Believe it or not, there’s a Corvette under that Batmobile.
After a year and a half of work a Texas man transformed his Corvette into his very own custom made bat car. John Salazar has always been into building all types of cars in his free time but this is definitely a challenge like never before.
Check out this news feature on John Salazar’s homemade Bat Car.
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We know that the most important question right now on people’s minds is when will production start for retail customers who have ordered the 2014 Corvette Stingray? Unfortunately, the only correct answer we have is “soon”. But until that magical date happens, how about we watch a video that shows just how the new 7th generation Corvette Stingray will be assembled.
The animation is much like the assembly of the Stingray’s LT1 V8 we posted earlier this year. Starting with the new aluminum frame, the parts fly in and the overall structure is rotated to show each new assembly until it ends with the body panels.
You’ve seen pictures of the new Power Wheels Corvette Stingray and now we get to see a short video of two experts putting the battery-powered sports car through its paces. Anyone up for drifting in Eco-Mode?
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Oh, the glorious sound of the 2014 Corvette Stingray’s exhaust note. Watch this lap of the Milford Proving Grounds in an Arctic White Corvette Stingray by Autoweek Magazine.
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Here’s your chance to buy a C2 Corvette with an unusual past and an unusual look.
The town of Colchester, Conn., says it is ready to get rid of its 1967 Corvette that was used for nearly 20 years as the police department’s DARE vehicle.
DARE – or Drug Abuse Resistance Education – is a program that aims to teach fifth graders the dangers of using illegal drugs.
Colchester switched to a different drug awareness program last year, however, and its unique Corvette – which has an American flag painted on the hood with the names of DARE business sponsors on the back – is no longer needed by the police department.
“It’s been sitting back here kind of rotting for the last few years,” Fleet Maintenance Supervisor Steve Sharpe says.
The car apparently does still run as a reporter for The Bulletin wrote about the engine growling as the ‘Vette was pulled in for its first wash in ages.
“It was sitting for a while,” Sharpe says. “It got to the point where I told the police they probably wouldn’t want to be taking it on long trips to events across the state.”
Colchester police seized the car in 1994 from a drug dealer and have used it to promote DARE’s message at parades, festivals, school assemblies, and other public gatherings.
Now that they’ve ditched the DARE program, town officials are ready to unload the unique Corvette and use the money it brings to replenish the town equipment reserve fund.
Public Works Director Jim Paggioli says the town hasn’t set an asking price for the Corvette and will likely auction it off.
“We have someone who specializes in Corvettes coming to look at it and get an appraisal,” Paggioli says.
He’s hoping the car winds up staying in Colchester, though, and says it “would be nice to see it show up in the car cruise-in nights on the town green.”
Autoweek was among the group of publications that recently took part in the 2014 Corvette Stingray drive experience held at the Milford Proving Grounds. Their review of the Stingray was published last week and is very favorable to the Stingray. Now we have the video from Autoweek showing many of the on-track exercises they were able to put the Corvette Stingray through.
The video features Corvette Chief Engineer Tadge Juechter who we see standing next to an Arctic White Stingray on the Milford Proving Grounds. Senior Editor Mac Morrison did the driving duties for Autoweek and we get his impressions throughout the video as well. But best of all, you get to ride along as we see a Velocity Yellow and Arctic White Corvette Stingrays doing their thing on the track and through the autocross course.
Here are the Corvette Stingray’s performance test statistics from Autoweek:
As mentioned, Autoweek’s review of the C7 Corvette Stingray is very in-depth and mostly positive. Morrison calls the interior the most of the C7 as the most promising Corvette cockpit yet, but thinks new users might get hung up on the menus and interfaces. You can read the full review at Autoweek.
Check out this in-depth interview on Trackdown on Shakedown with the always well-spoken Corvette Racing Program Manager Doug Fehan, who discusses with his old friend Leo Parente a wide range of subjects, including the 2014 United Sports Car Racing (USCR) series racing at Le Mans, Corvette marketing, and the ingredients for a successful Corvette Racing driver.
When asked the biggest challenge to making the upcoming USCR better than the status quo, Fehan compares it to a three-legged stool consisting of safety, the technical inspection, and the registration process.
“To me, there’s a three-legged stool from which everything is stacked upon,” Fehan says. “The first is safety. And although it doesn’t fit the NASCAR template, having our own self-contained, dedicated safety crew is of paramount importance. To me, that should just be plug and play. We have a great program that runs here in ALMS, and it should follow over. My opinion.”
Fehan says he’s not been overly impressed with what Grand Am has presented from a technical inspection standpoint.
“And, this ought to be plug and play, again, with the ALMS,” he says. “It’s a streamlined program. The competitors respect it. It’s efficient. And it gets the job done. There’s no reason, really, to change it. And it certainly would be an upgrade from what I’ve seen at Grand Am. And by the way, they recognize that there’s always room for improvement. And that’s the important thing. You have to recognize that you can improve, and then the willingness to improve.”
The third leg is the registration process, and Fehan says anyone who has gone to Grand Am knows that sometimes it can be challenging, as opposed to the ALMS, which provides a far more welcoming atmosphere.
“And if you’re bringing a potential sponsor, or an executive from your company, and you start swimming uphill in a big hurry, that’s the first eyes on that those people have for your organization,” Fehan says. “So registration process needs to be improved. We have a great program here, and hopefully that will be plug and play. Those three things, to me, are the fundamentals, which is an odd position to take. Others are going to talk about other things. Those are the three things I find to be the most important.”
