Pontiac G8 enthusiasts take note: the 2014 Chevrolet SS performance sedan is set to arrive in Chevy showrooms late in 2013, GM announced today. The highly anticipated four-door will wear the SS, or Super Sport, name we suggested over two months ago
and will serve as Chevy's NASCAR Sprint Cup racecar, debuting at the
2013 Daytona 500. While we're thrilled the 2014 Chevy SS exists at all,
the rear-drive sedan is really a placeholder car until an all-new North
American model debuts, likely for the 2016 model year. In the meantime,
the 2014 SS model will be built in Australia alongside the new Holden VF
Commodore (the present-generation VE Commodore SSV is pictured below).
As
expected, the 2014 Chevy SS will be underpinned by a version of GM's
Zeta global rear-drive architecture that also forms the basis of the
Camaro. But contrary to prior speculation, the SS will be more than a rebadged Caprice PPV
tweaked for wide-scale production. The Chevy Caprice PPV sits on the
long-wheelbase version of the architecture, while the Chevy SS will use
the shorter wheelbase and, of course, come with a V-8 engine under the
hood. Dimensionally, the Super Sport should be shorter than both the
front-drive 201.3-inch 2014 Chevy Impala and the 204.2-inch PPV.
Of course, those aren't the numbers enthusiasts are after. When we tested a 2009 Pontiac GXP
with a 6.2-liter V-8 and six-speed manual transmission, the car hit 60
mph in 4.5 seconds on to a 13.0-second quarter mile at 109.6 mph. How
well Chevy will balance performance with price has yet to be determined.
A 2012 Dodge Charger R/T
with Chrysler's 370-hp 5.7-liter V-8 and a five-speed automatic costs
$30,990 -- $2350 more for all-wheel drive. Will we ever see an
all-wheel-drive Chevy SS? It's not clear, but such a variant would
certainly go a long way toward assuring the car's U.S.-market longevity.Standard and available options should include the Chevrolet
MyLink connectivity system, HID headlights with LED daytime running
lights, quad exhausts, Brembo brakes, and enough performance bragging
rights to make enthusiasts everywhere drool. Whether a rear-drive
Australian-built sedan will fare better in the U.S. this time around is
an open question. Branded as a Chevy, it might have a chance at
long-term success. The new four-door marks the first time since the
B-Body Chevy Caprice and Impala SS were discontinued in 1996 that Chevy
will offer a rear-drive sedan in the U.S. Decades earlier, the 1961
Impala became the first production Chevy with an SS option, though only
453 units were built.
The
current Holden Commodore remains available not just as a sedan, but
also as a wagon and ute. Don't count on seeing either variant in the
U.S., though Pontiac toyed with the idea in the form of the G8 Sport Truck
before the brand died. For now, we’ll be happy with the SS. If it’s
anything like the dearly departed G8 GXP to start, we’re pretty sure
Chevy fans will be as well.
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