Mid-engine vette
Basically, the engine is where the back seat should be, surrounded by (1) rear suspension/wheels to the sides, (2) cockpit firewall to the front, (3) roof (fixed or convertible) from the top, and (4) trunk to the rear. (Assuming a rear trunk...if there isn't one, luggage space is even further compromised than usual.) The only "normal" access is from the bottom.
On a Porsche Boxster (for example), to get at the top of the engine requires lowering the roof part way (to get the roof cover open), removing the package tray/rear speakers, and then removing a metal engine cover, just to get to the point that you can see the engine. (Hint: changing the air filter is 1/2 hour labor charge and requires every minute of it.) To get at the front of the engine, you remove the seats and rear firewall carpet and yet another metal engine cover, and then work from inside the cockpit; that's for what should be simple jobs like belt replacement. There are a lot of jobs people routinely do in their garages on C5s that require transaxle and/or engine removal on the Porsche...hell, there are external engine parts that you can't even see without dropping the whole drivetrain.
Most Ferraris are even worse, with costs for normal 10000km service running into multiple $K.
And access aside, there's just a less space holding the same amount of drivetrain: everything is stuffed in even tighter than normal.
Mid-engine 'can' be reasonably service-friendly if the whole rear clamshell tilts to expose the engine. Then it looks the front end of a C4 vette
See Noble/Rossion, Ford GT, etc. Normal service is not too hard. The Ford GT
The C4
Other mid engined cars with big engines such as the old Ford GT, Lambos, etc are huge. Until I saw a Lambo in person I didn't realize they were that big, and no space to carry anything.
For a corvette to be successful, it has to be practical, not just a track toy.
The annoying part was, as soon as you added a passenger, everything else had to go in the trunk, including cameras, coolers, coats, and all the other things you normally want access to from inside the cabin on a long drive.
The other annoying thing was that I really wanted the seat to go back maybe another 1/2", but the seat back was slammed dead solid against the firewall...and I'm only 5'10".
Last edited by Lee DeRaud; Jun 24, 2015 at 07:16 PM.
Mid-engine 'can' be reasonably service-friendly if the whole rear clamshell tilts to expose the engine. Then it looks the front end of a C4 vette
See Noble/Rossion, Ford GT, etc. Normal service is not too hard. The Ford GT
For those who haven't seen one opened up, here's a Boxster "engine bay":

I think I opened up mine twice the two years I owned it, and one of those times was during a smog check.
Last edited by Lee DeRaud; Jun 24, 2015 at 08:02 PM.
The Best of Corvette for Corvette Enthusiasts

You're right though a totally different format would compete for Ferrari and Lambo owners business. Or anyone else that wants to spend that type of coin.
The question is, can they sell that car in those numbers? Take a C7, reduce the cabin size to the point where a 6-footer won't fit, reduce the luggage capacity to the point where a couple can't take it on a 5-day trip, and turn routine maintenance into something that simply cannot be done without a lift (or worse, dropping the engine and/or transaxle), and see how many actually make it out the dealer door over the long haul.
(Analogy: Porsche sells a lot more 911s than they do Boxsters/Caymans, despite the mid-engine cars being cheaper and handling better.)
The Caddy could easily come in 2 flavors:
Decaf, with the 3.6l TT V6 from the current ATS-V, making a bit under 500hp; priced where the current Vette leaves off; around $90k
Full-caf V-series, with a 640hp+ blown V8; priced $125k or so.
This would be exactly what VW group did with the R8. People are not going to purchase a 100k+ mid-engine VW; but they routinely purchase $60k+ sports sedans (based on cheap VW’s) and they’ve had a nice success with the R8.
Think about it: The biggest complaint about new Vettes has always been having to deal with the Chevy dealership. Cadillac does better in this regard.
I've been thinking of replacing my 18 year old Tahoe. Every time I talk to a Chevy dealer, I decide I would rather spend my money with my mechanic.
The Caddy could easily come in 2 flavors:
Decaf, with the 3.6l TT V6 from the current ATS-V, making a bit under 500hp; priced where the current Vette leaves off; around $90k
Full-caf V-series, with a 640hp+ blown V8; priced $125k or so.
You need to get out more.
I have a Pantera and I can tell you the driving fun factor of it to the C5 is a world of difference. I like my C5, don't get me wrong. However it is not a mid engine car.

The Chevy Cruze also outsells the V6 Camaro, because it's not an enthusiasts car, nor is a V6 Camaro. The Corvette is somewhat of an icon. I stand by my point that if Chevy switched to a V6 on a CORVETTE they would lose sales...
















