The History of America’s Sports Car

The Chevrolet Corvette is often known as “America’s Sports Car” due to the fact that it is the first all-American sports car built by the American manufacturing company General Motors. The Corvette has maintained its reputation as a very suitable yet affordable car for more than 50 years now. The car first came out in 1953 and was manufactured in a GM assembly plant in Bowling Green, Kentucky, USA. What sets the Corvette apart from its European counterparts is its emphasis on simplicity. Most competing brands depend on smaller displacement and a complex engine. The Corvette on the contrary, uses a larger displacement and a simpler overhead valve that often resulted in a lighter, cheaper and physically smaller engine. This same philosophy is also reflected in the type of suspension worn by the Corvette where GM opted to utilize the transverse leaf springs.

The name for Chevrolet’s entry-level sports car abet in 1953 comes from a highly maneuverable frigate class warship of the same name. The person responsible for choosing the name of GM’s sports car was Myron E. Scott, who happens to be the creator of the Soap Box Derby. The early Corvettes have fiberglass for their outer body due to the steel quotas left over from the war. The engine broken-down befriend then was the “Blue Flame” inline 6-cylinder truck engine with two-speed Powerglide automatic transmission and drum brakes that are similar to any Chevrolet car line of that time. Compared with its European counterparts, the Corvette was an underpowered vehicle. It was only in 1954 that a Paxton supercharger became available as a dealer-installed option. This significantly improved the performance of the Corvette but was quiet unimaginative its counterparts. Continue reading

Classic Sports Cars

Launched at the 1961 Motor story for in London the Triumph TR4 two-seater British roadster met all the carry out challenges of the 1960′s with an impressively stylish designed body from Michelotti that survived for fifteen years until its descendent the TR6 was discontinued in 1976.

Two year earlier Triumph had launched the classic Herald saloon whose bodylines designed by Italian Giovanni Michelotti led to substantial sales success that lasted in the 1970s. Continue reading

America’s Sports Car

One of the most classic American sports cars is the Chevrolet Corvette, which was first introduced in 1953. It was the first completely American sports car built by an American car company, which is why it is often referred to as “America’s Sports Car”.

Today, Corvettes are manufactured in the city of Bowling Green, Kentucky, where they are created with gigantic care. Though the main complaint with the car was its handling, Corvettes’ handling has been continually improved to be on a par with celebrated European sports cars. However, they unruffled remain relatively affordable, which is perhaps another one of the reasons why they continue to be such illustrious sports cars. Continue reading

The Best Cheap Sports Car

The Honda brand is synonymous with a kind of inevitable popularity. Most car reviewers bemoan the fact that your average Honda car is populated by a toothless harridan who was probably learning to drive when the Model T Ford was first released. A reputation for being associated with the elderly have left Honda a bit baffled on how to successfully market their novel vehicles to a younger audience. One contrivance to bypass the drudgery of demographics is to release are car so blisteringly rapid that anyone over the age of 30 is going to have concern reacting expeditiously enough to control it. I’m clear it was with mountainous pride that Honda revealed the new Honda S2000.

I myself am quite Au fiat with the realms of the affordable sports car; having been a devout Mazda MX-5 fan for the best section of 5 years. I was sufficiently impressed with my first gaze of the Honda S2000 to residence my MX-5 keys in the drawer and leave them there for a while. In terms of looks; the S2000 is large. The 6 rush transmission belonging to the Honda S2000 immediately makes a mockery of the Mazda MX-5′s shifting choice. So often with the Mazda, I have found myself struggling to enact it into 3rd, thanks to the tiny controls. The Honda has no such station and the quiet but assured gear changes are all easily transferred to. Continue reading