General Motors Says Orders for Camaro Sports Cars Outrun Supply
In another year+ or so the 6.2L will be the middle engine
Well, we could use all the standard excuses. "It was a different time". "Coupes are no longer popular". "People buy SUV's today". All of those have some merit, but mostly that's just an easy way to be dismissive. Those cars were WILDLY popular - and for specific reasons we probably shouldn't be so quick to dismiss.
BTW, how do we explain away the Mustang's success year after year? Oh, I know, "Mustang is Ford's Corvette".
BTW, how do we explain away the Mustang's success year after year? Oh, I know, "Mustang is Ford's Corvette".

I've mentioned this in other threads, but basically I see the BMW 3-series as the modern-day successor to a Camaro. A car which has a sporty (not necessarily muscle-car) image, but yet is practical enough for small families. It is not overly compromised compared to mainstream cars and is small enough to not feel intimidating. It's a car which almost everyone admires and doesn't require any explanations or apologies for why you bought it. That's exactly what a Camaro was in the late 60s; but it isn't now.
The old days gave a COMPETITIVE, CHEAP V8 option. Not an INFERIOR, CHEAP V8 option. You're taking me too literally, and I think we both know that 
LO3s are crap in today's terms, but in 1989 terms, they were decent enough. Something like that, in today's terms, would be nice, and someting the other guys don't have. I've been saying this since 2003, on this very board.
I'm aware no one is listening. I'm out on this topic...I'm not going to continue hi-jacking this thread, and I can feel it getting locked. I want no part of that.

LO3s are crap in today's terms, but in 1989 terms, they were decent enough. Something like that, in today's terms, would be nice, and someting the other guys don't have. I've been saying this since 2003, on this very board.
I'm aware no one is listening. I'm out on this topic...I'm not going to continue hi-jacking this thread, and I can feel it getting locked. I want no part of that.
The old days gave a COMPETITIVE, CHEAP V8 option. Not an INFERIOR, CHEAP V8 option. You're taking me too literally, and I think we both know that 
LO3s are crap in today's terms, but in 1989 terms, they were decent enough. Something like that, in today's terms, would be nice, and someting the other guys don't have. I've been saying this since 2003, on this very board.
I'm aware no one is listening. I'm out on this topic...I'm not going to continue hi-jacking this thread, and I can feel it getting locked. I want no part of that.

