Chevrolet SuperSport Sedan Coming in 2013

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DuceTheTruth

No Flexxin No Fakin
Apr 1, 2003
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#1
Chevrolet SuperSport Sedan Coming in 2013, Wagon and Ute Body Styles Possible for Next Gen on Zeta II
May 2, 2012 at 4:08pm by Dave Mable




General Motors sees a growing need for rear-wheel-drive cars in its product portfolio, and such an influx requires either an unimaginably flexible platform or a series of rear-drive component sets. Since “unimaginably flexible” isn’t something GM does well, the company is in the midst of dropping, reworking, and creating rear-drive architectures.

General Motors currently sells rear-drive cars built off of one of three architectures: Y-Car, Sigma, and Zeta. The first underpins only the Corvette—an anomaly in the company’s platform strategy. But the latter two volume platforms grew from a program dating to the early 1990s called Global Rear-Wheel Drive (GRWD in GM-speak). The plan was to use GRWD to build some Cadillacs plus a slew of Holdens for Australia. GRWD was doomed to failure because the Cadillac models required significant cost increases that couldn’t be absorbed by the Holdens, which are sold in vast numbers as razor-margined company cars. The project then splintered and evolved into Sigma and Zeta.

While only three Cadillacs have been spun from Sigma—the previous-gen SRX, the STS, and the current CTS—Zeta serves as the base for products as diverse as the Chevy Camaro, the El Camino–like Holden Ute, and even a Buick Park Avenue for China. All of the Zeta vehicles do have one thing in common, though: They’re porky. When Zeta development was in full swing, Holden management decreed that the Commodore (and all its variants) would ace the Australian NCAP crash tests, but the brand’s price sensitivity meant that extensive use of costly high-strength steel was out. And so the Zeta cars were made strong the old-fashioned way, with mass.


2012 Chevrolet Caprice PPV​

Current 2012 Chevrolet Caprice PPV​

New Stuff: Two RWD Platforms On the Way

Today’s Zeta will morph into the lighter and even more flexible Zeta II for 2015, at which point the Camaro will move onto the Alpha component set also used by Cadillac’s ATS and next-gen CTS. Before that happens, though, Chevy will sell a pair of Zeta-based cars. Actually, the first of these is already on sale—if you’re a state, county, or municipal government that’s allowed to purchase imported products. (Many departments have rules that prevent them from purchasing vehicles not assembled in America.) The vehicle is the Chevrolet Caprice PPV.

The second vehicle, of course, is the most interesting. Perhaps as a way to justify future North American production of its cop car, perhaps simply because Chevy “gets it,” a civilized, civilian take on the PPV joins the model lineup next year. Wearing the SuperSport badge, the car will initially ride on the current Zeta platform and be offered exclusively as a four-door sedan. The SuperSport name and styling also will be applied to the 2013 Chevrolet NASCAR entry. The launch powerplant for the roadgoing car is expected to be the Camaro SS’s 6.2-liter V-8, pumping out something on the high side of 415 hp. A version of GM’s latest 3.6-liter V-6 will be added after the launch for the weaker of heart; we’d expect this engine to produce at least 320 hp. The SuperSport and the Caprice PPV will then migrate to the Zeta II platform in time for the 2015.5 model year. When this happens, full production will shift to North America, thereby delivering a much larger market for the cop version. In addition to the SuperSport sedan, a cropped-rear-overhang sport wagon and a Ute pickup are being considered for the North American market.

Zeta II also will be used for two Chinese-market Buicks starting in late 2014, and one or both of these cars could arrive in North American showrooms if it’s determined that brand needs large rear-drive cars. Conspicuously absent from the Zeta II plans is anything from Cadillac. That’s another story—and another platform.
 

L.D.S.

The Bakersman
Aug 14, 2006
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Mizzourah
#5
lol Trolling as always.

Telling the guy that mentioned it last time in a thread unrelated to this topic as a form of trolling... genius.
 

DuceTheTruth

No Flexxin No Fakin
Apr 1, 2003
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#9

Nah man...I didnt do a re-post of a post that I myself made.

L.D.S. was on the case the whole time cause I was sittin here like who what when and where...good lookn out(L.D.S).

But yea, the main subject matter of the two threads are completely unrelated. Although this thread DID answer some shit we was wonderin about in the other thread I posted.

And about a year or so ago I did actually make an initial thread about the new Chevy police car before it came out. Some were wondering why the hell I made a thread about a damn police car and some thought it was cool(If I can remember correctly).

So just to comment on the thread itself...

I cant wait till Chevy introduces the new SS. If they dont fuck it up it might create a fanbase as large if not larger than the 94-96 Impala.
 

DuceTheTruth

No Flexxin No Fakin
Apr 1, 2003
6,884
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#14
You say that this is a re-post of a thread that I posted a month ago. I dont see how thats possible. I dont cross my own shit up. The thread you are talking about is highlighting the arrival of the upcoming 2014 Chevy Impala, a FWD car. And THIS particular thread is highlighting Chevrolets new "RWD" plans mainly the upcoming arrival of a vehicle said to be called the "SS", essentially a civilian version of the new police car in which you stated "looks like they took a crown vic, and stuck it in a trash compactor. "

My friend, the new Impala and the new SS are 2 TOTALLY DIFFERENT CARS, 2 TOTALLY DIFFERENT PLATFORMS which would in my eyes make this 2 TOTALLY DIFFERENT POST.

Either your fuckin with me, not very inclined on topics like this, or dont understand nothin that you read. At any rate, I hope this clears things up for you. I dont mean no disrespect to you so I hope none was taken.


2014 Impala



Chevy PPV Police Car



Put a bowtie in the front of that grille and there you have it....(or SS)
 

DuceTheTruth

No Flexxin No Fakin
Apr 1, 2003
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#16
Ok, fine i made a mistake. I was wrong. This is not a re-post. No, i'm not fucking with you....are you fucking with me?

Cool, no problem.

I'm not fuckin with you, I got bigger, much more important shit on my plate at this point in my life than to go out my way to fuck with you over some internet debate shit. It's not that serious.
 

DuceTheTruth

No Flexxin No Fakin
Apr 1, 2003
6,884
6,017
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#18
April 2012 Sales: What the Headlines Don’t Tell You
May 7, 2012 at 5:56pm by Justin Berkowitz





Freeze, Police (Budgets)!

Sales of the government-only Chevrolet Caprice in April 2012: 174
Total number of Chevrolet Caprice sedans sold so far in 2012: 542
Percentage of police agencies with vehicle-purchase budget cuts, according to a recent national survey: 61
Sales of the Pontiac G8 in 2009: 23,157
Sales of the Pontiac G8 in 2008: 15,002

What the headlines reveal: Chevy’s Australian-built Caprice has been a nonstarter for police departments, cash-strapped or not. (It doesn’t help that many departments have rules preventing them from purchasing foreign-made vehicles.) They’re unlikely to admit it, but this likely is a disappointment for GM executives on two continents. With rear-wheel drive, available V-6 and V-8 engines, and a long wheelbase, the Caprice should be more compelling to law-enforcement agencies than it appears to be. Down under in Adelaide, GM’s money-bleeding Holden division desperately needs to increase exports. The Australian car market is far too small to support a local manufacturing operation and a unique model in the Commodore—our Caprice is the long-wheelbase version; the extinct Pontiac G8 was the short one. This, even more than courting a tiny number of American enthusiasts, is why Chevy will offer a civilian version of the Caprice badged as the SuperSport.