Chevy on 10/26/21 unveiled the track-focused model of its mid-engine Corvette supercar, the C8 Z06.
Sporting the most powerful, normally-aspirated engine ever made, the Z06’s bespoke, 5.5-liter, dual-overhead-cam V-8 LT6) boasts a gain of 670 horsepower to 175 more than the standard, mid-engine Corvette Stingray, and 20 more than the last-gen Z06 and its supercharged V-8 LT4 engine.
The Z06 achieves its outrageous output using a free-spinning, flat-plane crank and 8,600-rpm redline technology usually associated with Ferrari supercars costing three times as much.
The spine-tingling shriek of the Z06 will be familiar to race car fans who have heard the engine propel the Corvette C8.R to seven wins and an IMSA sports car championship since its introduction in 2020.
"It's been hiding in plain sight. (We were) developing the heart of the beast," smiled Corvette Executive Chief Engineer Tadge Juechter as we circled a menacing, pumpkin-colored Z06 under GM’s Warren design center dome a week before Halloween.
To realize the full potential of the ferocious LT6 engine, Juechter and his guys had to make significant upgrades to the nimble Corvette C8,
which at $62,195 has sold like hotcakes with 495 horsepower and European-supercar good looks.
Stingrays are trading at some dealerships at $30,000-plus above sticker price.
Though pricing for the 2023 Z06 won’t be announced until closer to its summer 2022 release, expect it to start around $20,000 over a Z51 sticker which will be equipped with the must-have Z07 handling package
A huge, carbon-fiber rear wing juts from the rear chassis like a scorpion’s tail, putting over 730 pounds of down force. Fang-like dive planes pepper the face below the Corvette familiar, brooding headlights. Contrary to past Z06 upgrades, the ‘23 model shares only hood, hatchback, doors, and roof with the base Stingray.
Two features instantly distinguish the Z06 from the standard model.
The first: larger side intakes, shaped appropriately like a stingray’s tale.
“Performance aspirations force the car to look different,” said Juechter. “(It’s) enabled by the tires. That width drives the rear quarter panel out and makes the duct opening bigger, and the engine needs that.”
To harness the power of the LT6 mill, Michelin PS4 tires have been widened 1.3 inches over the already fat, 12-inch standard tire.
Softer compound Michelin Cup 2s are also available. The big rubber forced a 3-inch widening of the rear bodywork.
The second signature feature is the center-mounted quad tailpipes out back (the base V-8 splits its quad pipes into pairs on either corner of the rear diffuser). Juechter said the change was necessary in part to better channel the high-revving V-8's sound not just for exterior presence, but also for the enjoyment of the driver riding in the forward cabin.
The new, bigger fascia is more pronounced, holds three heat exchangers (the standard Stingray has two) to cool the temps within.
“We start with the Stingray, then amp everything up.
This is the first time we’ve done a full perimeter” on a Z06, said Juechter, referring to the exterior bodywork. “This enables us to do a better job on aerodynamics, package more coolers. We wanted this to be extremely capable on track.”
Juechter said Chevy’s new track weapon significantly outruns the previous-gen Z06 and can go wheel-to-wheel with the winged, $122k, 755-horse ZR1 C7 uber-'Vette.
With the Z07 package, the Z06 makes 734 pounds of downforce at 186 mph, the most of any Corvette ever.
On the skid pad, Juechter says the Z06 will pull a neck-straining 1.22 g-loads compared to ZR1’s 1.2.
At 186 mph, it boasts 6% more down force, 8% less drag.
The standard Stingray’s high-tech interior already shames most European exotics, and the Z06 doesn’t fiddle with the formula.
The instrument displays are digital, configurable. Wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are standard, so you can find the nearest racetrack.
The square steering wheel is festooned with useful buttons, including Z-mode, so you can instantly transform the car from interstate comfort to nuclear weapon should any muscle-car peer dare to challenge.
In keeping with its expected $20k premium over the Z51 based C8, Z06 has turned up the volume on materials.
The steering wheel can be trimmed in carbon fiber, as can the entire center console.
All this performance is still available in both coupe & removable hard-top convertible configurations, trunk and front trunk storage are uncompromised.
The coupe version allow you to gaze into the engine chamber at the 5.5-liter engine.
Not only does its high-pitched note sound like a Ferrari, its output is well north of the $300k Ferrari 458 Special V-8's 597 horsepower.
More comparisons?
The production LT6 engine has 170 more horsepower than the C8.R race engine due to Balance of Performance restraints placed on the race car to keep it from running away from class competitors.
“We have a lot more power than the race car,” laughed Juechter, who also points to the sophisticated, standard, magnetic dampers on the Z06 also prohibited in racing.
The race car and production Corvette C8 were developed in parallel, ensuring a direct technology transfer from track to street.
The C8.R shined in its first year of IMSA sports car competition, capturing six victories and winning the GT manufacturer's title.
“The new Corvette Z06 defines the American supercar,” said GM President Mark Reuss, himself a race-licensed driver.
“It builds on the groundbreaking dynamics introduced with the mid-engine Corvette and elevates them, too.”
It will be built in Bowling Green, Kentucky, in left-and-right-hand drive configurations, the latter for overseas markets.
“Ex-Corvette racer Oliver Gavin has been doing development work at the Nürburgring,” said Juechter, referring to Germany’s racetrack.
“(We want) to make sure the car is competent on track and on the Autobahn, which is why we go there. We want to sell this car in Europe.”