First, a bit of exposition: Back in the 1960s, GM-aligned horsepower junkies had a little bit of a problem – a GM corporate mandate forbade really big-cube engines from being installed as regular production options in cars that weren’t so large that you could park a jet between their grilles and windscreens. However, a few enterprising dealerships found a way around this internal barrier. By submitting special orders using the Central Office Purchase Order program more typically used for commercial fleet vehicles, dealers like Don Yenko were able to order low-spec Camaros with potent 427-cube big-block V8s. The COPO 9561 Camaro was born, drawing its acronym from the special ordering process that brought it to life.

Flash forward to the 21st century, and Chevrolet is looking to pull out all the stops with its reborn retro-style Camaro. Cue the 2011 COPO concept, a vision of a stripped-out, quarter-mile-ready Camaro for the modern age. Chevrolet put this thing on display at the SEMA show and people loved it so much that the COPO Camaro has been part of the Chevrolet catalog on-and-off for the past 10 years.

However, no modern COPO Camaro has been quite like the incoming 2023 model. For the most powerful engine on tap, Chevrolet has reached into its magic bag of speed parts and pulled out a 632 cubic-inch big block, otherwise known as the ZZ632. For those of us who use the metric system, that’s 10.357 liters of V8 engine. While the ZZ632 COPO Camaro’s output hasn’t been announced yet, we know that it makes 1,004 horsepower at 6,600 rpm and 876 lb.-ft. of torque at 5,600 rpm in crate motor form on 93-octane gas like you’d find at many pumps. Given that dedicated drag cars aren’t known for using the same stuff you’d pump into a Ford F-150, I wouldn’t be terribly surprised if the top-spec COPO Camaro sees a boost that plants power further in the four-figure range.

Of course, if you’d like a COPO with fewer cubes, there’s a seven-liter V8 and a 5.7-liter supercharged V8 on offer, but you’ll likely want the big block if you’re not concerned about fitting into NHRA’s Factory X drag racing class. There’s just nothing quite like the chest-thumping, wall-rattling roar of a massive V8, it’s something that leaves a physical imprint. If you want a new COPO Camaro, there are a few hoops you have to jump through and stipulations you need to understand, the biggest of which is that it isn’t a road-legal car. It’s a factory racer sold on a bill of sale that can’t really be registered anywhere. Sure, I suppose if you live in a state that doesn’t do emissions testing and have time and money to burn, you can swap all the good bits into a road-legal Camaro, but as it sits, the COPO remains a track-only proposition. Next, there’s the application process. If you click this link, you can tell Chevrolet which COPO you want, what you plan on using it for, who you are, and where you live. From there, you may be lucky enough to be selected to put down a $15,000 deposit. Final MSRP hasn’t been revealed yet, but don’t expect this thing to be affordable.

Still, if you’re wealthy and lucky enough to procure a big-block COPO Camaro, you’ll get yourself an amazing slice of automotive history. One of the last big-block dinosaurs ever to be made, a very quick symphony of the past. More than ten liters of V8 engine sure is wasteful, but what’s a party without excess? (Photo credits: Chevrolet)

Power To The People: 2024 Ford Mustang GT Makes 486 Horsepower You’ve Never Heard Of The LMX Sirex, Italy’s Camaro With A Ford Engine 2024 Chevy Corvette E-Ray Leaked On GM Website And As A Result, The Whole Internet Why The 1960s Hit ‘Dead Man’s Curve’ Says The Corvette Has Six Taillights Instead Of Four The One-Year-Only 1995 Ford Mustang GTS Offered A 5.0 Punch In A Base Model Body: Holy Grails Got a hot tip? Send it to us here. Or check out the stories on our homepage. Support our mission of championing car culture by becoming an Official Autopian Member. Reality is that in the most optimistic (pessimistic… matter of perspective) scenario we’ve got another decade and a half of gas powered cars on tap. And even then, this is a track-use-only model. There are going to be companies selling track-use gas-powered cars for the next several generations at the very least. Also…if they want to send the Camaro out with a bang they should put the new Z06 engine in it. Do it, GM. I’d sell one of my kidneys for one. That’s what makes things like this COPO Camaro interesting to me, it’s like a “What if?” car, what if internal combustion engines didn’t have to meet those regulations… Honestly that’s reason enough for the companies investing in synthetic fuels to keep going, if we didn’t have to worry about emissions then maybe we could all have cool 632 ci V8 Camaros… Electric cars aren’t faster yet. Not even close. The world record quarter mile time in an EV is 7.55 at 202MPH. That’s a purpose built, EV drag racer. The record winning time at the 2022 NHRA nationals was 3.665 at 338MPH. In a purpose built internal combustion powered drag racer. Electric cars have great low end torque and good acceleration at low speeds (sub 100MPH). They’re competitive with fast gas powered cars on the street. They’re faster than moderately fast gas powered cars in their segment. Beyond that, they still have a lot of catching up to do. There’s also kind of a reason why EVs aren’t subject to emissions requirements—they don’t generate emissions. The emissions regulations are further upstream, at the power generators that make electricity. Furthermore, even a coal-fired plant burns cleaner than a gas-powered car, since it’s much easier to employ effective emissions controls when the emissions are all in one big place, rather than millions of little ones. That’s to say nothing of zero-emission sources like solar and wind. *You know you were thinking it.

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