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Here's the story:
Illustrated Corvette Series No. 119 - 2004 Commemorative Edition
Corvette
"Salute to the C5-R"
It all goes back to one
man’s passion for racing. Zora Arkus-Duntov was the only
executive at GM to have raced a car at Le Mans, where he enjoyed class
wins in 1954 and 1955. Duntov took his passion and experience and
poured it into Chevrolet’s beauty queen, the Corvette,
elevating the car to legendary status.
Duntov had the kind of
expertise that only comes from putting it all on the line in a
four-wheel drift. Throughout the Corvette’s development, he
always had racing on his mind. Bill Mitchell called this quality
“having gasoline in your veins,” and in
Duntov’s case, it showed: No sooner had he stuffed the new
265 small-block into the ‘55 Vette than secret plans were
hatched to build the first Corvette Le Mans racer, the Corvette SS.
It’s hard to
imagine how Duntov kept the program secret from the GM brass for so
long. But when the Corvette SS went public in 1957, management came
down on him like an avalanche. The project was shelved, though
fortunately the parts escaped the crusher. Two years later the running
gear was used for Bill Mitchell’s Sting Ray racer,
experiencing moderate success.
As much as Duntov wanted to
build racing Vettes, he was relegated to making parts for independent
racers. In 1960, with backdoor help from Duntov, privateer Briggs
Cunningham built three Corvettes to race at Le Mans. He won First in
his class and Eighth overall.
Then, in 1963, Duntov tried
to sneak his lightweight Grand Sport Corvettes past the higher-ups.
When word of the project leaked out, plans for a production Grand Sport
were shelved indefinitely. Duntov spent the rest of his career
improving the Vette and providing material support to private race
teams.
In 1967 Dick Guldstrand and
Bob Bondurant took an L88 Corvette to Le Mans. The team would
ultimately drop out with mechanical problems, but not before the car
had hit a top speed of 171 mph. Then, in 1972, John Greenwood and Dick
Smothers raced the BFGoodrich L88 Corvette at Le Mans, dropping out
after 10 hours. Greenwood was back at Le Mans in 1976 with his wild,
“Batmobile” wide-body Corvette; he was sidelined
after five hours.
There wasn’t
another major Corvette effort at Le Mans until 1995, when Reeves
Callaway’s cars grabbed Second and Third Place class wins.
With the C5 selling well, and a new attitude towards racing inside GM,
Corvette fans saw the first factory-supported Corvette racer in 1999,
in the form of the C5-R. After two years of sorting out the car,
Duntov’s dream of a Corvette winning at Le Mans came true in
2001. The C5-R repeated the feat in 2002 and 2004. The 2004 season was
the best to date, with 10 First Place wins in 10 races!
To celebrate the success of
the C5-R Corvettes, Chevrolet offered the Commemorative Edition option
on all ’04 Corvettes - coupes, convertibles, and the Z06. The
paint scheme and stripes were based on the ‘04 C5-R cars, and
every available performance and luxury feature was included. This was a
$3,700 option for the coupe and convertible, and a $4,335 option on the
Z06. A total of 6,899 units were built, accounting for 20 percent of
all ’04 Vettes.
All Commemorative Edition
cars had the special Le Mans blue paint, crossed-flags embroidery on
the headrests, polished Z06 wheels with unique centers, and special
emblems. The Z06 version also had a carbon-fiber hood that saved 10.6
pounds. The coupe and convertible had a two-tone shale interior, while
the Z06 cars had a black interior.
Commemorative Edition
Corvettes can often be found parked together at Corvette shows, making
for an impressive display. It may have taken 48 years to win at Le
Mans, but it was worth the wait. We owe it all to one man’s
vision, many years ago.
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