I don’t know if I’ve ever mentioned it before, but I really like Corvettes. It’s something I don’t like to talk about, simply because it would be extremely gauche to be so hyper-focused on it. Honestly, I feel like if I talked all day about Corvettes, it’d probably get pretty annoying too, which is exactly why I’ve been very meticulous about avoiding the topic, opting instead to act like a well-adjusted human who knows how to have normal conversations. I have class.
But what I also have is a mfing CORVETTE BABY!!! One that I’ve been daily driving for over a year now, which is a fact that I know would confuse all the East Coasters who park theirs for the winter and sell them for pennies on the dollar. But for the young west coaster who doesn’t have a family of his own or many responsibilities outside of feeding himself nine times a day and wiping his rear once a week, it’s the perfect vehicle. And now, I’m gonna make it my goal for you to feel the same.


This is my magnum opus. This is my triumph. This is the middle finger to the establishment (my narcolepsy) that never wanted to give a young boy like me the opportunity to talk about the only thing that brings him happiness during these fleeting moments on Earth. This is the 18-year-late review of my daily-driven 2007 C6, brought to you by the main mouth breather of The Autopian. Let’s get into it.
The Basics

Year and Trim: 2007 Base Model with a Targa Top
Engine: Front engine, six-liter naturally aspirated V8, aluminum cast iron OHV.
Transmission: Borg-Warner T-56 six-speed manual transmission.
Drivetrain: Real wheel drive.
Output: 400 hp at 6,000 RPM, 400 lb-ft of torque at 4,400 RPM
Fuel economy: A reported 16 mpg city, 26 mpg highway, 19 mpg combined, but more on that later.
Base price: Original MSRP was $47,345, but the current national average is $21,865. Mine was mid-20s in spectacular condition with 55,xxx on the odometer.
First Impressions

Now, I didn’t exactly keep meticulous notes of my actual first impressions when I saw the car, but what I knew for certain was that I was in love. I think what the C6 gets right (other than everything) is a style that looks as new as it does classic. The C5 is undoubtedly a Corvette and felt like a further push of GM’s engineering prowess, but I think most people would agree it looks old. [Ed note: I do not, in fact, think it looks old – MH]
Now I’m not saying old is necessarily a bad thing! There are all kinds of old, from your George Clooneys to your Gary Buseys, and everything in between. If you ask me, the C5 is probably a bit of a Tom Cruise old, where it’s still sharp and incredibly capable in most situations, but from certain angles, it’s starting to show its age just a littleee bit.

The C6, however, is a Paul Rudd ager.
The internet often jokes about how Paul Rudd hasn’t aged a bit in the last several decades, and I feel like this coupe hasn’t either. If it came out today, I don’t think it would be all that revolutionary, but I think it would absolutely fit right in. At the same time, it feels like a car that’s a bit of a classic in a way I just don’t have the vocabulary to describe.
Anecdotal proof to that effect: When I’m parking next to some old heads, they often let out a little whistle and compliment it, calling it a classic, asking what year it is, all kinds of conversation. By contrast, when I head out for the day, the kids at the school I live across from all get excited and look at it like a spaceship and ask me to rev it (which I do, of course).
It feels agnostic to any generation, providing equal appeal to the typical 60+ Corvette demographic and to the Gen Alpha school kids who made fun of me with long hair by calling me Eric Andre. Lastly, of course, it appeals to me and all the 20-somethings nearby when I pull up in it.


The few who don’t dig it? Well, first off, they’re just wrong, and secondly, I give them a ride in it, and they immediately understand from that point on. Case in point: My roommate was very on-the-record for not liking ‘Vettes, but the first time I cranked it over and he heard that exhaust start burbling, I watched his eyebrows raise. A couple weeks later, we had a day out that ended in some canyon runs through Topanga, and it ended in him getting out of the car shaking, saying “I can’t lie: that scared the shit out of me.” And despite his fecal loss, he still relishes every opportunity to hop in it.
Speaking of hopping in, let’s talk about it.
The Interior
While present-day Griffin has regressed socially and become some kind of bashful, cantankerous rabid animal, my siblings and I were actually raised quite well, which means we weren’t the kinds of kids who destroyed everything our parents owned. One of those things was a ninth-gen Chevy Suburban, and I still distinctly remember the feeling of those plastic nobs and dials. It was notably better than my ‘01 Dodge Ram 1500 that I would regularly, accidentally, smash holes into its knee panel after lightly brushing it, but the Suburban was still far from the lap of luxury.
