Stryker_27
2024-05-17 13:06 | Silnev wrote
Absolutely not. "Stingray" is not part of the model's name. Additionally the "C2" designation is not an official GM designation nor is it the chassis code. None of the corvettes use "C" and a number to denote their chassis.
The whole association of using C plus a number to denote what gen of corvette you are talking about came about because when the C5 was in development, internally they called the project the "C5" literally just to mean Corvette 5. However it got leaked and soon people began to retroactively refer to the older gens with the "C" label.
Err... how is the 'Sting Ray' denomination not par of the model's name? I searched around and found it came from the name of the 'Mitchell Racer' to which GM bought the rights and used the badge on their 1963 Corvettes.
But uh thanks for the insight I guess... |
Silnev
 2024-05-17 12:44 | Stryker_27 wrote Would it be possible to modify the model's name to its full form "Corvette C2 Sting Ray"?
Absolutely not. "Stingray" is not part of the model's name. Additionally the "C2" designation is not an official GM designation nor is it the chassis code. None of the corvettes use "C" and a number to denote their chassis.
The whole association of using C plus a number to denote what gen of corvette you are talking about came about because when the C5 was in development, internally they called the project the "C5" literally just to mean Corvette 5. However it got leaked and soon people began to retroactively refer to the older gens with the "C" label. |
Stryker_27
2024-05-17 12:23 | Would it be possible to modify the model's name to its full form "Corvette C2 Sting Ray"? |
austinallegro
2007-11-17 14:46 | Defintely. |
CrazyCars
2007-10-25 21:09 | Agreed |
badlymad
2007-09-22 00:28 | An exaggerated 1963 Corvette Sting Ray, i think. |
Star Wars Fanatic
2007-09-20 23:06 |  |