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MALTATODAY 21 July 2019

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M8 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 21 JULY 2019 MOTORING THE first mid-engined Chevrolet Cor- vette has finally arrived with a naturally aspirated 6.2-litre V8. The all-new Chevrolet Corvette, with a layout that has been rumoured for nigh-on half a decade, is finally here. Unveiled in front of hundreds of journalists, owners, dealers in a disused World War II former blimp hangar in Tustin, California, Chev- rolet also confirmed it will be built in right-hand drive for the first time. As with every new sports car, aero- dynamics take a front seat, with side air intakes for engine cooling, and air pass-through ports below the rear taillights. Of course, Chevrolet knows that Corvette purists will wail about the fact that the engine isn't at the front. To assuage those fears, compa- ny execs spent a lot of time during the unveiling talking about how the C7 Corvette was the pinnacle of what a front-engined sports car could be, and it was time to move forward. "This is the right time to move to mid-engine," explained Tadge Juech- ter, the chief engineer of the new Cor- vette. "We've known for quite a while that we were reaching the end of what a front engine could do." Chevy claims the new entry-level Stingray can best 0-60mph in under three seconds, fast- er than every Corvette with the excep- tion of the fastest prior-generation C7. Tucked behind the driver is a natural- ly aspirated 6.2-litre small block V8 en- gine called the LT2. Producing 495bhp at 6,450 rpm and 637Nm of torque at 5,150 rpm (both ratings are with the optional performance exhaust), the LT2 is the most powerful entry-level Corvette ever released. Juechter says the Corvette will be the only remaining naturally aspirated V8 in the segment, with the company "bucking the trend" of forced induction. An eight-speed dual-clutch trans- mission (with flappy paddles and manual mode) gets the power to the rear wheels which means that, in an- other blow to Corvette purists, the manual transmission is gone for good. A plethora of drive modes allow for customising things, while a brand-new Z-Mode — complete with a Z button on the steering wheel — allows drivers to activate a fully-customisable per- formance mode with a single press. Twelve exterior colours (the white looked the best of the three they showed off at the launch), six interior themes, six seat belt colors, three dif- ferent seat types, and three options for stitching mean there are plenty of ways to customize your Vette, too. It also has sufficient storage behind the engine for two golf bags or to store the removable hardtop, and there's a standard front trunk as well. The interior is a little more question- able, with a long row of buttons run- ning to the right of the center tunnel between the driver and passenger. We'll have to test it in person to see if it's as odd to use as it looks, but it drew more than a few inquisitive glances from the assembled press. Perhaps the biggest question was pricing. Chevrolet, of course, didn't lay out everything — that'll come closer to the start of production later this year — but GM President Mark Reuss did reveal that the Stingray will start below $60,000. New 2020 Chevrolet Corvette revealed

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