The Generals weapon is ready for battle.
THE CHEVROLET Camaro is a fast, pukka rear-drive V8 performance car that looks good, is easy to drive and feels solidly built. It might struggle to rein in a Ford Mustang GT when compared dollar for dollar, but if you’re after a sharp handling muscle car with presence, then you’re in the right place.
It invades Australia from The States in MY18 2SS form. The ‘SS’ refers to the 6.2-litre V8 hiding under its bonnet while the ‘2’ means it’s fitted with premium interior equipment.
General Motor’s Alpha rear-drive platform underpins the lighter, stiffer chassis and everything comes wrapped in a retro-inspired design. It all costs a pretty penny, though, as Holden Special Vehicles converts each car to right-hand drive in Clayton. The resource needed to import, convert, and comply one helps explain why it is priced at $85,990 before on roads. That’s $20K more than the Mustang.
Despite this, more than 400 people have told HSV they want one sight unseen. In showrooms, they’ll see custom-made parts on everything above the centre stack’s HVAC buttons. HSV also widens the original passenger footwell for the driver, swaps the sole electric power seat to the right side, lays new wiring looms, and modifies the firewall.
But you wouldn’t suspect all this when you sit in one. The interior feels and looks factory built. The dash panels fit snug. The air-conditioning and heating obey commands, with the gurgles in our pilot vehicles due to be eliminated for production, and all screens function properly.
It’s cosy inside. The sixth-generation Camaro is smaller than the fifth generation in every way and skinnier than a Mustang or VF Commodore (just). The back seats almost press against the front seats and it is easy to touch elbows with a passenger.
This story is from the November 2018 edition of MOTOR Magazine Australia.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the November 2018 edition of MOTOR Magazine Australia.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Ged Bulmer
THE ACCOMPANYING YARN WAS A RIB TICKLER, BUT THE SUITS AT PORSCHE DIDN'T SEE IT THAT WAY
Dylan Campbell
WE WERE LIVING THE DREAM. WE ALL WANTED TO WORK FOR MOTOR AS TEENAGERS
HONDA NSX
Honda's alloy missile - a friendly firecracker
TESLA MODEL S
Looking back on the automobile's iPhone moment | TESLA AIMS TO ELEVATE THE ELECTRIC CAR FROM INTRIGUING CURIOUSITY TO A VIABLE MEANS OF EVERYDAY TRANSPORT
PORSCHE 959
Weissach rethinks the supercar
PCOTY LEGENDS - 1996-2022
HOW THE ANNUAL QUEST FOR AUSTRALIA'S BEST PERFORMANCE CARS HAS DELIVERED A ROLL CALL OF EXCELLENCE
THE UNDEFEATED
HONDA'S FK8 CIVIC TYPE R IS OUR LINEAL CHAMP, WINNING EVERY MOTOR COMPARISON AS WELL AS BOTH PERFORMANCE CAR OF THE YEAR AND BANG FOR YOUR BUCKS. WE PAY OUR RESPECTS WITH A FINAL DRIVE IN THE END-OF-THE-LINE LE SPECIAL
THESE ARE OUR PEOPLE
IN A CULTURE OVERFLOWING WITH POSERS AND TRY-HARDS, WE FIND A HAVEN FOR THOSE THAT LOVE DRIVING ABOVE ALL ELSE
OPEN WIDE, SAY R
VOLKSWAGEN'S GOLF R LANDS IN AUSTRALIA AND IT ALREADY HAS THE SWAGGER OF A GIANTKILLER ABOUT IT. WE LINE UP SOME ASYMMETRIC ALTERNATIVES TO SEE IF THE GOLF HAS THEIR RESPECTIVE TALENTS COVERED
SING FOR YOUR DINNER
As the motoring world undergoes seismic shifts in focus, Rob Dickinson's vision for Singer remains clear