Corvette Magazine, clearly, is the best of the Corvette print media right now...far, far ahead of the two Primedia rags, Vette and Corvette Fever, and (at least for now) a cut above the new (and as yet untested) Corvette Enthusiast.
I think "Corvette" has the C6 "story" fairly accurate.
Some of the "chatter" I hear from my intel sources is that the spy shots (mainly Jim Dunn's stuff) which have made the rounds in print lately may not be truly representative of the C6 exterior and may even be "red herrings". Other sources say what's in the spy shots is the camoflagued version of what we'll see at the GM display in Cobo Hall in Detroit next Jan.
I've been saying for nearly two years that the C6 base engine will be a six-liter at about 400hp. Looks like things are headed that way. As far as the base engine (RPO LS2) being an LS6-based unit, I'm not so sure it's as much LS6-based as it is a derivation of the overall Gen 3, aluminum-block design (LS1, LS6, LM4) with enough improvements and changes that it is called "Gen 4".
No doubt whatever changes are in store for the engine in the 06 car, the lion's share of them will go towards doing a motor which has 400hp in a six-liter package which offers the base C6 owner the increased performance a platform changeover should bring along with the refinement and fuel economy C5 owners have enjoyed. Word is that variable valve timing has been nixed because it makes the car's exhaust note unattractive. For an engine to gain 500cc and 50hp while meeting more stringent exhaust emissions standards and have fuel efficiency the equal of the C5, it going to need further improvement in combustion dynamics and engine controls along with, perhaps, the addition of GM's "Displacement on Demand" feature which arrives on truck V8s next year. Scuttlebutt is that GM will reveal the Gen IV story to media in about 45-60 days, so I'd expect to see lots of official information on the LS2 in late fall or during the winter.
As for "Corvette's" claim that there's been "still another exterior redesign", I think the magazine is all wet, there. At this point (or even six months ago for that matter), it's way, way too late in the program for a change in the exterior design of the car other than very minor details. I suspect the major design features of the C6 have been set for some time. In fact, even the much rumored redesign that was supposedly ordered by Bob Lutz right after he came onboard at GM probably never happened, or at least not nearly to the extent that many of my media friends have characterized.
High-intensity discharge, fixed mount headlights are a virtual certainty. Not soon enough as far as I'm concerned, too. C5 headlights have sucked since 97.
As for the aluminum, hydroformed frame...that got out when reports surfaced of a GM supplier ordering tooling to manufacture hydroformed aluminum. My fearless forcast is the base C6 will not have that. I think its frame will be based on the existing C5 frame which is steel. The performance version of the C6, which many think will continue the Z06 RPO, will be the car that has the mass-saving alum. frame.
What else will be see? No doubt loading of the car with more gadgets, especially, telemetric stuff. Oh Lord...just what we all need.
While I don't think there's going to be any huge changes in the car's structure or suspension...at least not the huge change C5 was from C4... I believe Corvette Magazine has it right when it mentions more extensive use of mass reducing materials and manufacturing techniques. In fact, it may turn-out that the magazine understated that a bit. Confronted with carrying-over the car's basic architecture, one way to gain performance is to lighten things up. Face it: as long as corporate GM mandates the Corvette will not cost its owner the Guzzler tax, the "low-hanging fruit" (ie: a huge but inefficient engine--a la Dodge Viper) is gone as far as making the car accelerate quickly. Further downsizing of electronics and more multiplexing will shed some more of that weight. Taking weight out is as good as adding torque output so GM is spending its money wisely when it does that.
I can hardly wait for the C6. It's gonna be awesome.