| 2017 Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport Interior For Sale |
In the Grand Sport, the 6.2-liter V-8 is equipped as standard with the Stingray’s available dry-sump lubrication system—the better to keep the engine’s internals slippery during high-g cornering and braking—and deep-throated dual-mode exhaust. It makes 460 horsepower and 465 lb-ft of torque, which, if you take a moment to examine the specifications panel accompanying this story, you’ll see is quite sufficient. The Grand Sport accelerates to 60 mph from rest in 3.8 seconds, 0.1 second quicker than our top time for a 460-horse Stingray with the same seven-speed manual transmission, and through the quarter-mile in a blistering 12.2 seconds.
| 2017 Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport Interior For Sale |
In addition to our test track, we also had the chance to experience all that grip—oh, the glorious grip—and stopping power at Atlanta Motorsports Park, a tight, technical, and undulating 1.8-mile road course draped over the northern Georgia hills. There, the Grand Sport’s eye-popping performance numbers became tangible, as we lapped to the soundtrack of a thunderous bass riff blatting from the quad tailpipes. The car is easy to drive fast, as its deep affection for traction allows you to steadily progress to the limit without fear of breaking loose, and the chassis and P285/30ZR-19 front and P335/25ZR-20 rear Cup 2 rubber clearly communicate exactly how much grip remains at both ends. In addition, all Grand Sports are equipped with the electronically controlled limited-slip differential that’s optional on Stingrays.
| 2017 Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport Interior For Sale |
Yet for all the wonderful things about the Z07 package, you will want it for only two reasons: You plan to track the car regularly, in which case it’s a must-buy, or you just can’t live without the full-bore junior-Z06 aesthetic. That’s because it basically adds nothing for the street, where the Grand Sport drives much like a regular Stingray, offering quiet composure, a comfortable and supple ride from the standard adjustable magnetorheological dampers, and the same functional interior.
In fact, you don’t really need much of what our test car included. To its base price of $66,445—$10K more than a starter Stingray—our coupe added the 3LT Premium package (heated/ventilated seats, the performance data recorder, head-up display, and navigation, among scads of other creature comforts, as well as leather slathered everywhere), the Competition seats, and a whole pile of cosmetic upgrades. Add all of this to the $10,990 in chassis upgrades mentioned earlier, and our Grand Sport stickered for $95,040. That’s a ton of coin that puts the car into Z06 territory—and sorry, but for 95 grand, we’re skipping the greatest hits and heading straight for the big poppa Z06 (which costs $89,390 in 3LZ trim).
Judiciously equipped—which means different things depending on how you’ll use it—the Grand Sport is actually something better than a greatest-hits album. It’s really more like a late-career masterpiece from an artist that’s sure of its capabilities and what it wants to be. Assuming this is one of the last major works of the C7 era, we can’t wait to experience C8.
Source : caranddriver.com
Source : caranddriver.com
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