Photo credit: Autoblog.com |
Grid from the Golden Era of Trans-Am racing |
Ford developed the Mustang
Boss 302, while sister company Mercury offered the Cougar XR7. Chevrolet
masterminded the almighty Z/28, and the S-Code designation for the Plymouth
Barracuda was made specifically for the Trans-Am series. These cars were
piloted by some of the biggest racing names ever to grace the tarmac, drivers
such as Parnelli Jones, Dan Gurney, and Swede Savage. However, my absolute
favorite of the legendary Trans-Am drivers has to be Mark Donohue and his
Penske/Sunoco Camaro Z/28.
No other classic
racecar has left quite the same impression on me than the royal-blue-on-yellow
Sunoco Camaro. With Donohue at the helm, the Sunoco Camaro snagged the first
place in the ’68 and ’69 Trans-Am series, thus cementing the Z/28 into racing
history. The Trans-Am battle was not just relegated to the track, however.
Trans-Am fever spilled over onto the streets of America as homologation
specials roared from stoplight to stoplight. While the Boss Mustang badge was
discontinued in the mid ‘70s, the Z/28 proved to have staying power. The Z/28
badge was carried on from ’68 through ’74, reintroduced in ’77, and continued
all the way up until the final Camaro year in 2002. With the demise of the
Camaro, it meant the demise of the Z/28, and the end to a road-racing legacy.
Sure, some of the Z/28 models in the ‘70s and ‘80s were less-than-inspiring,
but the badge was always so damn mean.
The death of both the Camaro and the Z/28 legacy was a huge blow for the masses
of Camaro fans worldwide.
However, I’m happy to report the Z/28 has returned to the
world of the living. The badge is back. The ‘mean’ is back.
The bad is back.
Photo credit: Autoblog.com |
At the 2013 NYC Auto show, Chevrolet revealed one of the
most hardcore vehicles it has ever produced. The 2014 Camaro Z/28 sports a 300
lb. weight reduction, thanks in part to thinner glass, a diet-heavy alacantara-swathed interior, and new lightweight wheels. Cog-swappers, rejoice;
The Z/28 is a manual-only muscle car. The Camaro receives a heavily reworked
chassis, carbon-ceramic brakes, and a sexy front-splitter/undertray system.
Lets go back to the previous statement; Carbon-ceramic brakes….on a Camaro!
What a world we live in…..
It also is fitted with a new engine, and oh my goodness,
what an engine it is.
I have not been looking forward to the eventual and
inevitable death of the C6 Z06 Corvette. The discontinuation of the Z06 would
mean the discontinuation of the LS7, which in my eyes, is one of the greatest
American V8s produced in the last decade. GM must have noticed my tearful
depression, and amazingly, the 7.0L smallblock has been given a lifeline with
the Z/28. Oh yes, America has a 427 Camaro once again. Do I smell a factory
Yenko package on the horizon? I sure hope so. And for those not convinced, here
is what you have to look forward to:
Lets recap. A lightened, manual-only 500 HP 427 Camaro with
active-aero, Recaro seats, and carbon-ceramic brakes. Oh my. If that does not
get your heart racing, please visit your doctor, because that’s the greatest
list of options ever to grace an American muscle car, ever. If its not already apparent,
I’m just a bit excited.
These statistics are
all well and good, but how does the Z/28 stack up to against its competition?
Well, the inadequate resurrection of the Camaro ZL1
nameplate has the Shelby GT500 covered, and the parts-bin special 1LE Camaro
faces the Mustang GT Track Pack. The obvious choice would be to compare the
Z/28 to the new Boss 302, but Ford dashed the hopes of fans everywhere with the
news of no Boss for the 2014 model year. That being said, lets do a little math
and logic to see if the Z/28 can come out on top.
In a comparison between the 2012 Camaro ZL1 and the quite
ridiculous 2013 Shelby GT500, the GT500 is bested around a track setting by
roughly one half-second. Then, according to Chevrolet themselves, the ZL1 is
whipped by the Z/28 on an unnamed track by over a mind-boggling three seconds
per-lap. Enter Boss, stage left; the ZL1 trounces a Boss 302 Laguna Seca by
about two seconds in this professional MotorTrend comparison. Don’t even bother
with the Dodge Challenger SRT8 392, as I highly doubt the too-heavy cruiser could
even best a Mustang GT around a track. Also withheld are the Cadillac CTS-V and
Corvette due to a higher price point and the fact that the Corvette is not a
muscle car. So, without any real world
tests, drag strip rumbles, or diagnostics, we can unofficially say that the
Z/28 is the fastest muscle car around a track setting. You can keep your 660 HP
quarter-mile missiles, Shelby. I want this Camaro GT3 RS.
Photo credit: Autoblog.com |
The return of the Z/28, Boss, Stingray, and ZL1 within a two
year span indicates much for the future of American muscle. Maybe we will see a
return of the Chevelle, 442, CobraJet, and Mach 1. Maybe a Boss 429?
How about we bring back Pontiac, first.
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