While the pricing includes the $995 destination fee, as well as the hefty gas-guzzler tax, it is still a considerable price to pay for an upgraded version of a car with a base price of less than $25,000. But then again, the 7.0 liter V8, limited-slip differential, and aggressively aerodynamic bodykit have all been sculpted out of lessons Chevy engineers learned on the racetrack. Development costs aren’t cheap, and the Camaro Z/28 is essentially a race car from front to back.
The only option buyers can check off at ordering time is a six-speaker stereo system and air conditioning. GM didn’t even want to add a single speaker to the Camaro, but was forced to by safety regulations – it’s there to provide the turn signal click, if you can believe it. It really is as close to a street-legal race car as you can get, with 15.5-inch Brembo carbon-ceramic brakes and ultra-wide Pirelli rubber that’s similar to what real race cars use. If you ask us, it’s worth every penny.
by Chris Demorro on January 6, 2014
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