The Man Who Saved The Chevrolet Corvette Has Died
Jim Perkins, the former Chevrolet executive responsible for changing the company’s mind about killing the Corvette, has died.
The 83-year-old passed away on Friday last week and leaves a lasting legacy on both sides of the Pacific. It was his inventive financial juggling in the early 1990s that saved the Corvette – Chevrolet’s brand flagship – from being canned altogether by bean-counters who simply didn’t know what to do with it. This money-shuffling, he later admitted, “could have gotten me fired or worse.”.
After starting at the very bottom in 1960, almost begging his way into a job scrapping parts that had been returned under warranty, he earned a long string of promotions over two decades that culminated in his appointment as General Manager – the firm’s leading role. He had loved the company and its cars since boyhood, and finally he was its top dog and able to direct a period of success.
He left in 1984 to pursue a no-doubt lucrative offer from Toyota to help launch a brand new luxury brand called Lexus. With the LS400 all but finished and the foundations laid for the maker of the world’s most reliable cars, Perkins switched back to Chevrolet in 1989 to find it on its knees. Without him its cars had not been developed, improved, replaced or even tinkered with very much. They were now dangerously off the pace - and they weren’t selling.
Chief among these under-performers was the Corvette. It was meant to be Chevrolet’s lion, roaring about strength and success, but global sales of the C4 had dropped to a paltry 20,000 units per year and the company was seriously considering cutting their losses and shelving it. It was Perkins’ intervention, and only his, that saved the day and brought the C5 into being. Automotive News quotes Ralph Kramer, Chevy’s PR director at the time, as saying:
“It was Perkins who found the money to go ahead and get the prototypes built. If it wasn’t for that, that car was destined to be shelved. He had the opportunity to move some funds around and he did that surreptitiously, causing no end of anguish among the auditors.”
The C5 Corvette arrived part-way through 1997. From its first full year on sale, 1998, the C5 and its slightly tweaked C6 successor sold at least 32,000 units per year for the next 10 years. Perkins was again instrumental in ensuring that, in his absence, the C5 would be placed in front of motorsport fans wherever possible. He helped to not only salvage the car’s image, but gave it the basis to achieve new heights.
By the time it was released, Perkins had retired from Chevrolet. His 1996 exit was felt by all at the firm but he left it in vastly better shape than he had found it in 1989. Shortly after leaving the US giant, he joined Hendrick Automotive Group and ran 100 car showrooms. Various other roles at the company followed, culminating in a heritage-based position restoring classic and racing cars. He will be missed.
Hat tips to ThatElementGuy and Chewbaccabuddy!
Additional info: Automotive News
Comments
aw, rip man many Fs pressed. In all seriousness thank you for saving america’s sports car!
the article was fire btw
To learn more, go pick up a book called “All Corvettes are Red” which documents the birth of the C5 in great detail.
CarThrottle acknowledging its users? Nani?
This could be a sign
BAMBOOZLED
Still, its nice that they do that
ThatElementGuy (Ծ_Ծ) I think hell may have frozen over
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Aww, thanks.
Beautiful obituary. With his death this year, along with Chris Svensson, Dan Gurney, Sergio Marchionni etc(i know there was a few more) makes me wonder if anyone had written a collective Biography on these people who help make the automotive works Fantastic.
If no one has, that might just be something for someone to write.
Rip
C5 is sure on my list to own one day, I just needed a glance and start-up engine sound to fall in love with this car, no matter what people say about it nor how slow it may be compared to modern cars.
F(ucc)
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