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The 1997 Corvette features
several first-time high tech innovations, such as black
lights for the instrument panel and a "plastic" (composite)
intake manifold.
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The first 200 production C5
Corvettes were painted red, not the traditional white color
for the first production run.
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The 1997 Corvette is the first
one designed from the ground up as a Corvette, with very
little borrowing of parts from other cars. One of the few
"Off the Shelf" parts are the exterior door handles which
are the same ones used on the Oldsmobile Aurora.
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The first use of a transaxle in a
production Corvette occurred in the '97. However, the first
plans for one were in the Q-Corvette in 1958, planned for
the 1960 model. Transaxles showed up in Corvette prototypes
in the mid '60s in running models.
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The first 4 speed in a Corvette
was built by Borg Warner in 1957. The first transaxle in a
production Corvette was also built by Borg Warner, forty
years later in 1997. Both were introduced late in the model
year.
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Borg Warner has produced a
transmission for each generation of Corvette: C1 - 1957 to
1962, C2 - 1963, C3 - 1980 to 1981, C4 - 1984 to 1988, and
C5 - 1997 to 1998.
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The 1997 Corvette is the first
Corvette to have windshield wipers that sweep in the same
direction instead of opposing directions.
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The 1998 Corvette convertible is
the first to offer the same sport suspension package as the
coupe. Since the C5 was designed from the start as a
convertible model, the ragtop is nearly identical in
structural rigidity to the coupe.
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The first Corvette to sport a
real trunk since 1962 again appeared with the 1998 Corvette
convertible.
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November 4, 1997 - The 9752nd
1998 Corvette rolled down the assembly matching the total
1997 Model production run.
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The last "Fairway Green" C5 came
down the assembly line as a '98 model on November 10, 1997.
The color was discontinued due to poor sales.
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It takes 55 hours to build the
new C5 Corvette, down from 70 hours for the previous C4
model.
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For the first time in history,
the 1999 Corvette is available in three disctinct body
styles... Coupe, Convertible, and Hardtop (aka, "Fixed Roof
Coupe").
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The performance axle ratio for C5
Corvettes with automatic transmission is 3.15:1 (the
standard ratio is 2.73:1).
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The 2000 Corvette featured new
color choices to celebrate Y2K... Millenium Yellow and Dark
Bowling Green Metallic... plus a new Torch Red interior
option.
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2001 will forever be remembered
as the year the Z06 performance hardtop was introduced with
its 385HP LS6 engine and 6 speed manual transmission.
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Corvette's use of a titanium
exhaust for the Z06 was the first ever for a mass production
automobile.
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Active Handling became standard
equipment in 2001.
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The 2002 Corvette featured a new
color, Electron Blue Metallic, and an upgraded 405HP LS6
engine for the Z06.
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The 2002 Z06 windshield was
thinner than that used in the coupe models, shaving 2.65
pounds per car. The lighter windshield was shared with
convertibles equipped with the Heads Up Display (HUD)
option, which was standard on 2002 Z06 models.
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The 2003 Corvette heralds the
50th anniversary with a special edition in Anniversary Red
with Shale interior and a new, high-tech magnetic suspension
option for all models but the Z06, which continues
essentially unchanged from the 2002 model year.
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In addition to Anniversary Red,
Medium Spiral Gray Metallic was a new color in 2003.
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The Magnetic Ride Option offered
in 2003 uses a magnetic fluid which adjusts shock damping
1,000 times per second, roughly equivalent to reacting to
each inch of road surface at 60 mph.
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2004 marks the last of the
extremely successful fifth generation Corvette and was
celebrated with the special Commemorative Edition Corvettes
in Lemans Blue with special badging, graphics and interior
appointments.