The 1963 Corvette Sting Ray not
only had a new design, but also newfound
handling prowess.
The Sting Ray was also a somewhat lighter Corvette, so acceleration
improved despite unchanged horsepower. 21,513 units would be built for
the 1963 model year, which was up 50 percent from the record-setting
1962 version. Production was divided almost evenly between the
convertible and the new coupe - 10,919 and 10,594, respectively - and
more than half the convertibles were ordered with the optional lift-off
hardtop. Nevertheless, the coupe wouldn't sell as well again throughout
the Sting Ray years. In fact, not until 1969 (by which time the coupe
came with removable T-tops) did the closed Corvette sell better than the
open one. Equipment installations for 1963 began reflecting the market's
demand for more civility in sporting cars. - the power brake option went
into 15 percent of production,
power steering
into 12 percent. On the other hand, only 278 buyers specified the
$421.80 air conditioning; leather upholstery - a mere $80.70 - was
ordered on only about 400 cars. The beautiful cast
aluminum
knock-off wheels, manufactured for Chevy by Kelsey-Hayes, cost $322.80 a
set, but few buyers checked off that option. However, almost 18,000
Sting Rays left St. Louis with the four-speed manual gearbox - better
than four out of every five.
All 1963 cars had 327cid
engines, which made 250 hp (186 kW) standard, with optional variants
that made 300 hp (224 kW), 340 hp (254 kW) and 360 hp (268 kW). The most
powerful engine was the Rochester fuel injected 327cid V8, which made
360 hp (272 kW). Options available on the C2 included AM-FM radio (mid
1963), air conditioning and leather upholstery. New for the 1963 model
year was an optional
electronic ignition,
the breakerless magnetic pulse-triggered Delcotronic, first offered by
Pontiac on some
1963 models.
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