and the 'vert as a cruising car they could get away with it...but I think most true Corvette fans want a powerful sportscar whether it is a coupe or a convertible.
I do think an automated top would sell very well with three specific groups of vehicle purchasers: the older and less flexible set, young & spoiled set and finally the image conscious (ego) set.
Heidi
Rob said:The C5, by nature is incredibly stiff due to its hydroformed rail technology, but the fixed roof Z06 is even better. Therefore, it only makes sense to make the Z06 the "higher performance" Corvette.
Honestly, Corvette won't be watered down. Dave Hill brought up some very good points about the C6 this weekend.78SilvAnniv said:Ah, but I don't want the Corvette to be watered down at all...I'd rather that all models were considered performance vehicles. I do think that it could be done, but I don't want anything to be sacrificed in the process.
Heidi
Vettelt193 said:I don't agree with the fixed roof ZO6 concept... In the 60's they didn't care what engine you got with what body style... the chassis technology is so much better today I am sure a C5 or C6 convertible is much stiffer than yesteryear's coupe. If those cars could handle the power, why can't a modern day convertible handle it? Some people like racing with the top off/down, so why not let them?
Any racer that buys a convertible knows that there are plenty of trade offs that lead to a slower car... all GM needs to do is go back to their roots and let the car buyers dictate what they make and sell. There have been plenty of customers that have voiced their opinions about this besides me, so I know I am not the minority on this one.
I wouldn't think that it would be too big a deal to engineer a release mechanism so the top could be raised in an emergency if the power system failed.
Just to clarify my position, I would like a power folding hardtop but I see no need to power operate the cloth soft top.
Tom