Will America Really Be Okay With Turbocharged Corvettes?

With rumours abound that General Motors is planning the end of the naturally aspirated Corvette, we have to ask the question: will America, the Corvette's heartland and home, really be okay with it?
Will America Really Be Okay With Turbocharged Corvettes?

The Chevrolet Corvette is an American icon. It’s a definitive sports car that has always maintained a certain core image and character, but if the latest news is accurate then it could be the end of the Corvette as we – and the US – know it.

Downsizing and turbocharging is getting to be old news in Europe. Makers of American cars have resisted a move in that direction because, until recently, they haven’t needed to think about it. Emissions regulations like the CAFE standards have started to push manufacturers a little, though. The news that the next Corvette could drop capacity and add turbochargers could be about as welcome among the car’s fans as a fart in a phone box.

The curvaceous C5
The curvaceous C5

To be clear about something, I’m not American and I’m not a US resident. This is not a piece designed to pretend that I’m either. It’s an observation of a specific piece of American car culture that’s about to be caught in the headlights of change.

America is notoriously stubborn about giving things up that are dear to its heart. Nobody mention guns (but guns). Big, normally-aspirated V8s that shout loud enough to wake the ancient Greek pantheon are part of US heritage; part of its rich car culture. Taking them away is like taking Miss Piggy out of the Muppets. The biggest piece of the overall character is gone.

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And yet the speculation is that General Motors is arming two new V8s for the C8 Corvette, both turbocharged and fundamentally different in character to the normally-aspirated and supercharged animals that have gone before. Alternatively, it’s perfectly possible that the smaller of these, at 4.2 litres, could have six cylinders. A six-cylinder Corvette would raise eyebrows right out of the roof.

Owners’ forums like the Corvette one from which this story was born are often populated by die-hards. It’s also fair to say that a lot of more moderate car enthusiasts know the score on the emissions front and have accepted the fact that engines will be downsized. Others… well, others like things just the way they always have been.

Will America Really Be Okay With Turbocharged Corvettes?

It’s beyond argument that a smaller, turbocharged engine doesn’t feel like a bigger one at low revs no matter how many turbochargers you strap to it. There’s always a weak spot, or lag before the boost kicks in. “There’s no replacement for displacement” is a long-standing American tradition in engine-building. As such, there are grounds for potential customers to be unhappy about this.

While there have been blown Corvettes in the past, most impressively the 254mph Callaway Sledgehammer of the C4 era, they’ve tended to be tuner specials. Callaway also created the twin-turbo B2K C4 at around the same time as the Sledgehammer.

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Even if turbos are fine, will the US really be okay with downsizing such a legend? Has the Corvette become so expensive that the group of people who will look at buying the C8 are outside that core, principle-clutching audience that seems to dominate voting-age America?

Using Mercedes-AMG’s recent history as an example, albeit in Europe, we know it’s possible to soldier on after losing one of the greatest engines ever made. The 6.2-litre V8 that graced the C63, E63, S63, G63, SL63, CLS63 and many more AMG legends was staggeringly good. It was so sharp in its reactions, blasted a heart-stopping T-Rex roar from its exhausts and was surprisingly genteel at low revs without giving up its response or urge. It’s in my top three engines ever made and I can’t see it being deposed in the turbo era, therefore ever.

Where it all began: the C1 Corvette
Where it all began: the C1 Corvette

The point is that it was an icon that was extinguished. Status doesn’t grant immunity from progress. The 4.0-litre lump that replaces the 6.2 these days is a fantastic engine, no doubt about it. But it’s not the same. Given the choice, I’d still take the older unit.

In 10 years time America could be in the same situation with the C7 Corvette’s 6.2. To our American friends who’d miss it, we say: enjoy it while it lasts. You don’t know what you’ve got ‘til it’s gone.

Comments

Olivier (CT's grammar commie)

When you live in an era where a turbocharged V6 mid-engined “Corvette” is a possibility, you know it’s an era you don’t wanna live in.

