This should sum it up. There are different cars for different people and no 1 car meets all the criteria that all people want. Many say the ZR1 has it all over the competition but there is more to owning a car then performance and cost alone. All of these cars have something to offer over the other. To me owning a Corvette even the ZR1 doesn't do it. I doubt that anyone of us would ever get to use all of what any of these cars have to offer performance wise so from that aspect performance on this level is rather mute. They were all very close on all of the trials that were performed on the test track. I don't think there was 2 seconds difference on lap times within the group. For me if I was going to get my dream car. I would need something to remind me daily that this in fact is my dream car. I don't want to see it rolling down the street everyday right next to me and that's one reason I would not pick the Corvette. But as stated.... everyone has different criterias for owning a car.
War of the Worlds: ZR1 vs GT2 vs 599 vs GT-R. Motor Trends Test
The Dust Clears
So? Who wins the War of the Worlds? For sure, each car in this field qualifies as a superstar. The Nissan GT-R delivers 21st Century electro-wonder and shattering performance at a base price ($77,840) that borders on the unbelievable. The Ferrari 599 GTB Fiorano offers succulent styling, shameless hedonism, peerless refinement, and speed and handling matched only by a handful of cars on the planet. The Porsche GT2, which Theys dubbed "the raciest in the bunch," churns out effortless speed (the variable-vane twin-turbo engine feels naturally aspirated, so smooth is its power delivery) and seems utterly bulletproof. You know you could hammer on it all day long and it would never complain. The ZR1 has a few glaring flaws -- including a fade-into-the-traffic-flow exterior and a cockpit lacking almost any signs of flying first-class -- yet by nearly every objective measure (and most subjective ones, too) this new Chevy expands the performance envelope for premium supercars. And at a fraction of the price of the European thoroughbreds. In the supercar realm, the 2009 Chevrolet Corvette ZR1 rules.
America still sucks at the castle thing, though.
First Place: Chevrolet Corvette ZR1
Class-shattering power, race-car handling grip, monster brakes, and sweet control inputs leave even the bluebloods in this Chevy's wake.
Second Place: Ferrari 599 GTB Fiorano
Costs huge, but delivers huge, too. Still one of the planet's finest sports cars. And when it comes to sex appeal, forget it: The Ferrari is the only one you'd choose for a date with Gisele Bundchen.
Third Place: Porsche GT2
The Rolex of sports cars: brilliantly engineered and bulletproof. Unreal speed, hellacious grip, and superb controls -- everyday drives become laps at Le Mans.
Fourth Place: Nissan GT-R
That a machine this incredible finishes fourth shows you how spectacular the other three really are. At the price, nothing comes close. And if you think Nissan is resting on its 480-horsepower laurels, stay tuned for Act II: GT-R V-Spec.