Название: Steve Magnante's 1001 Corvette Facts
Автор: Steve Magnante
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Автомобили и ПДД
isbn: 9781613254561
isbn:
207 Chevrolet retained racing legend Smokey Yunick and his Daytona, Florida–based Best Damned Garage in Town to help with the early race programs. Despite finishing 15th overall (the top five finishers were Ferrari, Ferrari, Jaguar, Aston Martin, and Maserati), the fact that Corvette even finished the grueling 12-hour event was impressive. Chevrolet’s ad agency, Campbell Ewald, made the most of things, delivering the classic “Real McCoy” magazine ad that appeared in the July 1956 issues of Hot Rod and Road & Track. It was Corvette’s first of many magazine ads touting race success.
208 Supporting the adage that racing improves the breed, the finned brake drums and metallic brake linings used on the 1956 Sebring race cars became part of 1957’s RPO 684 heavy-duty racing suspension option. In addition, RPO 684 also included turbine-like air deflectors placed inside the drums to circulate cooling air, open-faced front backing plates with flexible “elephant-ear” air scoops to force air into the drums, rear-brake cooling ducts, high-rate springs, shocks, and 15 × 5.5-inch steel wheels. Priced at $780.10 (1/4 of the cost of the car), only 51 of the 6,399 Corvettes built in 1957 were so equipped.
209 The RPO 684 big-brake option returned for 1958 with a cool twist. The restyled fascia for 1958 models included a pair of large fighter-jet-inspired air intakes below the quad headlamps, obviously the work of Bill Mitchell’s aircraft-fixated mind. Purely ornamental, they were blanked off for practical reasons, with flat-black paint applied to hide the flat dead ends a few inches inboard. However, with the RPO 684 option, the intakes were trimmed open to feed air to the rear brakes. Huh? Remember, the front brakes used flexible elephant-ear air scoops to direct passing air into the vented backing plates. To get airflow to the rear drum brakes, the grille-mounted intakes fed air into fiberglass conduits mounted to the underside of the front fender and leading down into the hollow rocker panels beneath the doors. From there, the moving airstream was released from the ends of the rocker boxes into square outlets that shot the air into smaller air scoops affixed to the rear-brake backing plates.
210 The 1958 RPO 684 big-brake package required extensive specialized work. Not only did assembly workers have to carefully trim out the fake air intakes under the headlamps, but they had to mount the ductwork to the undersides of the fenders, cut access holes in each end of the rocker boxes, and glass in the square outlets feeding the rear drums. Still priced the same $780.10 as the simpler 1957 setup, 144 were built.
211 If the 1958 Corvette nose’s decorative twin air intakes were perfectly suited for transformation into the RPO 684’s functional brake air-feed ducts, then what about the 1957 big-brake package, where did its rear-brake cooling system ingest air from? Lacking the 1958’s ersatz nostrils, engineers mounted two conical inlet scoops behind the teeth of the simpler 1957 grille. These fed air into 4-inch-diameter flexible hoses that ran along the inner fenders then down to each rocker panel. Once delivered to the rocker panel, the rest of the system rearward to the drums shared the 1958 layout.
212 For 1959, Chevrolet again offered the RPO 684 Heavy-Duty Racing Suspension option, but (except for a handful of early cars) it eliminated the troublesome brake-cooling ductwork and lowered the price from $780.10 to $425.05. Surprisingly, despite the more affordable price, demand remained flat, with 142 takers, two less than 1958 (when 144 were sold). In all instances (the big-brake equipment was offered from 1957 through 1962), the “elephant-ear” air scoops were shipped loose in the trunk for dealer or customer installation.
213 In 1959, all Corvettes were equipped with tubular steel traction bars. Mounted to the top of each end of the rear axle housing and running forward to the articulated frame mounts, they reinforced the front halves of the leaf springs to combat spring wrap-up and axle tramp on hard acceleration and braking. Before Chevrolet added them to all 1959s (regardless of power rating or transmission), companies such as Traction Master made small fortunes selling similar devices to owners of older Corvettes.
