Chevrolet Corvette Z06 Carbon

For the truly hard-core Corvette fanatic who likes to spend weekends thrashing his or her car at the track, there is only one Corvette worthy of consideration: the Z06. However, thanks to the ZR1, the lightweight, normally aspirated 7.0-liter coupe is no longer the absolute quickest Vette, but it is felt to have the most responsive handling. What it doesn’t have is the uber-cool carbon-ceramic brakes, carbon-fiber body panels and magnetic ride active damping system of its supercharged sibling. That can now be changed to past tense with the birth of the Z06 Carbon edition announced today by General Motors.
The Z06 Carbon was created to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the first appearance of the Corvette at the 24 Hours of Le Mans when John Fitch and Briggs Cunningham won their class and finished eighth overall. The Carbon edition is essentially a Z06 with a ZR1 chassis and some of the carbon skin. When production starts this fall, only 500 examples will be made and they will only come in two colors, Inferno Orange and Supersonic Blue. All examples get black-painted wheels and a black interior upholstered in leather and suede. Follow the jump and we’ll tell you more.

One element unique to the Z06 Carbon is its hood. The profile of the new carbon fiber hood is identical to that on the ZR1 but without a transparent window. That makes it the lightest hood ever on a Corvette and, according to chief engineer Tadge Juechter, it truly is a featherweight. ZR1 owners looking to swap out their hoods will be disappointed to learn that the Carbon hood will not fit their cars. Because of the absent window, the Z06 hood has different structure underneath that won’t clear the ZR1 engine’s intercooler.
The splitter, rocker extensions and roof of the Carbon are painted black instead of the super-expensive clear-coat used on the ZR1. The headlamp pockets and wheels are also painted a glossy black giving the Carbon a decidedly sinister appearance, particularly with the steel blue paint combination.

According to Juechter, the upgraded suspension and brakes give the Z06 a real boost on the track too. Even with the same powertrain, the Corvette circulates both Laguna Seca and the Milford Road Course three seconds a lap faster than a 2010 Z06. The addition of the magnetic ride damping system should also make the Z06 Carbon more livable on the road as well.
For those who don’t manage to get one of the 500 Carbon editions, most of the good bits will be available as part of two option packages available for 2011 models. The Z07 package provides all the mechanical goodness of the Brembo brake system, wheels and tires and the MR suspension. The carbon fiber package includes the splitter, sill extensions and rear lip spoiler. Unfortunately, the hood is only available on the 500 limited edition cars. The Carbon and new option packages go on sale in late summer at prices that will be announced closer to launch date, so stay tuned.

Sucks about the hood not fitting the ZR1, I am sure there is a market for a non-bubble hood

That’s pretty bad ass looking

Im sure the hood is not going to make that much of a difference on a ZR1. It also prob wont be long untill another option appears for a carbon replacement for ZR1 owners.

I deff like it.

that’s sick

I Came

Wow I really want that.

I’ll have to look into that…maybe this could be my first new car purchase? Dream

I wonder how far off the pricing will be from a ZR1

Me too have they opened pricing?

Maybe talk to Mr. Basil?

So Nasty looking!

Most siq.

me likey.

Speculation on other sites is that pricing will be closer to Z06 than ZR1. Would imagine they get snapped up pretty quick with only 500 being built.

meh

looks hawt. love the new vettes

I’m drooling

So amazing!

Should be bad ass! Really addresses the short comings of the current z06. Too bad it couldn’t get the CF roof too, but I’m sure it will preform amazingly, none-the-less. Shame I’ll never see one with only 500 being made. Many I’m sure, will be snatched up quickly by collectors.

I like it, but how many iterations of the same car are needed?

GM does this often with the Vette. Later in the model cycle they tend to offer special packages, color-combinations, etc to drum up interest before the next gen comes out.