Page 97 - Motor Trend (January 2020)
P. 97

gear and drive mode selectors. At first                                                                         CAR OF THE YEAR
            glance, the shifter looks similar to
            what you’d find in the Acura NSX. The
            Corvette’s gear selector is metal, about
            half the size, and feels like something
            off a high-end stereo. As does the well-
            weighted mode-selector puck. Think of
            a Marantz tuner from the 1970s, back
            when “American Made” was king.
              Everything is laid out well, too. “The
            interior is clever and attractive, and the
            ergonomics are very good,” road test
            editor Chris Walton said. “Having a small
            screen, close to the driver, enables you
            to rest your hand on top and thumb the
            touchscreen without the unsteadiness
            you’d have without the perch.”
              I love the squared steering wheel
            (a few others did not) and the jet-age
            homage of its design, though there was
            debate about the cabin’s overall design.
            Some judges felt as if there was a bit too
            much bling, but others liked it. As for
            the stream of buttons that make up the
            HVAC controls and “puts up a wall,” to
            quote Walton, between the driver and
            the passenger/glove box, most judges felt
            that these controls are of the set-and-
            forget variety. Plus, you just don’t notice
            them from behind the wheel. You do
            notice a couple inexplicable cheap
            outs, especially if you’re our executive
            editor Mark Rechtin. He despises the
            plastic cupholders. “How much would
            improving them have cost Chevy? Five
            bucks a unit?”











                                                            If the new Corvette has a weakness, it’s   the newer model? Perhaps. Whatever the
                                                          the exterior design. The judges’ opinions    reason, although the car’s shape is good,
                                                          ranged from harsh (MacKenzie: “Bill          the details are not. However, that just
                                                          Mitchell would be spinning in his grave.”)   means that Chevy has a real opportunity
                                                          to damning with faint praise (Walton:        in a few years with the midcycle refresh.
                                                          “Fine from 100 feet.”).                      As our guest judge and former Jaguar
                                                            The main issue: As you get closer to the   design boss Ian Callum said, “Great car to
                                                          vehicle, you see tributaries of pointless    drive. Shame about the styling.”
                                                          lines going off in every direction. This        Right, driving. What will convince
                                                          sort of sloppy linework—folds and creases    current Corvette owners to trade in their
                                                          that exist for the sake of existence—first    cars is the C8’s performance. In truth,
                                                          appeared on the previous generation. Did     the new ’Vette’s numbers and capabilities
                                                          the Corvette design team want to link the    might convince a few Porsche, BMW,
                                                          two products, to maybe help convince         and AMG owners to do the same. Might
                                                          current Corvette owners to trade up for      convince more than a few, in fact.
                                                                                                          We mentioned the 0–60 time
                                                                                                       previously, but to contextualize that
                                                                                                       number, the 755-horsepower C7 Corvette
                                                                                                       ZR1 hits 60 mph in 3.0 seconds. The
                                                                                                       789-horsepower Ferrari 812 Superfast
                                                                                                       hits 60 mph in 2.8 seconds. Remember,
                  If there’s one criticism of the C8
                  Corvette (cupholders aside), it’s                                                    the C8 with the Z51 Performance package
                  the lack of a manual transmission,                                                   makes “only” 495 horsepower. I won’t
                  but it’s hard to complain about
                  the results with the eight-speed
                  twin-clutch automatic.                                                                      JANUARY 2020 MOTORTREND.COM  97
   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102