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3Oct/110

C7 to have 7 Speed Manual – The Stick-Shift is not Dead Yet

A few weeks ago, Chevrolet announced that they expected more than half of their new Camaro ZL1's sold to be automatic. This followed the news that over 70% (a truly vast majority) of Camaro SS's sold were automatic. This news caused my friend who writes my brother blog, CamaroNewsBlog to declare the death of the manual as imminent (Click here for the CamaroNewsBlog article). While I do understand his worry, I tend to disagree, and it seems so does Chevrolet. This past week a person familiar with the development of the C7 Corvette stated that not only is the manual still alive and well in the Corvette world, it will also be offered in a 7-Speed version come 2014.

This news follows close on the heels of Porsche moving to a 7-Speed manual in their 911, and with good reason. The tigher CAFE standards require automakers to get extra MPG numbers wherever they can, and a 7-speed manual will allow for that by providing more ideal highway cruising transmission conditions. Of course, while that's the tame excuse for the 7-speed, it's not what gets me excited. If moving to a 7-Speed were a performance inhibitor you can rest assured that neither the Corvette team, nor their brilliant German-peers at Porsche, would go that way. Instead, I believe that a 7-speed can offer even greater performance for a more skilled driver.

While shift times can cause seconds of time loss on an inexperienced driver, for a true experienced race-enthusiast there is no such thing. A talented driver can shift in ways--through throttle and clutch control--that actually beat out the performance of the finest automatic transmissions on Earth. By adding in an extra gear, also, Chevrolet will allow themselves some room in the tuning department to really play with transmission ratios. An extra gear will allow for shorter low-end gears, and, thus, the capability for a much quicker, high-torque, blast-off. In conjunction with this, the use of two overdrive gears (as GM currently uses on their Z06 and ZR1 transmissions) allow for more top-end HP-based speed numbers. What this will amount to will be quicker take-offs for the experienced Corvette driver on a proper course, and much higher speed numbers through the straight-aways.

Of course, there's a downside to the 7-speed also: difficulty. A 7-speed transmission, especially with shorter lower gears, will be tougher on a less experienced driver and will curb the sales of the manual Corvette further. The average commuter will almost certainly continue trend the way of the Automatic transmission when an extra gear is thrown in to the equation, but, the Corvette also seems fairly free from these concerns. The beauty of the 'Vette comes in the appreciation of it as both a driving vehicle and a performance vehicle that all of its consumers (both the imagined 50+ standard, and the elusive mid-30's young professional 'Vette enthusiast like myself who would rather drive an American rocket on wheels than a German luxury sedan), a consumer base that will almost certainly continue to covet the manual for its enjoyment and feel. People who drive Corvettes want to feel their driving experience and for that their is absolutely no substitute from the manual. Give me a 5, 6, or 7 speed over an automatic any day of the week.

Corvette Transmission

C7 Corvette Manual 7-Speed Transmission - Photo courtesy Edmunds Inside Line

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