The Corvette, on the other hand, is performing an incredibly delicate ballet of nostalgia that toes the line between the old Suburban interior and one that’s elevated, more luxurious, and with a touch of the future sprinkled in.

The leather seats here definitely have some creases (which shouldn’t be a surprise considering it’s nearing two decades of life), but no cracks are showing in it anywhere (which is crazy given how I exclusively wear bedazzled Ed Hardy jeans to accentuate my curves). The leather in the childhood Suburban? More cracks and lines than the Grand Canyon.

As for the big, ugly P in the room, we need to talk about plastic. Economy cars with plastic in them? Totally fine and acceptable; there’s no need to give us high-end leather-clad panels everywhere. But as years have gone on, it feels like the quality of the plastics has grown exponentially, and there are honestly plenty of brands that are cramming luxurious leather interiors into their relatively cheap vehicles these days. Have y’all seen the modern Mazdas?
But that’s now, and this is then. We’re looking at an 18-year-old car under the GM banner, which means there’s no shortage of plastics inside it. And despite that, I cannot complain at all. They show no signs of wear, and the paint has held up flawlessly! By being a vestige of the old, I’m saddled with an interior filled with all the old dials and doodads the world is begging to return to, all while reminding me of the car my siblings and I used to laugh and fight in as a kid. I get the best of both worlds.
Oh and did I mention I get to feel like the pilot of a frickin’ F22 Raptor? Because this thing has a HUD babyyy!!!
Sorry, Thomas, but I disagree with you. HUDs ROCK! I kid you not, the HUD here is so comprehensive and responsive, I rarely find myself using the actual cluster. We have three modes here, with street mode dropping extra gauges and emphasizing the speed with a singular big number, and two track modes that give you additional gauges for your engine temperature as well as oil temp and pressure. And if you’re a nerd like me who likes to LARP as a racing driver, it even has an accelerometer on the bottom that’ll tell you how many Gs you’re pulling into a turn. It’s just FUN.

Even though I’m a lover of the HUD, the aforementioned analog dials are pretty crisp, too, especially when you compare them to the gauge cluster on the C7 that started to add some rudimentary digital panels that just…didn’t age great in my opinion. See for yourself:
And while we’re at it, I just wanna say that the C7 feels like it’s having an identity crisis overall. It’s trying to look futuristic, but it feels hampered by the capabilities of old GM manufacturing, and it’s most evident in a cockpit that looks like it was made with the same material as the C6’s, just with more stuff. Meanwhile, take a look at the C8’s that’s actually nice and just got an update!



It’s kinda clear the C7 is a bit of a redheaded stepchild, in my less than humble opinion.
The Driving Experience

Full stop: the Corvette is the fastest and overall nicest car I’ve ever had the pleasure of pressing the pedals of. The naturally aspirated V8 is so responsive, and I quickly learned on my first drive that 400 horses and an equivalent amount of torque is the perfect amount of both. It’s just enough for me to easily start an unexpected fishtail while turning onto a city street (allegedly), the perfect amount to get up to speed around the traffic on the highway on ramp, AND it’s enough to handle the worst starts and stops you can find in the hills of California. Seriously, I’ve taken multiple trips to San Francisco in it, and I haven’t had a single problem.
The performance caged inside that engine blesses you with a speedometer whose final number starts with a two, and yet, it doesn’t feel like I’m driving something eager to kill me. The chassis has an almost perfect 51:49 front bias weight distribution, with suspension that’s firm enough to communicate with my butt instead of sending bolts through it like everyone talks about with titans like the Porsche GT3RS.
Compared to everything else I’ve driven, the steering is heavy enough that I can feel the weight build up while hitting .5 G on the switchbacks of Angeles Crest, but not so heavy that I’m getting a shoulder workout while parallel parking it.
The only thing remotely aggressive about driving it is the T56 transmission. To my knowledge, this is the only car I’ve driven with the T56, so your mileage may vary, but the transmission is tough, and I love it for it.
