@callawayvette:
"From my personal point of view, I think this car is over priced for what you get. But then I am not in the business of selling cars like GM. The Corvette is slowly moving toward pricing itself
out of the market that the current average buyer can afford. Hope this day does not come but if it does, GM can only blame itself!"
Are you serious with this? Entry level is $52,000. With Z51 and mag shocks, it's ~$56,500 (without dual mode exhaust that only adds 5 hp). So, for around $57grand, you can rip off a 2:52 at VIR. Get the rest of the performance data from last week's data dump. How is this not a performance and overall sports car bargain? Oh wait... the Porsche Cayman is a real bargain at $53,000 with 275 hp and, yeah, 215 ft.lbs torque. Or maybe an entry level 911 with 350 hp, ~325 ft.lbs torque at $85,000. I guess for real giveaways, you'd have to go to Ferrari and start at ~$250,000! Whoops... forgot the value-leader Viper at ~$100,000 and Nissan GT at ~$105,000... more performance from those two for sure, as long as you can keep your teeth from rattling out of your skull in your EVERY DAY driving.
I'm having a really hard time understanding how anyone doesn't get the sports car value with this new Vette... as if the C6 wasn't enough already... you know, the one that smokes Lamborghini's regularly.
If you're talking about the affordability of cars in general, you might want to refer to the condition of the economy, but I don't see the hold-up. There seems to be brand new gas-swilling 4-door, 4x4 trucks in every mother's driveway these days.