Camaro ZL1 overcomes mullet days

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The 2013 Camaro ZL1 is equipped with a supercharged 6.2-liter V-8 engine that sees duty in the Chevrolet Corvette. (MCT News Service)
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What you think of the Chevrolet Camaro depends entirely on how old you were when you first saw one.

If you came of age in the late 1970s or 1980s, a Camaro is a rolling automotive mullet. But if you came of age in the 1960s, when the car debuted, the Camaro is something else entirely. It’s the Corvette’s kid brother, a fire-breathing four-wheeled delinquent ready for a street fight on Saturday night.

That’s the Camaro Chevrolet wants you to remember. So it should come as little surprise that the Camaro’s newest model with a legendary name: the ZL1.

Way back in the days when GM ruled the automotive world, the 1969 ZL1 was the most powerful Camaro you could buy.

The ZL1 was the brainchild of dealer Fred Gibb, who managed to persuade Chevrolet to assemble 1969 Camaros with Chevy’s mighty all-aluminum 427-cubic-inch V-8, rather than the 396 cubic-inch V-8 used in the SS and Z/28 models which were, until then, the top of the line. Rated conservatively at 425 horsepower, the bigger engine option alone cost $4,160, pushing the cost of a ZL1 to almost $7,000, or double the price of lesser Camaros. It’s no wonder only 69 were built.

Forty-three years later, what’s old is new.

The ZL1 returns for the 21st century as a coupe or convertible, equipped with a supercharged 6.2-liter V8 that sees duty in the Corvette, not to mention the Cadillac CTS-V. Here, the engine is rated at 580 horsepower and 556 pound-feet of torque. That’s more than the Cadillac, but less than the Corvette. When matched with a six-speed transmission – manual or automatic – it’s good for a 0-60 mph run of four seconds, a quarter-mile dash of 11 seconds and a top speed of 184 mph.

Mullet-era Camaros never ran this fast – unless being hurled off a cliff.

Climb inside and twist the ignition key. No push button starters here; this is old-school stuff. Listen to this fire-breathing chunk of Detroit heavy metal (that is built in Canada) comes to life. It throbs and rumbles. The dual exhaust burbles with menace, tempting you to disturb the peace.

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