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ZR-1 Convertible Prototype


Nice pix!! Thanks for sharing them! Do you mind if I resize them and add them to the Gallery?

That is one BEAUTIFUL beast! :cool

:wJane Ann
 
These are all beautiful ZR-1’s shots, thanks for posting!

B17Crew
:w
 
Beautiful!!

1263475974_c3610cf8fb_b.jpg
:drool: man that looks so good! Now if it was black with tan,white with tan, or white with black I would drool more.
 
When duribility testing was done on the ZR-1 Convertible the windshield would crack under hard acceleration. This killed the ZR-1 Convertible.
 
When duribility testing was done on the ZR-1 Convertible the windshield would crack under hard acceleration. This killed the ZR-1 Convertible.
Wait so the chassis was flexing too much? Or was it that the windshield for the ZR-1 was not made for open air?
 
When duribility testing was done on the ZR-1 Convertible the windshield would crack under hard acceleration. This killed the ZR-1 Convertible.

When did that ever stop the General?:eyerole

In 1977 I bought a new Olds Toronado. If you ran the passenger's window down at any speed over 80 MPH it would fly off of the car when you tried to run it back up.

After the second window the dealer refused to replace it in warranty so I went all the way up the ladder trying to get GM to fix the problem. The end result was a letter from GM's legal department that said something like this:
Dear sir, The maximum legal speed limit in the continental United States is 55 MPH. After extensive testing we have determined that there is no problem with the design of the window operating systems installed in the 1977 Toronado when the vehicle is operated within the parameters of the prevailing law.

One of my employees had a blowout and rolled the car on the I55 South of Memphis so the window became less of a moot point.;shrug

I also had a 1976 Eldorado, almost exactly the same car, on which the windows worked perfect at any speed.:confused
 
B2K convertibles seem to do just fine. I wonder if GM is just overly cautious? Or maybe their testing was over surfaces so rough most owners never see anything close to that?
 
I remember distinctly the "Stealers" inflating the prices of the original ZR-1s. There were several reports of new owners paying $100,000.00 for a $65,000.00 Vette. I believe that contributed to the demise of the model.

If there were more sales, I am sure GM would have found a way to continue production. At the same time, they might have found a way to build a convertible. With so little numbers of them sold, they really had no choice but to discontinue the vehicle.

SAVE THE :w
 
I remember distinctly the "Stealers" inflating the prices of the original ZR-1s. There were several reports of new owners paying $100,000.00 for a $65,000.00 Vette. I believe that contributed to the demise of the model.

If there were more sales, I am sure GM would have found a way to continue production. At the same time, they might have found a way to build a convertible. With so little numbers of them sold, they really had no choice but to discontinue the vehicle.

SAVE THE :w


Lotus engine pushed Corvette ZR-1 into exotic company
September 12, 2004
BY DAN JEDLICKA Auto Reporter