Shifting gears, Fehan talks about how well Chevrolet knows its Corvette customers.
“We stay in constant touch with our customer, more so than anybody else,” Fehan says. “When you look at other manufacturers, and they talk about knowing their customer– you live in the marketing world. You know it’s, he’s between 45 and 52 years old. Annual income of $102,000. He’s got two kids, both in college, married, with a pet. That’s knowing your customer.”
But at Corvette, it moves well beyond that.
“We know the people individually,” Fehan says. “We know it’s Charlene and Jim. We know their son, Trey. We know he’s graduating this year from USC. And we know their dog Rover, because we’ve signed his little vest. That’s knowing your customer. So we have the ability – and Harlan Charles does a great job, and along with Tadge Juechter, in relating what they take and learn from our customer. I mean, from our customer’s lips, and putting it into the vehicle. There’s nothing in the new car that the customer hasn’t asked for. So we don’t guess at what they might want. We know what they want. And that’s what makes Corvette unique in all the automotive world.”
Parente points out that when Chevy and GM prop Fehan up in front of crowds at the corral, he gets that same kind of feedback. “So, I don’t want to turn it into an infomercial, but it connects the dots between the racing and the real car,” Parente says.
No question, Fehan admits. “When you can relate to your customer on truly a firsthand basis, believe me, you have that customer captured,” he says. “And you have that customer far more than just Corvette. You have that customer for Sonic, or Silverado, or Cadillac ATS or CTS. They buy more than just a Corvette. They have more than one car.”
Parente asked Fehan how Corvette Racing evaluates its drivers and what criteria goes into making a great racer.
“The first thing, foremost, the foundation from which we build, is the ability to bring the car up to speed and not make mistakes behind the wheel,” Fehan explains. “You can’t go brain dead in a racing situation. That’s the platform. So first you have to qualify there. There’s nobody here that can’t go fast enough. Then you need someone who has a personality that allows him to check his ego at the door, to understand that he is no different or no more highly valued on this team than the guys who drive the truck, or the guys who are working on the car. He has to understand that he is part of this family. He lives here, all the time. And you only have to look around. I can find these guys in 30 seconds. They’re not off romancing something down the block. They are here. They live here. They have to be willing to subscribe to that. And probably the second most important thing is the ability to relate to our customer, and to appreciate what that customer means, and what that customer brings to the party. Because without our customer, he’s not working. He needs to know that. And I think when you look across the board, and you watch our guys interact, number one, they’re trainable. And number two, they’ve been well trained.”
Fehan proved to be right when he told Parente that he was expecting good things to happen in the July 21 race at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park.
“We never bring all this equipment and all this manpower to a race that we don’t think we can win,” he says. “OK? It’s 25% great car. It’s 25% great team. And it’s 50% good fortune. If we get a little bit of that good fortune rolling our way, we should end up with a good result here.”
Fehan proved prophetic as Oliver Gavin and Tommy Milner scored their second victory in the American Le Mans Series with a hard-earned effort in the Mobil 1 SportsCar Grand Prix.
Storms and low-riding Corvettes don’t always mix.
Just ask the driver of this C5 Corvette, who talked to a reporter from WREG-TV in Memphis, Tennessee last week about his misadventures following a major storm that swept through the area.
“I saw the water up under that viaduct,” Eugene Stephenson explained, “but I didn’t think it was that deep.”
He was just trying to get home to Whitehaven but didn’t make it past South Memphis before he stalled out in two feet of standing water under an overpass on Bellevue.
“It came halfway up the car,” Stephenson said.
That’s when the Corvette’s motor shut down, and he had to push the car to safety.
He told the reporter he was waiting on a tow truck when she came by.
Looking back on the situation, he told her, “It was pretty bad. It was pretty bad.”
He shouldn’t feel like the Lone Ranger, though. The reporter says tow truck companies told her they had gotten quite a few calls after torrential rains poured down on the city.
One of the best videos we’ve seen from the 2014 Corvette Stingray reviews is this one from Edmunds.com:
Follow the Edmunds.com team as we travel to Michigan for 48 hours with the 2014 Chevrolet Corvette. We drive the new C7 on the track at GM’s proving grounds, do instrumented track testing including 0-60 and the quarter mile, put it on a lift for a suspension walk-around and explore the wilds of Detroit during a photo shoot. Oh, and the requisite burn out.
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There probably isn’t a much sicker feeling for a Corvette owner than the one a Hampton, Va., man suffered Monday night.
Larry Phlegar had celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Corvette by buying a collector’s edition 2003 model, a yellow coupe that he had driven just 9,723 miles over the past decade.
Now he can only hope that lawmen are able to find his prized possession after a thief stole it Monday night.
“At first you think somebody has moved it,†Phlegar told WAVY-TV. “At first you think somebody has borrowed it. When I came out, walked around and realized it wasn’t on my property anymore, it was devastating.â€
Phlegar, who lives off Big Bethel Road, has contacted police, but he’s afraid the super-low mileage Corvette he’s had for 10 years may never be found.
The culprit also tried to steal his ATV, but fortunately Larry thwarted that attempt since he had earlier taken the battery out and it wouldn’t start for the would-be thief.
If you happen to catch Phlegar’s yellow Corvette going down the road, call the Hampton Police Department or the Crime Line at 1-888-LOCK-U-UP.