Before I got the Corvette, I had a six-speed third-gen Mazda 3, and it kept with the Mazda tradition of having a buttery smooth stick shift that will satisfy any driving nerd, but that’s far from the case here. The clutch’s bite point is on a razor’s edge, with folks like my greasemonkey father regularly stalling it when he gets behind the wheel. The shifter itself has the stiffest centering spring I’ve ever felt, requiring me to yank it over into first like I’m doing dumbbell flies, then push forward with all my might like I’m bench pressing just to break through the gate.
While I would’ve undoubtedly hated a stick with such traits on the Mazda, it almost feels right at home on the Corvette. The car is a bucking bronco telling me “hey kid: I’ve got a lot of power here, and I don’t care about whether or not you got the skill to use it,” right before it drags me behind it, foot caught in the stirrups. While I’ve never ridden a horse, I’m confident my skills at wrestling the Corvette’s shifter will have me ready to tackle a horse and put it into a chokehold before it inevitably submits and taps out to my superior knowledge of Brazilian Jiu-jitsu (I took two classes three years ago).
What It Gets Right

I can’t lie, it kinda does everything well. We already talked about the looks and the performance, but for now, I wanna focus on why the car is a shockingly good daily driver.
Before the C6, my daily was the aforementioned Mazda 3, and that car was, to quote Max Verstappen, “simply lovely.” Not only was it a pretty fun driver, it was pretty comfortable, got good gas mileage (32 MPG combined), and had a cargo space comparable to a truck bed when you folded the rear seats down. When I was in the film industry, I knew it would be a reliable commuter that wouldn’t kill me on fuel and that I could fill with equipment when I got to the backlot.
I wouldn’t dare say the Corvette does all that as well as the Mazda did, but it gets close enough that I don’t feel the difference. My current combined mileage is in the low 20s, but I fully admit that I’ve been driving with a bit of a lead foot lately because I paid for the whole speedometer, so I’m gonna use the whole speedometer! But when I’m driving with fuel economy in mind, I’ve brought that average up to the 26 range, and that’s in the several hours-long stop-and-go of Los Angeles.
On roadtrips, I’ve punched in the cruise control and reset the fuel economy ticker to see where it sits, and I’ve had it clear 30. Compared to the Mazda, which had half the cylinders and roughly a third of the power in its economical body, I’m getting infinitely more smiles and almost as many miles from the Corvette, and that’s a trade I’ll take every single time.
And remember how I mentioned the Mazda’s cargo space? Yeah, the Corvette has that in its cozy little hatch, too.
A guy like me always packs heavy, and not just because I’m a certified diva and style icon, but because of the nature of the media world. On a shoot, I often have a carry on sized bag filled with an arrangement of cameras, lenses, and mics; often some lights in a case roughly two feet by one; a separate backpack with a drone; a massive tote bag filled with miscellaneous gear like tripods and portable generators; and so much more; and it ALL fits no problem.
Hell, I once took a road trip with someone where we had the trunk fully loaded AND were still able to take the targa top off and pack it on top of the cargo hold. There’s so much room there, you would’ve sworn it’s generated its own hammerspace to accommodate it all! And on the note of the targa, lemme tell you: that’s the way to live. Just look at this video of my hair blowing with the targa off as proof.
What It Gets Wrong
When I try to deliberately poke holes in the argument for the C6, I’m just about shit out of luck on criticisms. But only just about.
One thing that Chevy introduced in the 80s was the “skip shift” that locked out your second gear, guiding you instead to fourth. It was added to avoid any kinds of gas-guzzler taxes, but the end result is a car that refuses to let you use all the gears in its glorious transmission. Sure, you can ignore it by short shifting, revving it out, or punching into third, but second gear is fun, too, dammit! I won’t stand for its erasure!
Outside of that, the only real issues you have to worry about are the standard sports car quirks you can expect anywhere:
- Visibility is a distant stranger.
- The car is long and wide, making it a bit of a pain to park, especially with…
- A wanting turning radius.
- The body is low, leading to occasional scrapes of the front plastic diffuser (which seems overwhelmingly cosmetic, meaning it just sounds ugly when you scrape it instead of actually damaging the car).
While I don’t have the most sports car experience compared to basically everyone else on the site, I’ve read enough reviews and watched enough videos to know that those issues are common on plenty of sports cars. With that in mind, you almost have to grade it on a curve.
