In February 2023 I bought Harvey's 2006 C6 Z06. He recorded his history of the car starting in August 2016 so I thought "Why not start a thread to continue telling this car's tale?"
Why I Bought Red Zed
Around 1977, my six-year-old self accompanied my father to the local Chevrolet dealer in Middletown, Ohio for a test drive in a Chevrolet Chevette. Dad wisely avoided purchasing the Chevette, but I remember seeing a Corvette in the showroom. It might have been silver. In any case, I was smitten at that time and Corvettes became something of an obsession. When I pictured myself driving a car, it was in a Corvette.
In 1995 I was a struggling college student who needed to get out from under a car payment. A church friend offered me his broken 1984 Pontiac Fiero for $250. It needed at least a head gasket and a radiator. I'd never done any major car work before but I was game. I asked if I could fix it in his garage and he said "Take all the time you need." I bought all the books, the tools, the supplies, and the parts and in 2.5 weeks, I drove home a properly functioning Pontiac Fiero.
Fieros became an obsession. Around 1996 or 1997, I found Fiero.org, a listserv with a few hundred other Fiero owners and enthusiasts. It's owner was an irascible, often irrational and rash admin of whom you could run afoul for the most meaningless things, but that was the state of the art and I found community there. In 1999 I attended The First and Maybe Last All Fiero Swap Meet (or whatever it was called) at The Fiero Factory, a shop in Toney, Alabama owned by the inimitable and ever-helpful Ed Parks. I attended every single Swap Meet in person for the next decade, until Ed sold the shop. But by the end of that run, I no longer had running Fieros and I wasn't so interested in them any more: wife, kids, career.... you know.
In 2015 I told my wife I was having a mid-life crisis and wanted to solve it with a hot hatch. She encouraged me to do it. I researched for a few months prior to buying a 2015 Ford Forcus ST (trim level ST3). It was my first new car and I've loved that car for eight years now. It's a pure giggle machine and has made me happy every time I've driven it. It's never been driven in winter. While it's no Red Barchetta, I love its mostly pristine condition.
Once a year I and some car friends descend upon Deal's Gap to run Tail of the Dragon and surrounding roads for a few days. These are not leisurely drives. My Focus' Michelin Pilot Sport 4S's come back about 50% worn from each trip. (Hey, tires are an entertainment expense!) The Focus is an astonishingly capable car and I've gotten good at hustling it.
But, but, but... my friends and I refer to RWD as PWD or "proper wheel drive". I began to want a PWD car.
A turn of events this winter had me driving a 2004 Corolla for work. I've never hated a car like I hate this car, and I've had a lot of cars. It runs well for a car with 230,000 miles but I hate, hate, hate it. In December 2022 I came home from work and told my wife I wanted another car. She rolled her eyes but she didn't say no.
My first thought was a new Civic. My wife's daily is a 2019 Honda Civic Sport and it's a fabulous car. I contacted my local dealer and spoke briefly about purchasing a new EX. But then I had a thought: if I was going to spend that much money, why not make the Focus the winter car and purchase a PWD toy? I had two cars in mind: an NC Miata or a C6 Corvette. We can fast forward to the end and note that the Corvette won.
I started thinking "3LT Z51 6MT". Then I realized that I wanted Grand Sport just for the extra tire. Then I thought "Why not a Z06?" So that's what I bought.
The name Red Zed came from me messing with custom Ohio license plates. "RED ZED" is available but while I've decided against the plate, the name has stuck.
Red Zed's Tales
I'll document what I do to and with this car in this thread. I don't intend to autocross or track it, but I'll be making Triple Nickel and Hocking Hills runs in it with friends, and it'll be the new TotD car.
Red Zed has already resurrected that part of me that became expert in Fieros and worked on them. When you buy a 17-year-old supercar with 70,000 miles on the clock, you get 17-year-old problems and I've had a few already. I don't mind spending the money or the time to work on it because when I close the door and take off down the road, I'm driving my Corvette. My six-year-old self is pleased.