Ages from now, when we look back at 2008–2013 with 20/20 hindsight,
we’ll likely deem GM’s quick-rinse bankruptcy a blessing. Case in point:
the 2014 Chevrolet SS sedan arriving later this year. This car is an
amalgam of a once-revered nameplate (SS) and one of the best cars
developed by pre-Chapter 11 GM, the Pontiac G8. Without GM’s trip
through the reorganization wringer, a rear-drive Chevy flagship might
not have happened.
Way, way back in the company’s rowdier days, Corvette patron Zora Arkus-Duntov affixed an SS badge (double-secret code for “super sport”) to GM’s first purpose-built racer.
Thanks to a magnesium body draped over a steel-tube space frame
inspired by the Mercedes 300SL’s skeleton, the Corvette SS weighed a
lean 1850 pounds dry. A front-mounted 4.6-liter V-8 equipped with fuel
injection and aluminum heads delivered 310 horsepower at 6400 rpm.
Piloted by the best shoes of the day—Fangio, Fitch, Moss,
and Taruffi—the two-seat SS was quick, but a lack of development
stopped it after only 23 laps at the 1957 12-hour Sebring Grand Prix.
The SS evolved into the more successful Sting Ray racer that begat the 1963 Corvette (C2) Sting Ray
production model. In 1961, Chevy resurrected the badge for an optional
($54) Impala package consisting of various chassis, interior, and
exterior upfits. Over the years, the double-S escutcheon has been hung
haphazardly on Chevys ranging from convertible pickups to front-drive
Impalas to current V-8–powered Camaros.
The new Chevrolet SS is an updated version of the Australian-built Pontiac G8, which thrived for barely 18 months before sinking, along with GM’s “excitement” division, in 2009. When it knocked off Dodge’s Charger R/T
in our June 2008 comparison test, we dubbed the G8 GT “the BMW that
Pontiac always wanted to build.” When it perished the following year,
GM’s Bob Lutz said the full-size four-door G8 was too good to waste, and
he pledged that it would reappear as a Chevrolet.
Lutz’s forecast was dead-on accurate. The Chevy Camaro, essentially a
shorter-wheelbase (112.3-inch) coupe version of the G8, arrived before
the onset of Pontiac’s death throes. In late 2009, Chevrolet announced a
118.5-inch-wheelbase Caprice PPV perp coach
built on GM’s large rear-drive platform, which was formerly code-named
Zeta. The new SS is the meat in the sandwich. It rides on the
size-medium 114.8-inch wheelbase of the old G8, but features a host of
updates such as re-creased sheetmetal, a new electrical architecture, a
retuned chassis, and contemporary Chevrolet interior and exterior
earmarks. All Zeta siblings have unibody construction, front struts, and
a multilink rear suspension.
The production SS due this fall will have an LS3 6.2-liter V-8 burbling
under its hood, backed up by a six-speed automatic with standard paddle
shifters. Packing 415 horsepower and 415 lb-ft of torque—as well as a
3.27:1 final drive—Chevy says the car should sprint to 60 mph in the
five-second range.
Decelerative responsibilities fall on Brembo brakes; hardware includes
14-inch front rotors, 12.8-inch rear rotors, and four-piston fixed front
calipers. Sticky Bridgestone performance rubber—measuring 245/40 at the
front and 275/35 out back—cozies up to 19-inch forged wheels. The hood
and trunklid are aluminum. There are, of course, LED daytime running
lights.
SSs will be sold fully loaded with top-shelf infotainment gear, HID
headlamps, stitched leather trim, the latest collision-warning
equipment, and Chevy’s first application of automatic parking assist.
The only option will be a power sunroof, so expect a sticker crowding
$40,000 when the car arrives in showrooms at the end of the year. Since
the efficiency upgrades of the new LT1 V-8—direct injection, variable
valve timing, and cylinder deactivation—are not included, factor some gas-guzzler tax into your budget.
The SS is Chevy’s new nameplate hero
in NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series. After winning 10 straight manufacturers’
championships with “Monte Carlos” and “Impalas” from 2003 to 2012,
Chevy is now the only brand with a racer profiled after a pukka V-8,
rear-drive production model. (Dodge withdrew its “Charger”
from NASCAR after Brad Keselowski piloted one to the 2012 drivers’
championship; Ford races “Fusions,” and Toyota competes with “Camrys.”)
The Chevrolet SS race car debuts at this year’s Daytona 500 as a 17-car
phalanx fielded by Earnhardt Ganassi Racing, Furniture Row Racing,
Hendrick Motorsports, Phoenix Racing, Richard Childress Racing, and
Stewart-Haas Racing.
The SS is essentially a spear aimed at the hearts of the Chrysler 300
SRT8, Dodge Charger SRT8, and Ford Taurus SHO, but it’s a stopgap
measure. That could change in a couple of years when the production
baton is expected to pass from GM’s Elizabeth, Australia, plant to a
U.S. assembly facility, and the heavy, elderly underpinnings of the old
platform are replaced by a new large rear-drive platform engineered to
serve under Chevrolet, Cadillac, and possibly Buick flagships. (More on
GM’s future RWD plans here and here.)
Meanwhile, for our role in pulling GM back from the abyss, we tax-paying
enthusiasts deserve this street-fighting SS with LT1 power and a stick
shift.
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