Does the C6 have visibility that can hold a candle to my old Dodge 1500? Not at all, those mirrors were the size of my chest and had the additional circular fisheye ones on them for good measure. Does that mean the Corvette is bad, though? No, it’s perfectly serviceable. Is its length and width a pain to fit in some places? Absolutely, but if it’s a spot that would have me worrying about parking a whoopty in it, maybe I should think twice about putting a nicer one there, too, eh?
That’s all I mean when I’m talking about grading it on a curve. You know there’s gonna be some compromises when you switch to a car like this, but everything it gets right just means so much more than the inconveniences that bring it down.
In Conclusion
Now that this is done, I’m sure you can understand why I wholeheartedly believe the C6 Corvette is indubitably the best commuter one can buy, right? RIGHT?!
I’m obviously hyperbolic in my love for the car, and a lot of it is definitely just because it’s my first exposure to the world of all things speed, but it truly does combine speed, practicality, and efficiency into a single package that so few cars can match.
The Corvette has served as the democratized beacon of speedy hope to the proverbial working man trying to outclass the performance of European sports cars. Because I’m a somewhat talented writer, I’m just gonna rip what I said from a previous Shartbox Showdown about its racing pedigree instead of typing it all out again:
“Let’s talk about the C6’s racing pedigree too: four LeMans wins. Fifty-one victories in its eight-year run in IMSA alone. It was a car so brisk on the track that many of its competitors straight up quit, with the ALMS series literally shutting down its class after everyone left. If that’s not an endorsement of its performance then what the hell is?! I’m sorry if I tout this car all the time but dammit I need people to know how much I love it!!!”

Past Griffin was really speaking facts, huh? But seriously, the first year the C6.R won Le Mans, it stared down the barrels of the Aston Martin DB9, Ferrari 550, Saleen S7, and the Lamborghini Murcielago. And to twist the knife a bit further, here’s each car’s base MSRP:
- The British One: $161,100
- The Prancing Horse: $212,000
- The Other American Car: around $300,000 (they were always optioned to hell, making it hard to find the true base price)
- The Murciful Bull: $288,000
And as a reminder, the C6 at its complete base price was $47,345, and the nicer Z06 track-focused trim clocked in at $65,800. I already loved my car to hell and back, but every time I consider those hefty price tags and remember the sheer amount of accolades it’s garnered through the years, I find myself loving the car just a little bit more each time I hop in the driver’s seat.
My first time in the driver’s seat was such an overwhelming yet pleasant shock to the senses, and while that shock has waned as time goes on, the car is still the gift that keeps on giving, the car I’ll always be grateful for, and the one I plan to hoon until the wheels come off.
But let me see if I can find someone dumb enough to let me drive their C8…
I liked the c5 when it came out and the C6 when it came out I didn’t see the point of the c7 and the c8 meh. Now I think I would grab a cheap c5. The jorts and new Ballances seem to be a moving target on generation. They were on the c4 and c5 for a long time now I think most are c6 and c7. Most of the Corvette math I see now are c6 and maybe some c7.
I’ve been dailying my 07 Z51 6MT since I bought it new. 165 K miles now. Easy to use a a daily car and fun still. One of the advantages of San Diego is year long Corvette drivin’ weather.
Lots and lots of cargo room compared to my C8 which I daily half the time now. I love driving both. Makes going to (and especially from) work so much better.
The C6 looks kind of timeless and will age very well, like the C4 has.
Yeah, I think the thing the C8 loses most is the justification of being a real daily driver. It’s obviously great, folks like you DO actually daily, but I feel like it’s genuine supercar look alone makes it a little bit more “oh, so that’s what you drive” compared to a more casual C6. And while (if I’m not mistaken) the C8 technically has more cargo space than a C6, it’s split across two smaller areas. Again: C8 is like…one of the best, most impressive cars made across its competitive set, and with respect to trims, it’s just different.
There is nothing more enjoyable than being able to FEEL the enthusiasm behind the words in an article.
Maybe it’s the dinner beers, maybe it’s because I too, am an absolute sucker for corvettes, but this just radiated all the feel-goods and made my night.
I’m not sincere about many things in life. The Corvette, though? That’s one of them.
So how many boxes of Kleenex do you go through during an average weekend canyon run?
*redacted*
Griffin, well chosen on the C6 that is the best looking ‘Vette until the C9 (hopefully).
Chevy Gets the performance right and then the styling right the next generation. C4? Beautiful to wedge-lovers, performance of a current hyundai (non-N).
