Camaro News Blog The latest Camaro News and updates

27Dec/110

Your Daily ZL1 Fix – Lots of new ZL1 Videos

Seven Great Video Finds for the ZL1

With the release of the Camaro ZL1 getting closer, the number of videos concerning the vehicle that are hitting the web is rapidly growing.

The ZL1 will be hitting showroom floors in a few months time, and in the slow build up to that date there will certainly be tons of videos hitting the internet. Here's a collection of six great ones that were recently released and feature the Camaro ZL1, and the seventh one is a a little bit different: it's the complete Camaro segment from the National Geographic show 'Ultimate Factories' that shows the production of the Camaro from start to finish. Be sure to check them out and grow even more envious for the Camaro ZL1. I can't wait for the day when I'm watching one on the road and not the computer screen.

Chevrolet Camaro Ultimate car factories Stories

15Dec/110

A History of Greatness: GM Produces 100-Millionth Small Block Engine

GM Produces 100-Millionth Small Block Engine

A ZR1 LS9 Engine just produced by Chevrolet was the 100-Millionth manufactured by the company.

In the past 56 years, since Chevrolet began producing small block engines, the bowtie emblazoned automotive company and the small block engine has been synonymous with one another. In that time, every iconic car produced by Chevrolet has been known and linked to their famous small-block engine design in some manner. Most recently, the fifth generation Camaro has become a small block powered icon on both road and track, much like it's LS small block powered big brother, the Corvette.

The sheer number there--100,000,000 for those who like lots of zeroes--really highlights the durability, reputation, and potential of the small block and speaks to the iconic nature of the GM engine. It is fitting then to also consider that the first small block, introduced in 1955, was built for the first generation Corvette and the 100-millionth produced was a hand-crafted work of art LS9 made specifically for the sixth generation Corvette's special edition ZR1--the fastest Corvette ever produced.

Chevrolet 1955 Small Block V-8 Engine

Of course, the transition from the first small block to the modern pinnacle LS9 is a long one, filled with numerous exciting and memorable engines. In 1992 Chevrolet first introduced its second-generation Small Block, known as the LT1, in to its Corvette. This engine became an absolute staple on tracks across the globe, and adorned various vehicles from that Corvette, to the F-Body Camaro and Firebird, and the B-Body Impala SS and Caprice Police car. The LT1, which featured a newly developed reverse cooling, is still being used in races all across the globe today.

Chevy LT1

Following the second generation, Chevrolet then introduced their first LS Engine in 1997. This third generation small block, which was first placed in the C5 Corvette, was an even greater step forward. The LS engines are all-aluminum small blocks, and the first of them, the LS1, was rated a naturally aspirated 350HP and 365 lb ft of torque--numbers that, today, are still incredibly impressive for a naturally aspirated 5.7L engine. The LS engine was then featured, in some form, in numerous different vehicles and even had a more powerful, LS6 version introduced in the C5 Z06 Corvette in 2001. This LS6 featured the same 5.7L displacement as its LS1 brethren, but put out a stomach churning 405HP and 400 lb ft of torque.

Corvette LS6 Small Block V8 Engine

Those numbers were fairly mind-shattering for a naturally aspirated engine of the LS6's size and weight, at least, until 2005 when the first of the fourth generation small block was released. In 2005 the Corvette went from its fifth generation vehicle to the now current sixth generation, and with the change in body also came the biggest change: the introduction of the Chevrolet LS2. The LS2 was almost identical to the LS6 engine in performance and displacement, but also featured a much more even Torque curve through-out the RPM range, and had the potential to be modified for incredible gains. It was from this base LS2 that the LS7--the now revered 505HP and 470 lb ft torque monster--was produced and introduced to the 2006 Corvette. Just one year after the update of the small block, this engine seemed to be where everything was building, and the Z06 became the undeniable greatest performance bang for the buck on the globe. Within the year, there were Z06's running against quarter-million dollar European exotics on racetracks all across the globe, and each one came with the distinctive sound and tone that only a Chevrolet small block V8 can deliver through the exhaust.

