Chev Camaro ZL1 1LE 001
5
Bruce Newton25 Jul 2017
NEWS

Exclusive: Camaro and Corvette for Oz

Iconic American muscle-car and supercar to pick up where V8 Commodores leave off

Holden V8 fans rejoice: General Motors looks likely to offer not one but two big-bore performance coupes Down Under after the homegrown Commodore SS is killed off this year.

After years of being denied official access to Chevrolet’s brawny Camaro muscle-car and iconic Corvette supercar, Australians should eventually be able to purchase both American sports cars from their local Holden dealer.

While next year’s all-new, mid-engined Corvette is expected to come here thanks to a factory right-hand drive program, the arrival of the Camaro is being driven by Holden Special Vehicles owner, the Walkinshaw Group.

Facing the loss of HSV’s primary income stream when Holden’s locally-developed and manufactured Commodore ceases production in October, Walkinshaw Group boss Ryan Walkinshaw and his chief lieutenant HSV boss Tim Jackson have doubled down on their efforts to gain GM backing for an Australian right-hand drive Camaro conversion project.

Chev Camaro ZL1 1LE 002

GM global development boss, former Holden chief Mark Reuss, is said to be a fan of the project. Holden is aware of the plan and has given it tacit approval, if not any strong support.

News of the Camaro deal has emerged from HSV and Holden dealers, giving them a boost with the next imported Commodore to eschew both V8 and rear-wheel drive.

Although HSV is refusing to comment on the V8 offensive, an official announcement is expected within weeks.

Holden spokesperson Sean Poppitt told motoring.com.au cryptically: “There’s plenty of exciting products, including the top-secret sports-car, coming at us but I’m not in a position to comment.”

The Corvette fulfills a ‘promise’ made to Holden enthusiasts that the company would offer a V8 rear-drive model in the long term. Converting Camaro, on the other hand, is part of a wide-reaching Walkinshaw Group plan to keep its GM and Holden relationship profitable and healthy and the HSV badge relevant.

Chev Camaro ZL1 1LE 004

HSV is also working on a Colorado in the same vein as the ZR2 high-performance off-roader that’s been revealed in the USA this year.

It’s also planning some mild upgrades to the imported 2018 Commodore and is said to be checking out the Chevy Silverado pick-up as another local RHD candidate alongside the Camaro and its ASV RAM conversion business.

According to motoring.com.au sources, the Camaro plan is focused on a sub-$90,000 entry-price for a high-spec version of the Camaro SS coupe.

Also available as a convertible in the US, Chevrolet's Camaro SS is currently powered not by the 6.2-litre LS3 V8 found the last of Holden’s Australian-made SS Commodores, but by GM's newer direct-injection 6.2 LT1 V8 from the C7 Corvette Stingray, featuring variable valve timing and Active Fuel Management.

That circa-$88K price tag is a lot more than the $57,490 entry price of a Ford Mustang GT V8 coupe and about $33,000 more than the soon-to-be-defunct Commodore performance flagship, the SS-V Redline.

But this will be the cheapest V8 option on offer for GM fans post-October, after which the German-made Commodore line-up will be topped by a 235kW/381Nm V6 all-wheel drive model called the VXR.

Chev Camaro ZL1 1LE 001

The Camaro will also seriously undercut the ‘C8’ Corvette, which is expected to be priced at around $200,000 when it turns up in Australia.

So why can’t Walkinshaw match the Mustang on price? Economy of scale is one thing. The Mustang is built in right-hand drive in the US factory and exported globally to RHD markets.

It’s proved a massive success in Australia, giving Ford performance fans a replacement for the Falcon and easily leading the local sports-car market with 5048 sold so far in 2017 (YTD June).

GM, Holden and HSV have all watched on with a mix of jealousy and puzzlement at Ford’s success, unable to figure out how the Mustang program can make money.

GM and Holden’s inability to make the sums add up has presented the opportunity to Walkinshaw Group, which prides itself on its ability to extract maximum bang from its engineering and design buck.

Walkinshaw Group intends to convert the sixth-generation Camaro locally at the new facility it will soon move into in Clayton, utilising the expertise it has garnered from its RAM pick-up program, allied with its GM product knowledge.

Official backing from GM is critical to the business case for conversion of Camaro as it will mean a discounted purchase price for the car for Walkinshaw.

Chev Camaro ZL1 1LE 002

Otherwise it would have to buy them from US dealers and sell a handful for $140,000-plus, as Queensland converter Performax and others did with the previous, Zeta-generation Camaro, and other converters currently do with both the Camaro and Corvette.

Motoring.com.au believes the conversion process will be based on the facelifted MY19 Camaro that we scooped in June.

As well as the Camaro SS, Walkinshaw may also convert the supercharged 6.2-litre ZL1 and also offer the 1LE track pack.

There’s chat of the legendary Z/28 badge making a comeback at the midlife update and that surely would be a motza for RHD.

It’s a similar story for the eighth-generation Corvette, the design of which is currently being overseen by Australian, Mike Simcoe.

The first mid-engined and first global Corvette, the C8 is also due on sale in the US late next year as a 2019 model.

Like the Camaro, that makes the Corvette likely to be available here within two years, which would see Holden keep its promise that a new V8 sports car will be among 24 new models released between 2015 and 2020.

Share this article
Our team of independent expert car reviewers and journalists
Meet the team
Stay up to dateBecome a carsales member and get the latest news, reviews and advice straight to your inbox.
Subscribe today
Sell your car with Instant Offer™
Like trade-in but price is regularly higher
1. Get a free Instant Offer™ online in minutes2. An official local dealer will inspect your car3. Finalise the details and get paid the next business day
Get a free Instant Offer
Sell your car with Instant Offer™
Disclaimer
Please see our Editorial Guidelines & Code of Ethics (including for more information about sponsored content and paid events). The information published on this website is of a general nature only and doesn’t consider your particular circumstances or needs.
Love every move.
Buy it. Sell it.Love it.
®
Scan to download the carsales app
    DownloadAppCta
    AppStoreDownloadGooglePlayDownload
    Want more info? Here’s our app landing page App Store and the Apple logo are trademarks of Apple Inc. Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google LLC.
    © carsales.com.au Pty Ltd 1999-2025
    In the spirit of reconciliation we acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of Country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their Elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.