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Burnout Super Test, Part 5: Corvette Z06 Centennial Edition vs. Cadillac CTS-V Coupe

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  • Burnout Super Test, Part 5: Corvette Z06 Centennial Edition vs. Cadillac CTS-V Coupe

    1. Clutch in, select 1st gear. 2. Throttle down until the tachometer stops moving. 3. Sidestep clutch. Longest stripe wins. | January 20, 2012

1 Video , 26 Photos | See more photos in this gallery »

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Burnout Super Test, Part 5: Corvette Z06 Centennial Edition vs. Cadillac CTS-V Coupe

Return of the Champ

    34 Ratings

    Like Jason Voorhees, the Burnout Super Test doesn't know when to quit. Also like Jason Voorhees, wherever it goes, destruction follows.

    Here's Round 5 in the series.

    Five? Yes, five. That means this is the fifth time we've dedicated actual resources — money, time and effort — to the science of melting rubber. Call us dedicated. Call us obsessed. Just don't call us boring, because this here boiling of bolognas is serious business.

    And serious business demands serious hardware. So for Round 5 we've brought back the King of Chaos, The Champion of Chunk, the Sultan of Smoke. In other words, welcome the return of the Chevrolet Corvette Z06. This time, it's the Centennial Edition. You might recall from Part Duh that at 323 feet, 7 inches, the Z06 laid the longest stripe in the history of stripe-laying. But this time it takes on a threatening challenger — another rear-drive car that's both more powerful and puts less rubber on the road: Cadillac's CTS-V Coupe.

    Let the Games Begin
    As always, we're playing by the same rules. Each car is given three chances to dance stripe down the tarmac and each attempt is measured independently. Where the stripe ends is left entirely to the subjective evaluation of the guy holding the tape measure. Fortunately, for this test, the black lines all had obvious stopping points.

    And just like in the high school parking lot on a Friday night, little thought is given to technique. But burnout contests are no place for subtlety. There's a simple three-step process:

    1. Clutch in, select 1st gear.
    2. Throttle down until the tachometer stops moving.
    3. Sidestep clutch.

    Longest stripe wins.

    And that's pretty much how it goes. No point in getting technical. Burnouts for science is a stretch anyway. Maybe we should have said burnouts for satisfaction. We won't burden you with all the satisfaction we found in the high school parking lot all those years ago.

    Here's how it went down.

    2nd Place: 2012 Cadillac CTS-V Coupe
    The Cadillac, despite complete disabling of its electronics, spun its tires for about 5 feet before wimping out completely and cutting power. This, being a crime against humanity, means it doesn't deserve the honor of mention in a burnout test. It's also an utterly ineffective self-preservation strategy against your creative author, who always finds a way. You might recall back in Round 3 that the 2010 VW GTI — pug of a car that it was — tried some similarly sly burnout deterrent only to have another 25 feet wrung from its sorry soul.

    But because we're charitable folk and we refuse to take crap from any car — especially this gentlemen's coupe — we pressed on. And by "pressed on" we mean "performed a giant brake stand followed by a rev-limiter-torturing burnout."

    The Z06 beat the tire-smoking snot out of the Cadillac.

    This was a generous stretch of the rules. And also utterly weak.

    The same can't be said for the Caddy's supercharged 6.2-liter V8, which cracks out 556 horsepower and 551 pound-feet of torque — 51 hp and 81 lb-ft more than the Vette. The CTS-V coupe also packs a full 950 pounds more road-crushing mass than the Vette and wears skinnier 285/35ZR19 Michelin Pilot Sport PS2 rubber.

    Turns out, it can still spin its tires.

    First run: 145.9 feet
    Second run: 136.11 feet
    Third run: 127.0 feet

    1st Place: 2012 Chevrolet Corvette Z06 Centennial Edition
    Now at this point, we'd all but given up hope for the Caddy. Thanks to our brake-stand bamboozle, its 145-foot performance placed it only a few feet behind the Round 4 winner. Yet it was facing a car which has already proven itself capable of massive feats of tire-smokery.

