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Hi Guys and Gals...

A while ago I posted a thread asking if anyone could point me in the right direction of hiring something a lilttle special in LA so I figured I would post a thread about the result (sorry it is so long but I hope you enjoy it),

Well after hunting around and finding a lot of things outside of my budget (Veyron for $25k US a day anyone?!!) I found this through Hertz:

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A 2009 ZHZ C6 Corvette....yes its convertible but not by choice as the coupes had all been booked. Specs are:

Engine: LS3 6.2L V8

Power: 436HP (320KW) @ 5,000 RPM

Torque: 424 lb ft (575 Nm) @ 4,600 RPM

Acceleration: 0-60 MPH in 4.3 secs

Top Speed: 190 MPH (306 KPH)

Like most (if not all!) American cars, your only option is an auto but thankfully it has the addition of a paddle shift. The car is also fitted with magnetic selective ride control.

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First impressions - Despite a 14+ hour flight the thought of picking up the Vette was better than any coffee I could've had in the morning. After the usual paperwork and a little mix up with the keys, I was shown to the car - despite the glaring yellow + LA sunlight it was a welcome sight :D . After checking the rear tyres and looking for existing scratches etc, I started loading my bags into the car. Word of warning here - depsite the boot being bigger than expected it isn't exactly deep. I was travelling alone and therefore had a medium sized piece of luggage and it JUST fit. Plus the roof takes up space in the boot so the trips with the large bag had to be with the roof up. Settling into the car was easy - all the controls were intuative, traction control button was easy to locate and the seats were comfortable.

Time to go and I fired her up via the start button - nice sound but a little muffled (we'll get to that later). Figuring I was in a bright yellow attention grabber I thought it best to stick to speed limits on the freeways......WRONG......going the posted limit (55-65MPH depending on the freeway) I was getting passed by litteraly everyone as most people seemed to be travelling between 70-80MPH. Appears that most Americans believe the posted limit is a mere suggestion. Well as they say 'when in Rome...' so stomped on the loud pedal - as I was in 'D' for dadaway the auto kicked down, the rears spun (at 65MPH!), and I was transported to lightspeed in a blink of an eye. Outright accel was on par with a good launch in my GTR but the instant (or close to) throttle response was nothing like hitting the loud pedal in the GTR....no turbo lag, just an instant increase in noise and speed :D It was fair to say that right there and then I cam.....I mean....bonded with the car :D

Despite being common in the US, the Vette does attract a lot of attention..esp a bright yellow one. It didn't matter if I was pulling up at the parking at Santa Monica beach, handing the keys to the hotel valet, or simply driving around town, it seemed to ellicit positive comments from the locals :P . Unfortunately it also seems to attract a lot of the same attention the GTR gets here in Melb - namely every man and their dog wants to race you from the lights.

After 3 days of general driving around to touristy places, including one loooong drive (around 200miles) to see an SR-71,

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my impressions were good. Visability was great except for a large blind spot over your shoulders with the roof up. The view out the front windscreen was great thanks to those bulges over the front wheels and the seats were comfortable. In fact it seemed to be the perfect weapon to have when involved in the urban warfare that is the LA freeway system! The only drawback was realizing how wide the Vette actually is and this happened twice. Once was parking at the Santa Monica beach carpark - it was a beautiful day and spots were hard to come by. After driving around the carpark for about 10mins I came across a free spot with two MASSIVE SUVs (like F150 style but bigger!) parked in the spots either side - I had to squeeze my way through the gap left between the door and the body....holy sh1t lucky I'm thin 'cause there would've been no way to get out of the car otherwise!! The other was driving up crazy winding, one prius wide, residential roads to see the hollywood sign - there was more than one occasion I had to breathe in to get past two parked cars or oncoming traffic.

As I got more confident with the car, the paddles started to come into play together with turning the traction control off - if theres one thing the Vette knows what to do its skids! Traction control has three 'levels' - on, completely off (my fav) and 'competition mode' which allows for a bit of slip before activating. It was no surpise to learn that the traction control is a bit crude...I was impressed by the slip it allowed the driver but not the way it activated (appeared to be simply cutting power). The paddle shift was also a little crude - no cluncks to speak of but changes weren't exactly smooth. I also could'vve done with the led dash display showing the current gear. It seemed to display this at one point but I think turning the traction control off changed the display to something else. There was more than one occasion I accidently selected 1st existing a corner to be greeted with a V8 bouncing off of the limiter and tyre smoke (Brisby would be so proud :) ).

