As Corvette enthusiasts, we are always fighting the reputation a very few bad Corvette owners bestow on us.
Well (without knowing the entire story) here is yet another video depicting a Corvette owner being less than a courteous steward in Tacoma, Washington.
Video footage captured a Corvette driver who refused to let a Dodge truck merge into his lane getting mad, rolling down his window to give [...]
With all the rumors, pictures and videos of the Mid-Engined C8, I though it would be fun to test your knowledge of past Mid-Engine Corvettes. Chevrolet has never produced a production mid-engine Corvette, but they have done many a prototype. How many can you name?
Starting in 1963, Chevrolet has made 8 known mid-engine prototypes! That is unless you count the 1959 XP-719 that may or may not have been a Corvette.
#1 – This first one was named the CERV II (Chevrolet Engineering Research Vehicle). Yes, there was a CERV I, but it was a test vehicle and not considered a Corvette. The CERV II was conceived early 1962, developed and built under Duntov’s direction between 1963 and 1964 as a separate line of racing Corvettes,
Vehicles Affected: Approximately 490 model-year 2019 Chevrolet Corvette ZR1 sports cars
The Problem: Hard braking or acceleration may cause the sensing diagnostic module to enter a fault state. As a result, the diagnostic module will not provide crash sensing or deploy the necessary airbags in the event of a crash, increasing the risk of injury.
The Fix: Dealers will reprogram the sensing diagnostic module with updated software for free.
What Owners Should Do: Chevrolet manufacturer GM did not immediately announce an owner-notification schedule. Owners can call the automaker at 800-222-1020, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s vehicle-safety hotline at 888-327-4236 or visit NHTSA’s website to check their vehicle identification number and learn more.
Source: https://www.cars.com/articles/2019-chevrolet-corvette-recall-alert-1420700398739/