214 Proving that bigger isn’t necessarily better, the Cerametallic brake linings used in Corvette’s optional brake packages had less contact area with the drums than the standard organic brake linings. The drop from 158 to 112.5 square inches was due to 1-inch gaps between the friction blocks. Intentionally added by Bendix engineers, they improved heat dissipation and reduced glazing and were also seen on the brake shoes used in NASCAR superspeedway race cars until the advent of disc brakes.
215 Although real knock-off wheels didn’t arrive until 1963, for 1956, the vague suggestion of two-bar knock-off spinners evolved into very realistic-looking copies. These hefty items were affixed to Corvette’s various stamped stainless-steel (snap-on) wheel-cover designs through 1962. Interestingly, Chevrolet adapted the cast-metal spinners for use on passenger-car wheel covers and even for those used on the Corvair Monza. The key difference was that only Corvette-sourced spinners were marked “Chevrolet Corvette.” Others repeated the “Chevrolet” nameplate twice.
216 Arkus-Duntov undoubtedly flinched at Corvette’s simulated knock-off wheel covers. It is ironic that 1957–1962 Corvettes equipped with the optional big-brake packages or the RPO 276 15 × 5.5-inch steel wheels (15 × 5-inch wheels were standard) were stuck with the same austere hubcaps fitted to 6-cylinder 150s and Biscaynes!
217 When the RPO 276 15 × 5.5-inch rims were specified, Chevrolet ensured that the spare tire was mounted to a matching rim, as well. This eased tire rotation. RPO 276 order rates were never high and amounted to 51 in 1957, 404 in 1958, 214 in 1959, 246 in 1960, 337 in 1961, and 561 in 1962.
218 Whitewall tires are commonly installed on restored Corvettes today, but how common were they originally? They were a mandatory option from 1953 to 1956; in 1957 the customer finally had a say in the matter. The 6.70-15 whitewalls added $31 to the total price and were taken by 5,019 out of 6,339 buyers in 1957, 7,428 out of 9,168 buyers in 1958, 8,173 out of 9,670 buyers in 1959, 9,104 out of 10,261 buyers in 1960, and 9,780 out of 10,939 buyers in 1961. In 1962, fashion changed; a thinner, 1-inch-wide band replaced the wide white stripe. Take rates for whitewall tires are not known for 1962 at this time.
219 In these days of exotic hydro-formed frame rails, forged-aluminum suspension control arms, carbon-ceramic brake rotors, and plastic-based leaf springs, it’s shocking to learn that Chevrolet relied on simple metal shims to revise the Corvette’s front-suspension geometry in 1956. Positioned between the front control arms and their mounting points on the front frame rails, these simple stamped-steel shims added much-needed caster for improved handling.
220 In 1957, Chevrolet used another basic device, a simple, flat, steel steering adapter, to improve steering response. The same steering box and pitman arm remained, but an extension was clamped to the center steering arm at the frame crossmember. The altered pivot points changed the steering ratio from 21:1 to 16.6:1. Only 3.7 turns were needed to go lock to lock, but the setup increased steering effort during parking maneuvers so much that General Motors restricted installation only to cars ordered with the RPO 684 heavy-duty brake and suspension option.
221 The first wheel-cover redesign in three years was in 1959. Although it was almost identical to the pressed stainless-steel units used since 1956, the flat span between each of the 10 “spokes” was pierced with a 2.0 × .5-inch rectangular vent. It may sound laughable in our modern world of aluminum and even carbon-fiber wheels, but the 10 vents eliminated the heat-trapping effect of previous non-pierced, full-sized wheel covers. Working with the four air gaps formed by the union of the wheel spyder and hoop, the heat generated by the brake drums finally had free passage to the outer face of each wheel. That said, the big-brake and 15 × 5.5-inch wheel options continued using the small passenger-car center caps, which provided unrestricted airflow to carry away СКАЧАТЬ