2021 Chevy Camaro Iroc Z USA Rumors
2021 Chevy Camaro Iroc Z USA Rumors
2021 Chevy Camaro Iroc Z USA Rumors – He’s the future for the Chevrolet Camaro definitely questionable. Amid rumors of the cancellation came this little latest news from the GM Authority that GM has left the trademark for the IROC-Z name.
Some vehicles from the 1980s are as iconic as the IROC Camaro, and it’s thought that the Chevrolet might revive the moniker for Camaro’s special edition in the near term. It seems that no longer happens, but like many trademarks like stories, it’s not quite as simple as that. Will IROC-Z be back to the market in 2021?
2021 Chevy Camaro Iroc Z USA Rumors
Per U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), GM left the trademark on July 25 after filing for it on October 15, 2018. Apparently, the car let the slide name after the last IROC-Z Camaro rolled from the assembly line to model 1990 years. However, the IROC wasn’t a name derived from GM – it stands for the US-based racing series called the International Race of Champions where racers competed in the cars that were put up identically.
Most of the action took place in NASCAR Superspeedways, and as such, most of the drivers from NASCAR. After starting the series in 1974 with the Porsche 911 Carrera RSR, the Chevrolet Camaro became an IROC-of-choice vehicle through 1990, at which point the coat shifted to the Dodge Daytona.
2021 Chevy Camaro Iroc Z USA Rumors
Name problems are more complicated by other IROC-Z trademarks that are still listed as active in the USPTO. A California based automobile company aftermarket is called 6LE design to file a trademark in May 2017, albeit according to the GM Authority, that the outfit has since gone bankrupt. The current trademark owner is unknown, but we certainly know who doesn’t have it.
The sale for the sixth generation Pony cars has fallen since its debut for the 2016 year model, and with that, we mean face louder than the skateboarder features on the fall army. 2018 is Camaro’s worst-selling year so far since the moniker is back in 2010, and this year is shaping up to be even more depressing.
In the last few months, we have heard that revived Z/28 for the present generation Camaro is likely to be canceled, not to mention the deaths of the entire row once a sixth-gen complement that runs at the beginning of the next decade. For what it’s worth, we feel the car really has to live, especially now that GM has shifted the Corvette into the world of supercars with the Mid-motorized 2020 Stingray.