    But this Z06 — the Centennial Edition — comes with tires so sticky they make the Vette's standard Michelin PS2 rubber seem like KY Jelly. Two 335/25ZR20 Michelin Pilot Sport Cup rear tires, which put 26.3 inches of rubber on the road, will do that.

    The only question, then, was if the ultra-sticky Michelins would entirely wussify the 505-hp Z06, turning it from the raging king of tire-smoking domination to an utterly emasculated prince of pantywaists.

    The answer is no.

    Our Centennial Edition Z06 couldn't match its predecessor's epic rubber-melting milestone, but it beat the tire-smoking snot out of the Cadillac. By 50.3 feet.

    And that, as they say, was the end of that.

    First run: 169.2 feet
    Second run: 196.2 feet
    Third run: What's the point?

    The manufacturer provided Edmunds these vehicles for the purposes of evaluation.

    Sort By:

    inlinesix says:

    09:02 AM, 01/30/2012

    "the photography, mercifully spared from aggressive postprocessing, was excellent this time around."

    I agree the photos are well done. However there are not a lot of heavily PP images on IL. I only remember seeing 1 HDR photo...there are a lot of "golden hour" photos and a lot with strobes.

    pensive says:

    08:08 AM, 01/30/2012

    '...Just put skinner tires on a Yugo and that would be a great burnout...'


    OK did you measure it?

    pensive says:

    08:07 AM, 01/30/2012

    am i the only fanboy who is terribly impressed at how
    the Z06 CE does black? muah! those tires are SQUATTERS
    aren't they.... wow.

    rope2 says:

    02:06 PM, 01/28/2012

    GOOD FOR U  INSIDELINE.. I DO NOT WANT TO GET OLD IN MY THINKING,, SO I THINK ITS FUN AND GREAT TO SEE PEOPLE DOING THIS STUFF AND LETTING LOOSE FOR CHANGE .I AM TIRED PEOPLE BEING SENSITIVE OF SUCH THINGS. ..ITS A MUSCLE  CAR ..LETS SEE WHAT IT CAN DO.....  WHO KNOWS HOW LONG WE ARE GONNA BE ABLE TO BUY THEM...

    wizard_ says:

    06:26 AM, 01/25/2012

    Edmunds really should have "Larry the Cable Guy" do these stupid articles.

    pisado says:

    08:04 AM, 01/24/2012

    What is it with American's and their burnouts.  Just put skinner tires on a Yugo and that would be a great burnout.

    wrinklebump says:

    05:42 AM, 01/24/2012

    the photography, mercifully spared from aggressive postprocessing, was excellent this time around.

    patrickw says:

    11:41 PM, 01/23/2012

    I am a big advocate of individual liberty. So long as my actions don't harm anyone else I don't want the government telling me what I can and cannot do. At the same time, I value education as to consequences and respect the good intentions and advice of those who want the best for me.

    Further, I am a diehard gearhead. Not only have I spent my entire adult life seeking out opportunities to drive high-performance vehicles near their limit, but I also love reading well-written articles about driving, automotive engineering, and design (at one time I subscribed to six different auto publications, including Competition Press and Autoweek).

    The core argument for burning rubber or watching others do so is that it is "enjoyable." In my 20+ years as a paramedic, I never heard anyone say that heroin, meth, or crack is not "enjoyable," but that does not mean using it is a good idea. And even addicts try to hide their behavior from kids.

    Wasting a couple thousand dollars on tires while adding several pounds of styrene butadiene, carbon black, and other toxic compounds to the atmosphere is not enjoyable to me; it makes me sad, like watching a junkie hit up. And I feel certain that lots of kids and young adults visit InsideLine, so I respectfully submit my opinion that such an article - glorifying wasteful and irresponsible behavior - lowers the image and reputation of InsideLine and does a disservice to its younger readers.

    gtrguy2012 says:

    10:04 PM, 01/23/2012

    Pointless test.  IMO the Z06 is the best Corvette.

    zr1man says:

    08:50 PM, 01/23/2012

    Very entertaining. And congratulations to little brother. I don't know why IL did not include the ZR1 in the contest. It would easily be the winner.

    I will admit that I have never tried a super long burn out in my 2010 ZR1. Who really wants to leave $200 worth of tires on the pavement?

    The ZR1 Rules!

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