C5, fantastic performer but ugly as fock.
C6? C5+ performance in a gorgeous package.
C7? F You. Uglier than a $20 prostitute. Performance doesn’t matter – there’s no running from that level of ugly. I hope everyone involved in designing the C7 has died of syphilis and that their children are infertile.
C8? Styled with a hatchet, but a monster of a machine.
C9? We can only hope.
You ok? Theyre just cars, man.
I know, right? I don’t have a Corvette. I never had a Corvette and I’m not actively shopping for one.
I have no valid reason for my strong opinions on them.
I say that is a spot on assessment!
Something tells me you really like the C7, Anoos!
Well done getting the 3LT, my first Vette was an 08 3LT that got cammed and put down around 450whp and I sincerely miss it.
Bought a C7 after selling it and although the C7 was a better sports car in just about every measurable way, if I was going to buy one back it’d be the C6 (sold the C7 for an S2000).
The C6 is a simple sledgehammer of a car, and unlike the C7 or C8 it’ll still be on the road in 20 years long after the computers on the new cars become unattainable.
Haters will hate no matter what you drive, if you like it that’s all that matters. I don’t think I’d ever own a vette but no denying they’re good value for how much performance they offer. I think the C7 is the best vette personally but to each their own.
I feel like at this point, anyone talking shit on c-5 and c-6 corvettes is either suffering from brand snobbery, or is regurgitating something they read on the internet. Like that time for a few years where everyone hated nickelback, but nobody bothered to ask why?
If you’re looking for people to disagree with you, you won’t find them here. Great car. Enjoy!
Old?
Yeah 2007 was just a couple years ago… wasn’t it?
My prefrontal cortex only fully developed two years ago. Everything before then wasn’t real
LoL! Points for honesty!
This is a great article. Cool, fun cars should be enjoyed as they were meant to be. Seriously considered one, but now past 60, went with a MB for comfort and 4wd for winter. How bad is insurance for the age challenged?
(New Balance,RDRR)
Just buy the resistor to defeat the skip shift, they’re like $10 on Amazon and install in 30 seconds
First thing we did on the Challenger! Other than the sketchy jacking up I had to do to crawl underneath, it was stupid simple and well worth the effort.
I’ve done it twice (the other Tremecs I’ve owned haven’t had skip shift) and in terms of satisfaction per dollar/time it’s the best modification in the world.
In time! It’s a want, just not a need for me yet.
I always thought the C6 looked like that big buff dude in a well tailored suit. The C4 is the same way, just with more hair and a sorta Don Johnson vibe to his outfit.
The C5, same dude with a bad haircuit wearing a cheap suit from men’s wearhouse thats half a size too big.
C3/C4 for me will always be too closely aligned with malaise – I actually like both body styles.
That said, I always liked the C5 exterior (long live pop-up headlights) and performance, but the interior is soooooo bad.
The 90s C4 are quite slick imo. Chevy did a good job of improving the C4 over the years. My Dad had a ‘91 and I loved it.
May be buying a C4 in a year or 2, have first refusal on a ZR1.
DO IT!!!! C4 ZR-1 was one of my childhood heros. I had a cool poster of one on my wall, it was a cutaway drawing showing the mechanical bits.
I also like how it was a technological dead end. They figured out how to make 2 valve heads that flowed just as well with the LS1, simple, lighter, better than huge/wide DOHC V8 that proved a real PITA to work on in Fords.
I have had my 2012 Corvette convertible base automatic for a bit over a year now and I really enjoy it.
I chose the base model because I have no trust in GM (every GM vehicle my family has had, going back to the late 60’s, has been a total piece of shit) and wanted something with the fewest options possible. Less to go wrong as I was taking a chance on a brand I have no faith in.
The Corvette was never my dream car, much preferred 911’s. I grew up in the 70’s-80’s and the late C3’s and early/mid C4’s never appealed to me (especially the horrible quality).
When it finally came time to have a ‘me’ car, I chose a Corvette because it is affordable and maintenance friendly. I have too much experience with modern VAG products to make that mistake again…I hope.
Absolutely love the HUD. Every time I drive my wife’s Pilot I get irritated that it does not have a HUD.
The car is so easy to drive at city speeds. Does ride a bit rough.
