The 1972 Chevrolet Corvette is one of the most misunderstood and underappreciated cars in American automotive history. Most people know it as the last year for chrome bumpers, but that single fact barely scratches the surface of what makes this car so remarkable. In this video, we go through twenty facts about the 1972 Corvette that reveal just how significant, surprising, and historically loaded this transitional model really was. We cover the four separate features that ended forever with the 1972 model year -- the chrome front and rear bumpers, the removable rear window, the vacuum-operated wiper door, and the vacuum headlight system -- and explain exactly why their disappearance mattered. We dig into the gross versus net horsepower controversy that made buyers panic in 1972, and show why those lower numbers on the window sticker were almost entirely a measurement change rather than a real-world performance drop. We break down the extraordinary rarity of the 1972 ZR-one package, with only 20 examples ever built and zero exterior badging to tell them apart from a standard car. We also cover the story of how the 1972 Corvette achieved the greatest overall endurance race finish in the history of the nameplate up to that point, taking fourth place overall at the 12 Hours of Sebring against the finest European racing machinery of the era. And we explain why California buyers could not order the big block engine that year, marking the beginning of a troubling trend that would grow significantly in the years ahead. Whether you are a dedicated Corvette collector, a muscle car historian, or simply someone who wants to understand why the chrome bumper era Corvettes are so treasured today, this video covers the 1972 Corvette with the depth and detail the car deserves. Topics covered in this video include the last chrome bumper Corvette, the 1972 Corvette production numbers, the ZR-one special purpose engine package, the LT-one small block engine, the LS-five 454 big block, the SAE net versus gross horsepower change, the 12 Hours of Sebring 1972 result, the Dave Heinz and Bob Johnson racing Corvette, the deletion of the fiber-optic light monitoring system, the removal of the M22 Rock Crusher transmission, the removable rear window history, the vacuum wiper door, the California emissions restriction on the LS-five, the shift to automatic transmission dominance, the federal excise tax repeal, the 1972 Corvette color options, and the cultural shift in the Corvette buyer base during the early 1970s. #Corvette #1972Corvette #C3Corvette #ChevroletCorvette #LastChromeBumper #ClassicCars #CorvetteZR1 #LT1Corvette #ChromeBumperCorvette #CorvetteFacts #RareCars #CorvetteHistory #ClassicCorvette #454Corvette #MuscleCars #AmericanSportsCar #VintageCars #CarHistory #CorvetteStingray #CarFacts #GMHistory #Chevrolet #CarDocumentary #RareCarFacts #1970sCars #CorvetteCollector #SharkCorvette #C3CorvetteHistory #1972CorvetteZR1 #CorvetteEnduranceRacing Disclaimer: Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. I do not own some or all of the video materials used in this video. In the case of copyright issues, please contact me at [email protected] for credit or removal.