The Mid Engine Corvette is happening

Kensington

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hevrolet's upcoming eighth-generation Corvette, or "mid-engined C8" as it's known to its fans, has an electrical control system reportedly so complex and secure that third-party attempts to tune the factory ECU could potentially "brick" the car.

The 2020 Corvette has been reported to use a new global electrical system framework devised by General Motors, one so complex that working out its kinks allegedly delayed the C8's reveal by six months. According to Muscle Cars & Trucks, this system's nerve center is an Electronic Control Unit (ECU) with security measures so stiff that it'll shrug off most attempts to modify its code. Extreme encryption measures reportedly mean that even reading the ECU's code will be exceptionally tricky for tuners, who have long loved the Corvette for its easy performance gains with slight modification.

Sources allegedly told the publication that the C8's ECU can recognize attempts to modify its code, and that it may shut down while you're working on it to save its factory settings. Should some third-party code make its way into the ECU, the car will reportedly enter a "recovery mode" wherein the car is effectively bricked, meaning it won't start, and won't be tunable with anything other than proprietary GM gear.

Simply replacing the factory ECU with a third-party unit such as a Haltech or Motec unit to bypass this problem is reportedly not such an easy proposition, for reasons unspecified. We speculate that this may be down to the alleged complexity of the C8's electrical system.

GM plans to launch the C8 on July 18 in Orange County, California. There, GM will reportedly announce that the base model will be powered by a dual overhead cam V-8 called the LT2, linked to a dual-clutch, seven-speed automatic transmission. Rumors claim that there will be no manual transmission options available at any point and that twin-turbo V-8s will eventually be available on the C8's higher trims, in 4.2 or 5.5 liters.

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Yaj Yak

Gladys
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I'd think that the C8 mid engine model would sell at a much higher MSRP than the C7. The current Stingray MSRP is $55K. I'd guess the C8 starts somewhere in the $80-$100K range.

If the C8 street car looks anything like that and starts at under 100k. :nutz:

Bingo under 100k and they wont be able to make them fast enough.

Negative Ghost Rider. The price is 100k+

Or so the internet says. But based on Previous ZR1 pricing? I'd say its a sure bet.

Base model @ $99,995

:rofl:

The new C8 sounds like a $200K car with all this tech.

It sounds like GM's system will perform similar to Lamborghini's ALA
https://www.roadandtrack.com/new-ca...lamborghini-huracan-performante-aerodynamics/

$200K might be the top model otherwise no grandpa is spending $200K on a vette . Base model needs to start around $60-70K

So the C8 will go completely mid engine?

WTF is going on with the center console, near the passenger, having that wedge section with the buttons on it???

ac523324-2020-corvette-c8-4carscoops-768x531.jpg

you fucking noticed it first :rofl:

Sub 100k entry this thing will be a money printer.

ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

hahahahahhahhahaahahahahahhahhahaahahahahahhahhahaahahahahahhahhahaahahahahahhahhahaahahahahahhahhahaahahahahahhahhahaahahahahahhahhahaahahahahahhahhahaahahahahahhahhahaa
sorry [MENTION=11785]98GrandPrixIraqVet[/MENTION] :rofl: :fu:



fun pricing guesstimates above.
 
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