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#11 | |
![]() Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Mullica Hill, NJ
Posts: 2,631
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While love is usually blind, it does not in this case, let me overlook the cars missing tooth or other imperfections. C-5 onward build quality and updates are significantly ahead of the C-4 platform. A C-5 Z06 is one of the most balanced Corvettes ever with a solidity making it feel it cut form an ingot. Toss-ability that turns grown men into kids, but I no longer own one. Yet I still own, and will ALWAYS own my Ruby. My C-6 is a dream to drive. As solid as the C-5, but in a convertible! NO Cowl shake top up or down. No it does not rev like an LT-5, but just a joy to drive anyway. I put a 6 foot 10 yes TEN client into a C-6 ZR-1 and he LOVES it! Spend a day with a C-7 Z06 with a manual. It is breathtaking!! Tight inside and you can land fighter planes on the console, but still a blast to drive. The C-8? Best riding Corvette I ever drove. Yes EVER. I will await a manual transmission, and if GM does not deliver it, I will find someone making a conversion. I know I am not the only one who wants it with a clutch and shifter just for fun! It is ok to be in love with more than one car. Loving one, does not exclude the other. Talking cars here folks, just cars! Now back to the missing tooth car................. and where is the key for that 427................. ![]() Marty ![]() |
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#12 |
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Chicagoland, IL
Posts: 9,686
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Marty,
If ur reply was directed towards me, I would say I am in agreement w you. Having said that, I am also in agreement w Erik in that I find the C4 ZR more engaging than the subsequent generations. Its more ?old school? and more of a sleeper which is something I like. Less of a ?boulevard? driver and more rough and tumble. Marc H loves his C6ZR. I would probably like one at some point. Drove my friends C7 Z and just felt it was massive. I grew up w Spitfires and MGB-GTs. Traded my C3 coupe for a Datsun 240Z. I like smaller and more nimble. One of the most fun cars I ever had was a 1980 Scirocco S. And my 84 Xfire was 3200# wet. I?ll wait to hear what u think of the C8. BTW, Taurus SHOs were great road cars. Had 3 of those, all Yamaha V6. Last edited by XfireZ51; 09-25-2020 at 12:47 PM. |
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#13 |
![]() Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: McLean, VA
Posts: 3,730
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Having owned C4 ZR1s since 1991, my love of C4 ZR1 cannot be questioned. I spent 22 hours (11 hours to Jacksonville and 11 hours back to DC) in my son's 2019 GS with 7 speed manual. Yes. I missed rifle-bolt shifter in my Z and F16 canopy like panoramic view 360 degrees and solid revving LT5. However, steadiness of longer wheelbase, solid chassis with or without the top, razor precise steering and uncanny suspension with magnetic shocks were impressive.
I am in the line at a local Chevy dealer for 2021 not to replace my 94Z but to augment my 94. ![]() |
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#14 |
![]() Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: McLean, VA
Posts: 3,730
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On the subject of improving steering feel, as Goldcylon posted, check and replace the ragjoint or the entire steering shaft. Mine, after 160,000 miles developed a slop. 1/32" at the ragjoint translates to about a 1/4" at the steering wheel. Another area to examine is lower control arm mounting to the frame. My rear attachment point had ground out the rubber bushing and moving around. Replaced with urethane bushing and torqued down the best I can.
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#15 |
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Chicagoland, IL
Posts: 9,686
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If only the GS C8 were to come w a naturally aspirated DOHC, I?d be in line myself. Altho there is some discussion that the Z06 may be NA DOHC.
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#16 |
![]() Join Date: Nov 2016
Location: New Brunswick
Posts: 955
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Not to repeat myself, but...
My daily drive has a modern chassis, modern steering, magnetic dampers/shocks, etc. It's much roomier and more comfortable then a C4. Or a C5, C6, C7 or C8 for that matter. I put 53,000 km onto it in 9 months, before Covid hit. It's a really great office. However, like most modern cars, it's so competent, it's a bit dull. The 6 speed manual helps, but there's an element of feeling like you are just playing a computer game, rather then driving a mechanical device. Plus, it's so ridiculously fast, that the speed is unusable. It also takes a couple of weeks of driving to get used to the power and acceleration, and a lot of the thrill goes away. But, give me a fully analog car, that makes me work for its performance potential, that is constantly bombarding me with good sensory info, and that will be a fun drive.
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1990 ZR-1 # 996 "All Corvettes are red. The rest are mistakes." - John Heinricy |
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#17 |
![]() Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: CenCoast California
Posts: 898
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There are some things one could do:
The aformentioned replacement of the flex coupling in the column helps. Also, replacing the outer tie rods, replacing the upper and lower ball joints and, if necessary, the inner tie rod ends inside the rack. And then, there is the rack itself. All those pieces must be in new or "as-new used" condition if steering feel is going to be optimal.
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Hib Halverson Technical Writer former owner 95 VIN 0140 current owner 19 VIN 1878 |
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#18 |
![]() Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Crystal Lake, IL
Posts: 7,180
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__________________
LGAFF 90 #966-150K miles-sold 92 #234-sold 1987 Callaway TT #17 1991 ZR-1 #1359 |
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#19 | |
![]() Join Date: Nov 2016
Location: New Brunswick
Posts: 955
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__________________
1990 ZR-1 # 996 "All Corvettes are red. The rest are mistakes." - John Heinricy |
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#20 |
![]() Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 183
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