Parking SUCKS. I am 6’2″ with bad knees and getting into and out of the car I really need the door to open all the way. Hard to do that with someone parked next to you.
Visibility with the top up is pretty bad. You must have your mirrors set perfectly as looking over your shoulder is useless. But when the top comes down…yum!
The car has been pretty reliable.
It squeaks and rattles, but nothing like the new 1986 Corvette a friend had in high school.
One thing I really dislike is the FOB. The system that ‘reads’ the FOB is known for being a piece of crap. Have issues with ‘no FOB detected’ especially in bright sunlight. Other than that, I have had few issues.
Would I do it again? Yup. This car is just too fun to pass up.
Thank you for the HUD love! I need Thomas to ride in my car so he can see the finer things in life that we have.
And yeah, I’m 6’2″ as well and, while I’m pretty young, there’s a couple times I’m making grunts that would put my dad to shame.
And I’ve also had the occasional FOB issue! Very annoying
That’s funny, I must be getting old as I wouldn’t even think of a C5 as old let alone a C6.
C5/C6 may be the sweet spot, particularly the non-Z06 models. C6 has the nicer interior.
Me reading the headline: “C5’s count as old now?”
Me reading the body: “oh…”
Beautifully written! I love your style (writing and otherwise), and your enthusiasm for the C6. I admit that, if I were ever to seriously consider a Corvette (and I’m probably older than your Dad), I’d be shopping the C6. I agree that it still looks great (better than the C7 or C8, IMHO) and it seems to be the literal sweet spot in the ‘Vette lineup (although I wouldn’t turn down a 1966 Stingray or a C1).
“The car is a bucking bronco telling me “hey kid: I’ve got a lot of power here, and I don’t care about whether or not you got the skill to use it,” right before it drags me behind it, foot caught in the stirrups.”
But I have a concern about this: “and wiping his rear once a week“. Uhhhh… you might want to see a doctor. I know that’s a personal observation, but you brought it up! (https://www.verywellhealth.com/how-many-times-a-day-should-you-poop-11741852)
Anyway, always glad to see your articles pop up on the site.
I thank you sincerely for the read, but I won’t stand for the notes on my hygiene! Once a week is FINE, no matter how many times my doctor and roomies beg me to change my ways!
LoL! Well I’m at least glad to hear that I’m not alone in mentioning it 🙂
I’d be too tempted to throw a few grand on getting the interior covered in marine vinyl to cover the plastic, even moreso with the C7. I know this because I think of it all the time in my GR86, plus it would be nice to add some damn color. I considered a used C6, but it’s just that little bit too impractical for me as an only car.
No need to get custom leather–just get a late model C6 (2008+) with the 4LT package, which came with all leather interior.
That’s definitely better.
Okay, I commented too soon. This is also a great idea!
Marine vinyl? Seriously?
I didn’t even know that was a thing people did with car interiors that they wanted to actually, you know, sit in. How is that an improvement over decent upholstered seats or leather?
The real question is: how is leather an improvement over vinyl? Modern leather is higher maintenance, thin top grain trash that’s so overprocessed that it might as well be vinyl, just one that degrades more quickly. Vinyl is more resilient, low maintenance, comes in any color that doesn’t deteriorate, is cheaper, and easier to use without blemishes or grain to work with. Marine vinyl is that, but more resistant to UV (even if it’s not necessary in a coupe in New England). When I was a kid, a family friend who was a top MB dealer had me try out two identical cars, one MB Tex (vinyl), one leather, and tell him which was which. I took a while to answer and I can’t remember if I guessed right as that’s all it was. He said, there really is no difference until you see these cars in 20 years and the vinyl will likely look like new and the leather won’t. Leather has its place, but as modern automotive upholstery, it’s outdated.
Thanks for the details!
I have leather in two of my cars (both 3rd gen Subaru Foresters), and on one of those, it came from a Katzkin kit that was custom-designed to fit the car (the other was factory).
My teenage son and I were able to install the Katzkin kit ourselves, over the course of a few weekends. It wasn’t easy, but it wasn’t incredibly hard, I guess? Anyway, the discovery was that even “leather” applications for car interiors are probably 40% vinyl, anyway (Katzkin kits are the ones that dealers have installed when you select the “leather” option).