However, there were two drives I will remember for a long time. The first was the night I drove to Malibu along the pacific coast highway from Santa Monica. About halfway there a bike cruised past and the rest of the drive was spent baiting the female rider at every opportunity.

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One thing I should note here is that the cops are well aware of how this road is used, and on this night I passed two patrol cars by the side of the highway. One I passed around the limit and the other is a story for another place :) The other was my last day with the car and I couldn't resist giving it a good send off. After doing a little research before the trip I was recommend to the Angeles Highway in the hills to the north of the city basin. The description was that this it is a facimile of the burger ring....how could I resist?!! Unfortunately I was just getting started on a spirited drive along it (and it was looking VERY promising ;) ) when I came across a sign saying the road was closed - turns out the road had collapsed the week prior to my visit :( So I duely turned around and drove to Mulholland Drive

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which was looking a little disappointing due to traffic and road surface until I stumbled upon an awesome canyon road running between Mulholland and the pacific coast highway. It was a fantastic road with a mix of tight and sweeping turns, elevation change, and best of all, good gaps in traffic. I strapped my video camera in between the seats and the result is on a memory card ;) 2-3 hours later (I did a couple of runs) and over 1/2 a tank of fuel later I had made plenty of good memories.

Final 'on the limit' impressions of the Vette - awesome throttle response and accel, good brakes (never faded on me once) and you are constantly aware of what the rear tyres are up to as you are sitting right above them. The biggest let down was the front end - put simply, I just couldn't trust what it was doing ( I guess a big lump of V8 over the front end will do that). Feedback from the front end was almost nonexistant and you never knew whether it would grip or not. Again, it is probably the engine up front, but you are also aware that a lot of weight transfer is taking place making the Vette feel heavier than it actually is and not as nimble. At the end of the day you learn to trust whether the car will grip or not, but it was nothing like what I experience in the GTR and that gets critisim as well! The balance of the car is fairly neutral with a little touch of understeer but go in with too much gas and the lively rear end steps out everytime (with TC off!) - that being said it is very controllable with the loud pedal ;)

Oh and on a final note - loud noise. A bit of research before I left resulted in me learning that the Vette is fitted with an electronic butterfly valve to control echaust noise. This was proven to work well on my first day when I realized the difference between over and under around 4,500RPM. Luckily my research also resulted in a solution - find the fuse box, locate the correct fuse and simply pull that fuse out which results in that butterfly valve failing open...hello beautiful V8 rumble from the get go...just remember to put the fuse back in before returning the car.

I would highly recommend the experience to anyone, just don't turn the TC off until you are confident with the car and your abilities!

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Awesome sounding trip mate! Would LOVE to do that someday. Bet the Vette was a stark contrast from a turbocharged import!

Sif not choose the convertible over coupe anyway :P

Would also like PM regarding cost of hire car :D

Ok I had it for 4 days and was around 170-180 USD a day list price. You then need to add on the extra charges (airport fees etc), insurance etc so factor in around $250 a day (rough).

Be aware that there is a mile limit on it and I ended up doing more simply due to the long drive to the SR-71. If you were hanging around LA I'm sure the mile limit wouldn't be broken.

Also if you hunt around there are % discounts to be had. After my research the Vette was cheaper but Avis do the new V8 camaro too.

Great write up :P I would encourage more members to do similar articles if they rent themselves a similarly interesting car. Must of been quite the experience barelling down the highway with that V8 noise egging you on to go faster. Definetly something i'd like to experience when I trek to the USA.

Great write up I would encourage more members to do similar articles if they rent themselves a similarly interesting car. Must of been quite the experience barelling down the highway with that V8 noise egging you on to go faster. Definetly something i'd like to experience when I trek to the USA.

Thanks mate. As for the highway thing, once I got used to the average speeds people were driving at over there I found it quite liberating not have to worry about speed cameras everywhere. When I caught up with my cousin later in the trip and asked him why there are no speed cameras (there are red light cameras but no speed ones) he said that they did introduce them but farmed it off to a private company. People were getting the fines and thinking it was from a private company, and not the police, nobody paid it and they scrapped the whole system - now thats people power!

Thanks mate. As for the highway thing, once I got used to the average speeds people were driving at over there I found it quite liberating not have to worry about speed cameras everywhere. When I caught up with my cousin later in the trip and asked him why there are no speed cameras (there are red light cameras but no speed ones) he said that they did introduce them but farmed it off to a private company. People were getting the fines and thinking it was from a private company, and not the police, nobody paid it and they scrapped the whole system - now thats people power!