LO3s are crap in today's terms, but in 1989 terms, they were decent enough. Something like that, in today's terms, would be nice, and someting the other guys don't have. I've been saying this since 2003, on this very board.
I'm aware no one is listening. I'm out on this topic...I'm not going to continue hi-jacking this thread, and I can feel it getting locked. I want no part of that.
I bought a brand new LO3 / M5 in 1991. They were crap then too. Sorry.
That engine is almost singularly responsible for my getting rid of the car a few years later.
Gutless? Check.
Persistent audible detonation? Check.
Hates to rev? Check.
At least it got good mileage in the era of $1.00 / gallon gas.....
If they can do it with the G8, they should be able to do it with the Camaro; i.e. 3.6 V6, 361 hp 6.0 and 415 hp 6.3. A ~330 hp 5.3 with AFM option on the base Camaro would be a nice compromise and, IMHO would allow them to push the SS up market a bit more. Yeah, I know 330 hp isn't much more than the DI 3.6, but it would have significanly more torque.
Besides, you pay about 7k more for a Mustang V6 to the V8.
How much would you have had to spend for a 400HP+ Camaro in the 80's? How about a 300HP? Wait, you couldn't get one. I don't think having to spend $30K for a 426HP Camaro is a lot. Historically this car is a performance bargain. You are getting a ZL1 for the Camaro RS price.
First off, even exotic cars didn't have 300 hp, much less 400 back then.
Secondly, lets not get completely fixated on HP. Hundreds of thousands ( over a million??) of 2.8/3.1 V6 and LG4/L03 V8 3rd gens were sold to happy customers. These buyers weren't shopping for a ZL1, they pulled out their checkbooks for a good looking, easy to live with, sporty car with contemporary styling, proportions and dimensions.
R377, I think your post was right on.
This may not go over well here but I look back at the 3rd Gens as when GM took the Camaro down a more enthusiast focused direction and away from its mainstream roots. The 4th Gen was just evolutionary from there and further still from the mainstream coupe formula.
This is where I think having the Corvette in stable has hurt the Camaro over the years. Chevy has just about done everything right with the Vette with sharp styling and high performance first comfort and drivability second. To which they have been rewarded with good sales and loyal return buyers for almost 57 years. And yet when this formula is carried over and mixed in with the Camaro it produces a car hailed by enthusiasts and car magazines who are performance first but questioned by mainstream buyers to the point that some feel intimidated trying to drive even the base models.
Ford seemed to get back to basics with the '79-93 Foxbody and refocused the brand further with SN95 and Edge while staying modern enough to compete in performance but mainstream enough of a design layout that it could appeal to women and non-performance oriented shoppers. (FWD-Probe fiasco aside)
The Mustang has never been perfect IMO but Ford has largely kept the mainstream coupe layout with ergo and user friendliness first and performance as an option for those looking for it, second.
This is where I think having the Corvette in stable has hurt the Camaro over the years. Chevy has just about done everything right with the Vette with sharp styling and high performance first comfort and drivability second. To which they have been rewarded with good sales and loyal return buyers for almost 57 years. And yet when this formula is carried over and mixed in with the Camaro it produces a car hailed by enthusiasts and car magazines who are performance first but questioned by mainstream buyers to the point that some feel intimidated trying to drive even the base models.
Ford seemed to get back to basics with the '79-93 Foxbody and refocused the brand further with SN95 and Edge while staying modern enough to compete in performance but mainstream enough of a design layout that it could appeal to women and non-performance oriented shoppers. (FWD-Probe fiasco aside)
The Mustang has never been perfect IMO but Ford has largely kept the mainstream coupe layout with ergo and user friendliness first and performance as an option for those looking for it, second.
Really guys? We're still talking about a mid level V8?
The LS3/L99 is the mid level V8. The top level V8 (LSA) is on the shelf for now. A 5.3 in this car would be only slightly better than the V6 and suck a lot more gas.
I'll give you the weight arguement, but this one is a dead horse. Give GM a little credit, in their worst year ever they made a pretty damn good Camaro. No, it's not perfect. It hasn't even been out a year yet. Let's see what GM does with this car over the life of this generation before we consider it a failure.
Just because they sold a bunch of 305s in the 80s doesn't mean that it would work for this one. If they offered a badge-delete option on the SS, but it had to come with cloth seats and base stereo or base wheels, do we really think that would be a sales winner? I don't. GM doesn't make money off decontented cars, unless they sale them at high volume. I don't believe that would work.
The LS3/L99 is the mid level V8. The top level V8 (LSA) is on the shelf for now. A 5.3 in this car would be only slightly better than the V6 and suck a lot more gas.
I'll give you the weight arguement, but this one is a dead horse. Give GM a little credit, in their worst year ever they made a pretty damn good Camaro. No, it's not perfect. It hasn't even been out a year yet. Let's see what GM does with this car over the life of this generation before we consider it a failure.
Just because they sold a bunch of 305s in the 80s doesn't mean that it would work for this one. If they offered a badge-delete option on the SS, but it had to come with cloth seats and base stereo or base wheels, do we really think that would be a sales winner? I don't. GM doesn't make money off decontented cars, unless they sale them at high volume. I don't believe that would work.
Last edited by Sixer-Bird; Jul 1, 2009 at 08:34 AM.
My take is that the Pony Car market ended up diverging from the mainstream car market more and more until it became it's own little specialized segment that sells mostly on style points. Of the "secretaries" I know, none of them drive anything like a pony car, or even a 'sporty coupe' - it's stuff like Civics, RAV4s, and Priuses.
I was never really sold on the idea that the Camaro didn't sell because it wasn't "practical". I think it's more likely the styling got stale, and the marketing got stale, and the car had a reputation for qwality problems. IMO, the lesson here is more that you can't put an "image car" on a ten year model cycle.
In the interest of clarity....
I bought a brand new LO3 / M5 in 1991. They were crap then too. Sorry.
That engine is almost singularly responsible for my getting rid of the car a few years later.
Gutless? Check.
Persistent audible detonation? Check.
Hates to rev? Check.
At least it got good mileage in the era of $1.00 / gallon gas.....
I bought a brand new LO3 / M5 in 1991. They were crap then too. Sorry.
That engine is almost singularly responsible for my getting rid of the car a few years later.
Gutless? Check.
Persistent audible detonation? Check.
Hates to rev? Check.
At least it got good mileage in the era of $1.00 / gallon gas.....


Did you ever try modding yours? As Charlie knows, I checked out, drove (and ALMOST bought
) a green/gold 25th anniversary '92 RS last weekend...bone stock down to the paper air filter.With an AT and 2.73s, I won't lie...it was painful. By comparison, my M5/3.08 RS with headers, a full exhaust, Edelbrock TBI Performer intake, open element air cleaner, chip and a few "free mods" will run and hide by comparison. I was shocked how good mine felt by comparison
When we get my best friend's '83 L69 back together, we're interested to see how that'll run against mine. With stock 3.73s I'm confident he'll take me off the line, but with the headers and other items I think I can pass him up top. Battle of the high 14s Camaros? 
Anyway, I'm making one more post in here and I'm gone...because I can feel myself helping drag this off topic. Pop Quiz, Gentlemen....
If you could buy a 1LT for $25,000, and have a solitary add of $1,700 for a 350hp 5.3 V8...for $4,200 LESS than a base 1SS...well???
Would ya??? I already would've...
I ain't spending $600 a month for 5 years to get a V8...period. $500 a month is a LOT more pallatable, and I doubt I'd ever miss the 75hp I gave up...
If you could buy a 1LT for $25,000, and have a solitary add of $1,700 for a 350hp 5.3 V8...for $4,200 LESS than a base 1SS...well???
Would ya??? I already would've...
I ain't spending $600 a month for 5 years to get a V8...period. $500 a month is a LOT more pallatable, and I doubt I'd ever miss the 75hp I gave up...


