If Volt, why Camaro shaped?The All New 2026 Volt!
I hadn’t watched the race entirely yet but see what you mean…I read the thread title in the context of tonight's race and was expecting a WAYYYY different thread about NASCAR cracking down of manufacturer collusion next year.
Forgive me please if I’ve missed it but what is Chevrolet going to race next year with the Camaro not being in production? Corvette? Suburban? Seriously, I’ve probably missed it.
No kidding. I drive my sedan with pride.They'll probably switch to Cadillac, or put a Corvette logo on a Camaro body.
This country is so weird. People drive pickups and SUVs and bitch about gas prices and are now mad that ICE models of sedans and coupes are being done away with.l
Neither of those things have any chance of happening.They'll probably switch to Cadillac, or put a Corvette logo on a Camaro body.
GM is already putting Cadillac branding on Prototype-class sports cars. Toyota has a Supra logo on its stock cars. Why are Caddy or Corvette such a reach?Neither of those things have any chance of happening.
I thought all markings were part of the wrap. I think the individual decals have been eliminated.All Chevrolet has to do is pick a model they want to use and get a heat gun to remove the Camaro decals.
I thought all markings were part of the wrap. I think the individual decals have been eliminated.
Corvair, start of the rear engine revolution in Nascar.
¿You do know 'No va' means 'Doesn’t go' is Spanish, right?They need to bring back the nova, especially with cup going to Mexico City next year!
Because IMSA prototypes and NASCAR Cup Series are advertising to two different demographics. Notice how Toyota doesn't run the Lexus LC in Xfinity.GM is already putting Cadillac branding on Prototype-class sports cars. Toyota has a Supra logo on its stock cars. Why are Caddy or Corvette such a reach?
Sounds like Corvette would be a perfect fit. As someone else suggested, it will probably be just Chevrolet with no model name.Because IMSA prototypes and NASCAR Cup Series are advertising to two different demographics. Notice how Toyota doesn't run the Lexus LC in Xfinity.
GM is VERY protective of the Corvette nameplate and the aura around it. They have VERY tightly controlled where, when and who races them as much as humanly possible since the C5 debuted in the late 90's. There is about as much chance of a Camaro bodied stock car being badged a Corvette as there is a blizzard in hell.I think the corvette would miss the nascar demographics. How many fans can afford to buy one of those?
Sent from my SM-G991U using Tapatalk
The SS brand was extremely limited but was used for a couple of years.I think the corvette would miss the nascar demographics. How many fans can afford to buy one of those?
Sent from my SM-G991U using Tapatalk
I took that to be his/her point?¿You do know 'No va' means 'Doesn’t go' is Spanish, right?
Check the part highlighted in brown. It specifically says 'Camaro ZL1'.Photos above on Hendrick site for 2025. Just refers to it as Chevy.
I'm fairly confident that all that Camaro and ZL1 branding will fade away in the next few weeks. I will also submit that that is one of the best looking schemes on the #24 since the mid 2000's. The scheme that ran yesterday in the finale was nothing short of embarrassing, every bit as awful as the one with the lime green in it.Check the part highlighted in brown. It specifically says 'Camaro ZL1'.
I thought the scheme yesterday in the rear of the car looked cool. Gordo flames on every scheme isn't going to happen every time.I'm fairly confident that all that Camaro and ZL1 branding will fade away in the next few weeks. I will also submit that that is one of the best looking schemes on the #24 since the mid 2000's. The scheme that ran yesterday in the finale was nothing short of embarrassing, every bit as awful as the one with the lime green in it.
If you're selling selling car paint, white doesn't seem the way to grab attention. Nor does not understanding what colors do and don't go together. They taught us that in like the third grade.I thought the scheme yesterday in the rear of the car looked cool. Gordo flames on every scheme isn't going to happen every time.
Where is the emoji smacking myself in the head?Check the part highlighted in brown. It specifically says 'Camaro ZL1'.
A white hood with a Huge "A" in the middle of it signifying the brand draws the eye when the car is in a crowd to the sponsor who is footing the bill for the car being on the track. They didn't teach you industrial graphic design when you were in third grade.If you're selling selling car paint, white doesn't seem the way to grab attention. Nor does not understanding what colors do and don't go together. They taught us that in like the third grade.
I thought they were actually told they can run it as long as they want? Just sounds like no body upgrades.I thought the rule was you could run a car model 1 year after production ended?
There is a reason why a couple of the DuPont/Axalta schemes are iconic, and this one won't EVER be. Also keep in mind there no real consumer component to this sponsorship. The "customer" is body shops and auto body suppliers, and they are going to be far more impressed by a flashy paint scheme then a white car with an a big A on the hood.A white hood with a Huge "A" in the middle of it signifying the brand draws the eye when the car is in a crowd to the sponsor who is footing the bill for the car being on the track. They didn't teach you industrial graphic design when you were in third grade.