That is truly brilliant. Having that liberating attitude toward speed must be great in the U.S with all those big long highways people have to traverse everyday. I suppose thats why here in Australia people dont really make a fuss about speed camera's very few people do long highway drives like you have to in America. I suppose its because a large number of Americans go to college quite far away from their homes and then also move away from their families so they are forced to drive hundreds if not thousands of miles to visit their families a couple of times a year.

If only we could have some sort of movement like that in Australia and finally stop the revenue raising.

FARK YEH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Figured you'd like this one Bris :rofl:

That is truly brilliant. Having that liberating attitude toward speed must be great in the U.S with all those big long highways people have to traverse everyday. I suppose thats why here in Australia people dont really make a fuss about speed camera's very few people do long highway drives like you have to in America. I suppose its because a large number of Americans go to college quite far away from their homes and then also move away from their families so they are forced to drive hundreds if not thousands of miles to visit their families a couple of times a year.

If only we could have some sort of movement like that in Australia and finally stop the revenue raising.

Well I wouldn't call it a liberating attitude exactly...don't get wrong, there were plenty of patrol cars dotted along the highways - more often than not in the middle of a stop. Despite this according to my cousin, and proven by the fact that I went past more than one cop doing a little more than the posted speed, they still give you a 10% leeway. I used the word liberating due to the fact I wasn't worried about being fined because I was overtaking a semi (and there were plenty!) for example and could actually concentrate on the task at hand, driving rather than 'sh1t can overtake this truck or is there a speed camera hidden around here somewhere'.

What they really need to do over there is get a movement together to convince the numbskulls riding around on motorbikes and push bikes that they need a helmet :thumbsup:

Figured you'd like this one Bris :D

Well I wouldn't call it a liberating attitude exactly...don't get wrong, there were plenty of patrol cars dotted along the highways - more often than not in the middle of a stop. Despite this according to my cousin, and proven by the fact that I went past more than one cop doing a little more than the posted speed, they still give you a 10% leeway. I used the word liberating due to the fact I wasn't worried about being fined because I was overtaking a semi (and there were plenty!) for example and could actually concentrate on the task at hand, driving rather than 'sh1t can overtake this truck or is there a speed camera hidden around here somewhere'.

What they really need to do over there is get a movement together to convince the numbskulls riding around on motorbikes and push bikes that they need a helmet :rofl:

I suppose you trade one freedom for another no matter where you go. I'm all for the rule of law but getting someone for being 5km/h over a freeway is ridiculous its nice to see that the "super troopers" :P see it the same way. Maybe the highway patrol in the states doesnt want to bother with speeders because they want to be chasing down drug runners or murderers, like they should be in this country.

I meant it must be nice like you say to not have stare at the speedo half the time and actually concerntrate and enjoy the experience of driving :) I look forward to experiencing it for myself one day.

Oh and by the way sweet idea going out of your way to go see the SR-71 its a once in a lifetime sort of oppurtunity and I hope totally worth it :thumbsup:

Edited by FrangaR33

Oh an Brisby I forgot to report that when the Vette is bouncing off the limiter in first with the exhaust popping and carrying on it sounds eerily like the Vette GT cars :thumbsup:

Oh and by the way sweet idea going out of your way to go see the SR-71 its a once in a lifetime sort of oppurtunity and I hope totally worth it

It might not have been for everyone but it sure way for me to see a childhood hero in the flesh....the one actually in the LA science museum is the trainer not the real thing :rofl: so had to go out of my way to an airforce base museum - totally worth it and the old guys looking after it told me a few things I didn't know :P

I'll be in Hawaii at the start of August for 10 days and I'm still deciding what to hire. I don't need a car the whole time I'm there so was thinking just the stanger but have not ruled out the Vette if I can get one. Also looking at all the other american muscle that is for hire there.

Gret write up too by the way.

I laughed at the handicapped parking.

Yeah I had a chuckle myself as I had nothing to do with it......Vette was liked by the hotel valets who gave it a special spot while it wasn't being used by someone more deserving :)

I'll be in Hawaii at the start of August for 10 days and I'm still deciding what to hire. I don't need a car the whole time I'm there so was thinking just the stanger but have not ruled out the Vette if I can get one. Also looking at all the other american muscle that is for hire there.

I was in Hawaii in March last year and while I wasn't looking too seriously I did try and find what a 'different' car would cost. If memory serves cars like the vette and camaro are not avail there, just mainland US - the closest you will get (and its a stretch) was a V6 mustang convertible. Don't know why as I thought Hawaii would be the perfect spot to hire something like that...maybe the market isn't big enough?

DO IT ADZ :D

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