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When General Motors Corp. pulls the cover off a new supercharged
version of the Corvette at the Detroit auto show next month, it
will unveil a performance car designed to rival or better even
the fastest, most expensive.
But the Corvette's chief engineer says the 2009 Corvette ZR1
may be the last in a long tradition of Detroit performance cars,
endangered by stronger federal fuel economy regulations and limits
on carbon dioxide emissions.
"High-performance vehicles such as this may actually be
legislated out of existence," Tadge Juechter said at a recent
showing of the ZR1, which is designed to have around 620 horsepower.
President Bush on Wednesday signed into law legislation that will
bring more fuel-efficient vehicles into auto showrooms and require
wider use of ethanol, calling it "a major step" toward
energy independence and easing global warming.
The legislation requires automakers to increase fuel efficiency
by 40 percent to an industry average 35 miles per gallon by 2020.
But Juechter said to sell one of the Chevrolet supercars, GM
would need to offset that with cars that get 45 mpg.
"It could really be an endangered species," he said.
Aaron Bragman, an auto analyst with the consulting firm Global
Insight, said predicting the death of the muscle car might be
premature.
The Corvette, he said, is fuel efficient when compared with its
competitors. Although fuel economy figures weren't released for
the ZR1, the current 505-horsepower Corvette ZO6 gets an estimated
15 mpg in the city and 24 on the highway, according to GM.
The ZR1, he said, gets around the same mileage as a Chevrolet
pickup truck, and GM won't be getting out of the pickup business
because of gas mileage standards.
"I think it's a little over-dramatization," Bragman
said. "GM wants to sell big, high-performance, fun cars.
And typically that's what Americans want to buy."
Performance cars of the future may be powered by smaller engines
or electric motors, he said, but they won't die.
The ZR1 will have a top speed of more than 200 mph, driven by
an all-new supercharged 6.2-liter V-8 engine. It has 19-inch front
and 20-inch rear wheels and a suspension tuned to provide extraordinary
cornering grip, GM said.
The car has a carbon-fiber hood, fenders and roof for weight
savings, and its huge carbon-ceramic brake rotors give it great
stopping power, the company said.
The ZR1 will cost around $100,000 and probably will go on sale
next summer.
Source: Associated Press
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