
General Motors might be chasing history, or simply putting the final touches on the highly anticipated C8 Chevrolet Corvette Zora. Possibly both.
This week, a group of GM engineers showed up at the Nürburgring, bringing along some intriguing C8 Corvette variants. None of the cars were camouflaged, which naturally raised eyebrows. To most passersby, the yellow C8 with a Z06 badge or the purple one wearing ZR1 branding may not have meant much, as both are already available. But anyone paying close attention would know something’s up.
Take the purple C8 with the Z06 badge, for instance. It’s wearing ZR1-style air intakes and styling cues, pointing to something more than just a regular production car.
Then there’s the yellow sticker seen on both cars, placed at the top left corner of the rear glass above the engine bay. That sticker signals a hybrid system, something neither the Z06 nor the ZR1 has.
Up front, the radiators on the purple test car are clearly visible. Their placement is different from standard C8 setups. That’s because the vertical radiators are used to cool the front electric drive unit, while horizontal ones are responsible for cooling the V8 engine.
Word is that GM’s team is sticking around Europe for about three weeks, which is plenty of time at the Nürburgring, suggesting this trip might not just be about final tweaks to the Zora. It could be a serious run at claiming the title of fastest American production car around the ‘Ring.
Currently, that record belongs to Ford. Back in December, the Blue Oval announced the Mustang GTD had dethroned the Dodge Viper ACR with a lap time of 6:57.685. That lap made it faster than the Porsche 911 GT3. But Ford wasn’t satisfied. In May, they returned and shaved off another 5.5 seconds, setting a new time of 6:52.072. That effort also put the GTD ahead of the Mercedes-AMG GT Black Series.
The upcoming Corvette Zora is expected to merge the Corvette E-Ray’s electric front motor with the Corvette ZR1’s twin-turbo flat-plane crank V8. Total output is rumoured to exceed 1,200 hp.
If GM is serious about this Nürburgring mission, we could be looking at a new American lap-time legend very soon.