| |
Prologue |
| |
|
| 1 |
The Corvette is Born |
| |
The Corvette grows out of the European tradition of sports and racing cars and is reinterpreted for the American market |
| 2 |
Duntov Develops the Corvette |
| |
Zora Arkus-Duntov had one thing in mind when he sought work with General Motors-to develop the Corvette into a world-class performance sports car. |
| 3 |
The Second Generation Corvette-C2 1963-1967 |
| |
An all new chassis with independent rear suspension would provide the foundation for all production Corvettes from 1963 through 1982. |
| 4 |
The Mid-Engine Corvette |
| |
The mid-engine Corvette was the still-born dream of Zora Arkus-Duntov, who wanted to push Corvette to higher levels of performance, while GM management just wanted greater sales. |
| 5 |
The Corvette Ages Through the 1970s |
| |
In the 1970s, major changes to the Corvette were restricted to those required to meet ever more-stringent government safety and emissions requirements. |
| 6 |
The Next Generation Corvette |
| |
Finally given the green light to explore development of a totally new car, the Corvette Engineering group started considering all of its options. |
| 7 |
Hammering Out the Details of an All New Corvette |
| |
With a basic concept in hand for a new Corvette, the engineering team now had to develop all the components and fit them together in the first all-new Corvette for 20 years. |
| 8 |
The C4 Matures and Spawns a Raodster |
| |
As soon as the 1984 Corvette was ready for production, the Corvette Engineering Group went to work to improve its performance and safety. They also brought out a convertible version. |
| 9 |
The Crucible of Showroom Stock Racing |
| |
With its Showroom Stock and Corvette Challenge racing programs, Chevrolet was able to test and implement changes to production Corvettes faster than would have been possible otherwise. |