Of course, Chevrolet wasn't finished there (thankfully, they're dedicated to the production of envelope-pushing performance machines) and we saw such engines as the 430HP LS3 (now outfitting the base-level C6 Corvette and the Chevrolet Camaro SS), the LSA (a 556HP Supercharged monster that can be found in the world's fastest production sedan, the Cadillac CTS-V and will also hit the streets in the body of the new super-Camaro ZL1 this year), and the engine that would be made as number 100,000,000--the LS9.

Corvette ZR1 LS9 Small Block V8

The LS9 is an absolute marvel worth talking about as well, especially considering that everything before it brought us to this point. The LS9, which can only be found in the top of the line Corvette ZR1, produces an amazing supercharged 6.2L engine based on the LS3 block and putting out a ferocious 638bhp and 604 lb ft of torque. Those numbers, in combination with the Corvette's lightweight body and wide, aggressive stance, have produced a vehicle that runs track times that best it's $250,000+ competitors. Today, the ZR1 is the undeniable greatest bargain on wheels that exists for the performance minded consumer, and, as such, is the only engine fitting to be given the designation as number 100,000,000 of its kind.

Of course, Chevrolet's not stopping at 100,000,000 and the future of the small block engine holds a great deal of excitement. Already, official reports have come out that Chevrolet is updating their engine for the seventh-generation of their Corvette, and we may see the introduction of such features as direct injection and an upgraded combustion chamber design, as well as the improved performance and efficiency numbers to match. GM enthusiasts should expect to see the next small block engine first hit the streets in the C7 Corvette, scheduled for release some time in 2014.

13Dec/111

Chevrolet Hands Over the ZL1 to Reviewers for the First Time

Reviewers Get Hands on Production Camaro ZL1

Some of the Automotive community's largest media outlets were handed the keys to the new Camaro ZL1 this past week

Ok, so, no reviews have hit the web just yet, as Chevrolet seems to have requested the few media outlets lucky enough to their hands on the ZL1 withhold them until after the Detroit Auto Show, we do know that they're not far off. That being said, the indications are there that the reviews had a whole lot of fun in the new super-Camaro.

MotorTrend posted a set of fantastic photographs that one of their photographers snapped of their test model ZL1 on the Inde Motorsports Ranch, a track they describe as "a high-speed technical track that puts as much emphasis on suspension as it does horsepower. Plenty of elevation changes, off camber, increasing and decreasing radius turns means the driver has very little time to rest during laps. The track is almost like running a “best of” mix-tape with replicas of the most challenging corners from around the world." Along with the photos, they indicate that they took the ZL1 out and let their driver "flog" it. What this means to me is that they really opened it up and had a fantastic time.

While they're the first to officially indicate having a ZL1 in hand--and it appears they had exclusive first rights to the vehicle--there are some insiders noting that MotorAuthority, Jalopnik, Road and Track, and a small handful of other media outlets have either been given the same privilege now or will be given such in the weeks to come. It seems that after the Detroit Auto Show--an event Chevrolet seems to have marked as their final large display of the ZL1 and its style and abilities before letting the vehicle really go public--reviews and review videos will begin hitting the web in torrential numbers, and, if my same inside information is true--the reviews will be positive. Very positive.

Until then, and until we're all able to get behind the wheel of one of these amazing automobiles, we'll just have to settle for some fantastic photos courtesy of MotorTrend showing off the tester ZL1 they were given in high-speed motion around one of the nation's more technical tracks.

Also from MotorTrend, a list of highlights on the Camaro ZL1 that we, the adoring public, already know but love to read over again:

  • The ZL1 is powered by a supercharged 6.2-liter V-8 producing 580 hp and 556 lb-ft of torque with an active exhaust system
  • Choice of two six-speed transmissions: automatic or manual transmissions
  • Brembo brakes
  • Corvette ZR1’s Performance Traction Management system standard.
  • GM claims the new Camaro ZL1 coupe will hit 60 mph in 3.9 seconds
  • It unofficially lapped the famed Nurburgring in 7:41.27
  • Engineers spent more than 100 hours in the wind tunnel to achieve zero-neutral lift or negative lift – a GM first
  • The coupe goes on sale springtime next year with a base price of $54,995
  • The convertible will be available next summer as a 2013 model
  • GM expects the convertible to give up little performance to the coupe
  • The Camaro’s chief engineer said Mustang fans can thank the Camaro ZL1 for the GT500’s recent improvements