12/03/2017 - 16:49 |
6 | 0
Anonymous

Let me just say, that cars such as the Regal GNX which is a turbo V6 is one of the highest regarded sleeper/muscle cars of the 80’s.

12/03/2017 - 20:15 |
0 | 0
Topher505

They can make a v6 Vette, so long as they still offer a v8 beside it. If I remember correctly, when it comes to emissions standards, car companies get judged based upon the average mileage of the whole lineup. So, if they have a bunch of eco friendly models and only one or two gas hogs, they pass. That’s how they’ve been getting away with current v8 model performance vehicles. They could probably keep the v8 around so long as the rest of their lineup gets good enough mileage.

Personally, I wouldn’t buy a Corvette or a Mustang or any of the like unless it had a v8. The whole heritage around those vehicles were basically founded upon having 8 cylinders. You can get the same power output from different cylinder counts but it will never feel or sound the same. It’s not just a change to the formula; it’s a whole new one. With any luck, the only place in the US that will have restrictions on v8s will be California. If anyone makes a push for it, it’ll be Cali.

At the end of the day, these gas guzzlin’ v8s only account for so much of the car population. They’re usually not even used as dailies. Dumping those won’t save the planet. I imagine it’d have a negligible impact. Everyone always pushes clean cars but I wonder just how clean aircraft or big boats are. The Cherokee I learned to fly in didn’t even have catalytic converters. Most big barges put out many hundreds of times the emissions of hundreds of cars and those are being used globally non-stop. Something should probably be done about cows, too. Maybe it’s just me, but in the grand scheme of things, v8s just don’t seem like that big of an issue.

12/03/2017 - 23:55 |
8 | 0

Aviation is the worst, or one of the worst for pollution. That Cherokee you flew on probably had the 0-320, a 5 liter inline 4 engine, that is carbeurated, makes 150hp, and uses 1940s era technology. The FAA is really strict when it comes to engine testing, so it may be decades until small piston engine aircraft become any better for the enviroment. I can see commercial airliners getting better though.

12/04/2017 - 13:32 |
0 | 0
V-Tech and EcoBoost kicked in yo

I don’t mind it. The truth is, with modern turbocharging technology, NA engines are having a tough time. I suspect the base models will be NA while the higher end models will be boosted.

If AMG can make a twin turbo 4.0 V8 have low end torque like a big block 572, why can’t GM?

12/04/2017 - 01:49 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Neithier the zo6 or zr1 is naturally aspirated. they are both supercharged which is forced induction just like a turbo charger. the 2017 camaro zl1 is supercharged as well

12/04/2017 - 02:23 |
0 | 0
Ray Sloan

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

But they are turbo…thank goodness

12/04/2017 - 12:11 |
0 | 0
InjunS2K

No problems I see with that. Lots of American muscle cars have been turbo’d from factory so I’m sure this will work out just fine. As long as Chevy keeps using the LT block, should be plenty strong for years to come and future boost upgrades

12/04/2017 - 03:39 |
0 | 0
Gites

As long as it’s got pair of 4 cylinders that form a V shape we’ll be ok

12/04/2017 - 03:57 |
2 | 0
Olds Alero

We’ll live. It’s not like we’re a bunch of savages who think change is the work of satan himself. Well, most of us aren’t.

12/04/2017 - 05:29 |
0 | 0

Some people don’t want every single thing to change. The vette is one car, let them have it

12/04/2017 - 12:01 |
0 | 0
Tim.

No. And i dont know why everyone wants to mske it mid engine either. Most ridiculous idea I’ve every heard

12/04/2017 - 06:13 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

To be completely honest, yes the V8 is the biggest part of the American heritage. However the very first year of the Vette beared a v6. And GM knows what they’re doing when it comes to turbos (87 gnx turbo v6 slaughtered everything back then) so it could be a decent change. I guess we’ll have to wait and see

12/04/2017 - 14:15 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Actually the first vette had a I6, not a v6

12/04/2017 - 14:32 |
0 | 0

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