{"id":532,"date":"2025-07-20T16:04:00","date_gmt":"2025-07-20T16:04:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/klemtravalos.com\/?p=532"},"modified":"2025-07-23T11:55:52","modified_gmt":"2025-07-23T11:55:52","slug":"why-perfectly-good-new-corvettes-are-being-cut-in-half-with-a-garage-tool","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/klemtravalos.com\/index.php\/2025\/07\/20\/why-perfectly-good-new-corvettes-are-being-cut-in-half-with-a-garage-tool\/","title":{"rendered":"Why Perfectly Good New Corvettes Are Being Cut In Half With A Garage Tool"},"content":{"rendered":"
Every year, a surprising number of perfectly functional vehicles are quietly taken apart for reasons that have little to do with performance or safety. These cars run, drive, and behave like any other model in showroom-perfect condition, yet they’re sent to facilities where their fate is sealed. One such example is this C8 Corvette<\/a>, now in pieces, after GM completed its internal use.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\tvar adpushup = window.adpushup = window.adpushup || {que:[]}; Read: Cop Begs Corvette Driver To Stop Before Gently Sending Her Into A Ditch<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n In late 2021, a series of tornadoes struck Bowling Green<\/a>, Kentucky, damaging the Corvette production plant. At the time, it was clear Chevrolet<\/a> would scrap most of the affected cars, though the exact method remained a mystery. That changed recently when we received photos of the process. And thanks to the man who carried out the dirty work, we now have a clearer picture.<\/p>\n A Job Few Would Envy<\/strong><\/p>\n That man is Brandon Woodley, a hard working skill-filled guy just following orders. It just so happens that those orders sometimes sound something like “destroy that perfectly functional (and perhaps lightly damaged) Corvette over there, and then do the same to the ten right behind it.” Woodley doesn’t just pull some fuel lines apart or cut a ground cable; he literally saws these cars in half, and it’s all above board.<\/p>\n He tells Carscoops that the entire process can take as little as three minutes. What type of massive industrial cutting tool does the work? “Sawsall with a metal blade,” says Woodley. That’s right, the same tool you probably have in your garage is what professionals use to literally cripple supercars.<\/p>\n Legal Limits Keep These Cars in Pieces<\/strong><\/p>\n Why couldn’t someone just buy both halves and have a functioning car? “Both halves can be sold to the same person but can’t be put back together legally,” he says. “GM<\/a> exes out the vins basically, and the car can no longer be sold.”<\/p>\n
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