I’ve also recovered some seats with “leather-like” interior vinyl upholstery in an older car (1970’s Toyota), and they turned out pretty well. In fact, the book I used to help with the process (we had to remove all the original seat coverings and make patterns from scratch) said that vinyl was the way to go, and that “if you want that leather smell, just toss a baseball glove under the seat” LOL.
But I guess I always associated marine vinyl with sticky plasticky coverings suited for outdoor storage.
Like anything, there are levels of quality that can seem like a night/day difference and I wouldn’t do cheap stuff. I was a marine mechanic for a little while and I was usually impressed with the resiliency of vinyl in constant salt air and sun exposure and some were pretty supple.
One thing I swear by for leather, though, is bike saddles. I have Brooks on all my bikes as I find them very comfortable (the aesthetic is nice, too). They’re about 1/4″ thick leather, cut for optimum grain orientation, not to maximize the number of saddles per hide like some imitators, and they conform to you over time like shoes, which vinyl won’t do. I also tried an imitator and didn’t like it—I believe that, because they weren’t cut for grain strength, they had to back the leather underneath with some kind of reinforcing cloth that appeared to prevent it from ever breaking in. Brooks does make a line of rubber-based saddles that I’ve never tried. People seem to either love or hate them, which is pretty much the way it goes for any half-decent saddle or mattress, but now I’m veering way off the subject.
Marine vinyl: It is soft-touch and stretches around corners well. Also, this is for covering plastic on the console, not the seats.
Interesting. I never thought about using it for covering the hard plastic. Back in the heyday of import-modding in the late 90’s and early 2000’s, lots of folks just scuffed stuff up, primed it, sanded it, and painted it.
This is a fantastic idea!
I still think currently the C5 is a better value but the C6 remains my favorite Vette. It feels like the formula finally hit perfect there. The C7 is just a little overcooked and the C8 might as well just be a different vehicle entirely, as much as I appreciate them.
C5 >>> C6 aesthetically. The C5 knows it is old and proudly rocks the popups and amber bulb DRLs. The C6 is a tween that’s trying too hard with the body-matching headlights.
That said, both of them still look like old cars and neither has aged very well at all. I get the performance is a decent bang for the buck… but they are not head turners and I would fall out of love quickly.
There was a week or so when I felt I fell out of love with it, but then I saw the sun catch it at the perfect angle when filling up on a road trip, and I got suckered in again. But to each their own!
100%, to each their own. I won’t yuck your yum, as the saying goes around here. I rock a 20 year old coupe as well, and just last week a new mail guy asked me if it was a 350 or 370 (I have it debadged). He couldn’t believe how old it was! And I still turn around and look at it every time I get out in a parking lot.
If you feel that way about your C6, that’s all that matters!
I dunno, all this talk of Corvettes has me looking really longingly at a yellow C5 convertible available locally. It does feel like it’s still a head turner to me.
I think C5’s in bright colors still have a lot of charm. They hit the sweet spot of nostalgia, but not TOO old for me.
I agree I prefer the C5 over the C6 by a wide margin. Maybe it was because the C6 lost the popup lights which I thought were the coolest thing as a kid when these came out but the C6 just feels cheaper to me.
And yes I realize both have more plastic than a Fisher Price factory on the interior.
Great choice. The C6 was the last corvette with a nice rear end…and it really is one of the nicest butts on any corvette. Never loved the C7, and while I really do like the C8 styling (screw the haters), its rear was one of the few misses. Also, I think around 400 hp is right where the sweet spot should be for street legal cars. Congrats.
Agreed on the C8! I think it looks great! It doesn’t blow me away quite like it did when it came out, but I still think it’s pretty darn solid!
Totally agree!
All sadness about being old aside, I do think the C6 is a very good generation of Corvette and a good value at this point. It’s the newest Corvette I think is a reasonable purchase. Good choice on your part and great write-up!
Thanks Drew!
Very persuasive.
If I ever end up working in the US again I’m going to buy a C6.
Captain Muppet: you are proof that my mission is working. If I can convince just one more person to buy a C6, I will have won this game of life.
It looks great, it’s fun, reliable and not expensive. What’s not to love?
Like a Porsche but reliable and not expensive.
Oh no…a C6 is officially an old Corvette. Oof. I may never recover.
I appreciate this note. Thank you for being closer to my age.
says: Old Corvette
shows: C6
Fucking savage, sonny.
Don’t blame me! Blame the haunting realities of the forward march of time!