Graham Jagger wrote:
Z goes a little further back than the Camaro with GM.
October 1962 - 4 Z06 optioned Vettes enter Grand Prix at Riverside.
1963 Model, Option Z06 (Special Performance Option), 199 built.
Aye Zora!!!
And in 1961 Aston Martin DB4GTs had a large Z on the side signifying that they had Zagato bodies. That doesn't prove that GM copied AM any more that it does that Datsun copied GM. The cars mentioned here had zero relevence in the Japanese market where the car was named the FairLady Z. If only the US version had the Z attached (FairLady was thought far to feminine for our market thus the substitution of 240) then you might have a leg to stand on, but claiming that the 240Z was given that name to copy GM just isn't something that can be supported with facts.

BMW calling their roadster line Z, now that is another story. Way too much latter for that letter to be a coincidence. Of course I am sure some Bimwad will come and tell me that it stood for some 78 letter German word that described some part of the Z1. And don't tell me it is the Z axle. I don't buy that crap. When was the last time a German engineer ever did anything the simple way like giving something a name because it made a shape that looks like a letter? Please. Next you will tell me that 100% drive-by-wire is a good idea. Nice cars and all, don't get me wrong, but complexity is the German way.
Adam, good luck finding a car. Might a suggest one that doesn't use the letter Z.
