Model record
Chevrolet Corvette C5-R
Background
The Chevrolet Corvette C5-R is a grand touring racing car built by Pratt Miller and Chevrolet for competition in endurance racing. The car is based on the C5 generation of the Chevrolet Corvette sports car, yet is designed purely for motorsports use. It became one of the most successful cars in GT categories, with wins at the 24 Hours of Daytona, 12 Hours of Sebring, and 24 Hours of Le Mans, as well as championships in the American Le Mans Series. The Corvette C5-Rs debuted in 1999 and continues to be raced to this day in vintage racing events, although the C5-R was effectively replaced by the Corvette C6.R in 2005.
Text adapted from “Chevrolet Corvette C5-R” on Wikipedia ↗ · CC BY-SA 4.0 ↗ · retrieved 2026-07
Sources
Same marque
Other Chevrolet models
- 1400 —
- 150 —
- 1500 —
- 1600 —
- 1700 —
- 1800 —
- 1955 —
- 1957 —
- 1965 Impala SS —
- 1S —
- 210 —
- 2100B —
- 2400C —
- 490 —
- 700 —
- AK-Series —
- Adra —
- Agile —
- Apache —
- Astro —
- Astro I —
- Astrovette —
- Avalanche —
- Beauville —
- Bel Air —
- Beretta —
- Blazer (2018) —
- Blazer EV —
- Bolt —
- Bolt EUV —
- Brasil 3100 —
- Brasil 6500 —
- Brookwood —
- Camaro (second generation) —
- Camaro (third generation) —
- Camaro B4C —
- Camaro ZL1 (fifth generation) —
- Capitol —
- Caprice 9C1 Police —
- Cavalier —
- Cavalier (2016) —
- Celebrity —
- Celta —
- Chevelle —
- Chevelle (Third-generation) —
- Chevelle Laguna —
- Chevette —
- Chevrolet/GMC B-Series —