Lotus engine pushed Corvette ZR-1 into exotic company
September 12, 2004
BY DAN JEDLICKA Auto Reporter
Only one Chevrolet Corvette has been sold with a European-designed engine, which let the two-seater compete in the rarified high-performance world occupied by sports cars such as Ferrari and Lamborghini.
That Corvette was the 1990-95 ZR-1, and it's the most exotic production 'Vette ever built.
The standard Corvette was plenty fast with its conventional 245-horsepower V-8. But the ZR-1 had a custom 375-380 horsepower V-8 from Lotus -- the British sports car and world championship Grand Prix race car builder, which does work for major automakers. Both engines had a 5.7-liter displacement, but that's about all they had in common.
Why Lotus? Because Chevy had considered a turbocharged V-6, twin-turbocharged V-8 and even a non-turbocharged 600-horsepower V-8, but found them too noisy or inefficient. It needed a quiet, docile, smooth, economical engine at home in heavy traffic and on race tracks. Morever, GM bought Lotus about the time Chevy and Lotus representatives met in 1985 to initially discuss the ZR-1 engine, which took about two years to develop.
Such an engine never came cheap, so the Corvette ZR-1 was General Motors' most expensive 1990 car and its new flagship model. The ZR-1 announcement price was $58,995, but soon jumped to $64,138.
The ZR-1 got its model designation from the "ZR-1'' option package, which added $27,016-$31,683 to the standard Corvette hardtop's list price -- making it the most expensive auto option in Chevy history.
Of course, the highlight of the package was the Lotus-designed V-8; it actually was hand-assembled by Mercury Marine at its Stillwater, Okla., plant. While mostly known for boat engines, Mercury had a good reputation for precision engine building.
Buyers lined up to pay $80,000-plus to be among the first to get a ZR-1. Some dealers and private sellers were asking up to $150,000 for the ZR-1. The reasoning was that this was a sure-fire collector car. (A ZR-1 now is valued at $49,000-$55,000, with the highest price for the 1994-95 model)
About 3,000 ZR-1s were produced for 1990, or less than one per Chevy dealer.
"The ZR-1 gives you attributes of a $75,000 to $300,000 sports car," said former Corvette chief engineer Dave McLellan, who was in charge of the Corvette program.
This writer found during a test of a 1992 ZR-1 that it was the least expensive, most civilized and reliable exotic car, despite its humble Chevrolet insignia. The special V-8 whisked the car to 60 mph from a standing start in 4.3 seconds and to 100 mph in 11.5 seconds. It allowed an unmodified Corvette ZR-1 to average 173.8 mph for 5,000 miles in 1990 on a Texas track during a sanctioned run.
However, the ZR-1 still delivered an estimated 17 mpg in the city and 26 on the highway.
The Corvette ZR-1's hand-assembled 32-valve, dual-overhead-camshaft V-8 had a key-operated "valet switch". It limited horsepower to 150-200 when a ZR-1 owner handed the keys of the car to parking lot attendants or teen-age family members.
The Corvette ZR-1 got its world introduction early in 1989 at Switzerland's Geneva Motor Show and at a splashy French media launch. The overseas introductions were meant to underscore the car's world-class design. Corvette sales had been lagging, and the ZR-1 showed that GM's Corvette could compete with the world's top sports cars. The ZR-1 engine gave the Corvette an exotic car reputation it never had been able to offer.
However, the Corvette ZR-1 wasn't introduced until later in 1989 as a 1990 model. Things were held up because Chevrolet had designed a new dashboard for all 1990 Corvettes, which were introduced in the fall.
Besides the special V-8, the ZR-1 option contained such things as wider rear high-performance tires. The Corvette ZR-1 looked like a conventional Corvette to the casual observer, although it had wider rear bodywork to accommodate those bigger tires, which called for new doors, rocker panels and rear fascia.
The only other external mark was a convex tail with square tail lights in place of the standard Corvette's concave rear panel and round tail lights. There also were a pair of rectangular exhaust outlets to accompany the taillight shape.
Also standard on the ZR-1 was a thicker rear stabilizer bar and new FX3 adjustable suspension, with "Performance", "Touring" and "Sport" modes.
The special suspension -- optional for standard Corvette coupes with a manual transmission -- allowed the ZR-1 to handle better than most European exotic cars and helped make the car safe for average drivers with no high-performance driver training.
The ZR-1 came only as a coupe with a six-speed manual gearbox. After all, this was a very serious auto -- no cruiser for the open-shirt, gold-chain crowd that often bought Corvette convertibles with an automatic transmission.
Curiously, Chevrolet gave the regular 1991 Corvette the covex tail panel and square taillights previously reserved for the ZR-1, although it didn't have the ZR-1's oversized flanks and huge rear tires. All Corvettes got a new tapered lower nose, horizontal strakes instead of vertical slots in the front fenders and lower-restriction mufflers. The 1991 ZR-1 was officially rated at 375, instead of the 375-380 rating of the 1989 model -- not that anyone could tell a difference in performance.
Production problems in 1991 held down Corvette ZR-1 volume, and Chevrolet announced in 1993 that it would build only 380 ZR-1s annually.
That year, the car's horsepower jumped to 405. But about 4,800 ZR-1s had been sold, and it seemed as if most everyone who wanted the car had bought one. Also, standard Corvette horsepower had climbed to 300, which was more than enough for most 'Vette purchasers.
The Corvette ZR-1 was dropped after a final 448 copies were built for 1995. GM and Chevrolet had gotten lots of publicity with the car, and there seemed no need to keep a low-volume auto that was costly to build when GM was cutting costs to become more profitable.
By then, the Corvette ZR-1 had firmly established its reputation as being a world-class sports car.
 
When did that ever stop the General?:eyerole

In 1977 I bought a new Olds Toronado. If you ran the passenger's window down at any speed over 80 MPH it would fly off of the car when you tried to run it back up.

After the second window the dealer refused to replace it in warranty so I went all the way up the ladder trying to get GM to fix the problem. The end result was a letter from GM's legal department that said something like this:
Dear sir, The maximum legal speed limit in the continental United States is 55 MPH. After extensive testing we have determined that there is no problem with the design of the window operating systems installed in the 1977 Toronado when the vehicle is operated within the parameters of the prevailing law.

One of my employees had a blowout and rolled the car on the I55 South of Memphis so the window became less of a moot point.;shrug

I also had a 1976 Eldorado, almost exactly the same car, on which the windows worked perfect at any speed.:confused
What GM did then and later in 1991 are different things. The laws changed and lawyers are just waiting for a chance to sue.
 
I saw this at the G.M. Tech Center Corvette show a number of years ago and was told it was built for the head of Chevrolet engineering...:cool

That would be Don Runkle,I think thats how you spell the guys last name.I know he was a G.M. exec but cant remember in what capacity dont know if this is the same car ,the DR-1 had an early front bumper and the ZR-1 Spyder was built by ASC,I think.Its been years since Ive read anything about the convertible ZR-1.There were 2 Spyder type ZR-1s built,onw wa silver and the other was Dark Red Cherry,might have been the same car.
 
That would be Don Runkle,I think thats how you spell the guys last name.I know he was a G.M. exec but cant remember in what capacity dont know if this is the same car ,the DR-1 had an early front bumper and the ZR-1 Spyder was built by ASC,I think.Its been years since Ive read anything about the convertible ZR-1.There were 2 Spyder type ZR-1s built,onw wa silver and the other was Dark Red Cherry,might have been the same car.

At the time, Don Runkle was head of Chevrolet Advanced Engineering. :)
 
1991 LT5 Vert
1991-LT5-Droptop.jpg


1991-LT5-Droptop-info.jpg


Snake skinner
SnakeSkinner-LT5.jpg
 
So tell me more about the Snake Skinner. I've heard the term before but can't remember any details.

:wJane Ann
extremely light weight. as in everything that didnt make it go faster, stop better or turn sharper was given the boot, some port and polish work on the motor, Im tempted to say some CF was used but Im not sure about that. It was a bas mamajama. Car was white with one racing seat in it when I saw it in 1999 or 2000 at the ncm. Came in around 3100lbs and 450 hp. Too bad it never made production though there was an aftermarket company that was using that moniker on the car....the company slips my mind
 

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