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All About Cars

All About Cars

2019 Corvette ZR1: 755 horses of Futuristic Supercar is Last of an Era

Aug 13, 2019, 08:31 AM by Mike Blake
About Corvette … OK, the C8 (Eighth-generation) Corvette Stingray is due out in 2020, and it is arguably as exciting a vehicle as America has seen … maybe ever. From its mid-engine 495 horsepower and 470 lb.-ft. of torque setup to its vanguard sculpting, driver-centric cockpit, luxury and power … 2020 will be an exciting year for Corvette. And the rumor is, it is nearly sold out in presale.

But it is 2019, and if you are looking for a new Corvette now, the 2019 Corvette ZR1 is a supercar with futuristic sculpting, and is the fastest, most powerful production Corvette ever, at 755 hp, and it may even make next year’s C8 owners drool with envy.

I don’t often use the term “supercar”, as the expression is often over-used, misapplied or part of over-hype. But the 2019 Corvette ZR1 certainly enters the discussion for proper use. Supercars are generally thought of as high-end exotic automobiles that are fast, luxurious and handle like race cars, with extraordinarily stylish looks and price tags that are extraordinarily high. One car that certainly fits the definition in all areas but price, is built in Bowling Green, Kentucky -- the 2019 Corvette ZR1 – and is among the final C7 Corvettes to be built.

With a sticker less than one-third that of many supercars, the ZR1 has the horses, is built with exotic lines from exotic materials, and handles like a car destined for the track, but with street-luxury car smoothness for driver and passenger. 

ZR1 wields its Corvette-power record with a new hand-assembled 6.2L LT5 supercharged small-block V8 engine. A Corvette-touted top track speed of 212 mph makes the 2019 ZR1 the fastest production Corvette ever. Now, I didn’t bring my test vehicle to 212mph in my tests, and I didn’t finish off a zero-to-60mph run in the 2.85 seconds Corvette says it will run, but in a test car that wasn’t race-tuned, and on a surface that wasn’t optimal, I did blaze through a zero-to-60 sprint in 3.3 seconds for an 11.4-second quarter-mile, and I achieved a top track speed of 135mpg when I had to slow – there was MUCH more left in her.

More than just a speed car, the 2019 ZR1 advances Corvette’s performance legacy and also provides the most advanced technology in its production history. Offered in 1ZR and 3ZR trims in coupe and convertible body styles, ZR1’s aggressive appearance is driven by function, with a unique front fascia designed to channel air for propulsion-system and drivetrain cooling, including four new radiators bringing the heat-exchanger total to 13. A special carbon-fiber “halo” hood is open in the middle to clear the LT5 engine’s supercharger/intercooler assembly. Additional features, including aero packages with stanchion-mounted wings, help push the ZR1 harder onto the track for more confident handling and faster lap times

Techwise, the Chevrolet Infotainment system comes with an 8-inch-diagonal color touchscreen and includes Apple CarPlay and Android Auto compatibility with built-in Wi-Fi® Hotspot. The cockpit gets a standard leather-wrapped flat-bottom steering wheel, keyless open and start, standard head-up display, nine-speaker audio system, dual-zone automatic climate control, and such standard safety features as four air bags (including side-impact air bags), Rear Vision Camera, four-wheel disc brakes with four-channel ABS, Active Handling with electronic stability control, safety belt pretensioners and tire pressure monitoring with run-flat tires.

Looking sci-fi-future sharp and aerodynamically refined, the ZR1 measures a carved 179.8 inches long, a wide-body road-hugging 77.4 inches wide, and a stable 48.7 inches high (for the convertible) on a 106.7-inch wheelbase. And weighing only 3618 lbs for the Convertible, it proudly thunders out Corvette from every angle.

Inside, my ZR1 Convertible cockpit was cozy and secure. With the top down, wind-in-your hair excitement embodies Corvette, and with the top closed, the driver and passenger are surrounded by leather, electronics and comfortable seating, with headroom a comfy 38 inches, legroom a vast 43 inches and shoulder and hip room an indulgent 55 and 54 inches.

The 2019 ZR1 exceeds even supercar expectations and improves upon Corvette’s supercharging heritage as its dual-fuel-injection, LT5 6.2L V-8 engine rockets out 755 hp and 715 lb-ft of torque. Fuel figures are what you might expect from a 755hp racecar – 13/city and 19/highway for the manual. My tire-smoking tests and exhilarating highway cruises achieved an average of 13.9mpg

Racetrack low and stable, my ZR1 hugged the pavement during quick-maneuvers, and its short/long arm (SLA) double wishbone suspension with cast aluminum upper and lower control arms, transverse-mounted composite springs and Magnetic Selective Ride Control was at one with the surface; and the 15-inch Brembo Carbon-Ceramic brakes stuck and stopped like no other vehicle I have tested this year.

The 2019 Corvette lineup starts at $56,995 for the Stingray Coupe, $66,995 for the Grand Sport Coupe and $81,995 for the Z01 Coupe. The 2019 Corvette ZR1 starts at $121,995 for the Coupe and $126,485 for the Convertible. I prefer this baby in Black (at no extra cost), but my test ride in sharp Sebring Orange Tintcoat exterior paint added $995 and mated well with the Jet Black perforated Mulan leather seats. The Satin Black hood stinger stripe added $500. Performance packages could add $3000, but my test vehicle was fine as it was. Destination and freight charges added $1095 and the Gas Guzzler tax added $2100 for a price as tested of $130,090.

You can see the car-enthusiast show debut of the 2020 C8 Corvette, the 2019 Corvette ZR1 and more than 5,000 Corvettes that cross the 66-year history of America’s sports car, at the world’s largest Corvette event – 2019 Corvettes at Carlisle, August 22-25 at the Carlisle (PA) Fairgrounds. The event represents all generations of “America’s Classic Sports Car,” and includes burnouts, autocross competition, a huge swap meet and a parade through downtown Carlisle. And there are fun events lined up for the entire family.


<I> Visit www.CarlisleEvents.com for more on the automotive hobby.

Mike Blake, former editor of KIT CAR magazine, joined Carlisle Events as senior automotive journalist in 2004. He's been a "car guy" since the 1960s and has been writing professionally for about 30 years. </I>

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