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Chevrolet small-block engine (first- and second-generation)

The Chevrolet small-block engine is a series of gasoline-powered V8 automobile engines, produced by the Chevrolet division of General Motors between 1954 and 2003, using the same basic engine block. Referred to as a "small-block" for its size relative to the physically much larger Chevrolet big-block engines, the small block family spanned from 262 cu in (4.3 L) to 400 cu in (6.6 L) in displacement. Engineer Ed Cole is credited with leading the design for this engine. The engine block and cylinder heads were cast at Saginaw Metal Casting Operations in Saginaw, Michigan.

Chevrolet small-block engine
1985 Chevrolet Corvette L98
Overview
ManufacturerGeneral Motors
Also called
  • Chevrolet Turbo-Fire
  • Nascar
Production
Layout
Configuration90° V8
Displacement
  • 262 cu in (4.3 L) (1975–1976)
  • 263 cu in (4.3 L) (1994–1996)
  • 265 cu in (4.3 L) (1955–1957)
  • 267 cu in (4.4 L) (1979–1982)
  • 283 cu in (4.6 L) (1957–1967)
  • 302 cu in (4.9 L) (1967–1969)
  • 305 cu in (5.0 L) (1976–2002)
  • 307 cu in (5.0 L) (1968–1973)
  • 327 cu in (5.4 L) (1962–1969)
  • 350 cu in (5.7 L) (1967–2003)
  • 396 cu in (6.5 L) (Aftermarket)
  • 400 cu in (6.6 L) (1970–1981)
  • 427 cu in (7.0 L) (Aftermarket)
  • 434 cu in (7.1 L) (Aftermarket)[1]
Cylinder bore
  • 3.5 in (88.9 mm)
  • 3.67 in (93.2 mm)
  • 3.736 in (94.9 mm)
  • 3.75 in (95.3 mm)
  • 3.875 in (98.4 mm)
  • 4 in (101.6 mm)
  • 4.125 in (104.8 mm)
  • 4.155 in (105.5 mm) (Aftermarket)
Piston stroke
  • 3 in (76.2 mm)
  • 3.1 in (78.7 mm)
  • 3.25 in (82.6 mm)
  • 3.48 in (88.4 mm)
  • 3.75 in (95.3 mm)
  • 4 in (101.6 mm) (Aftermarket)
Cylinder block materialCast iron, aluminum
Cylinder head materialCast iron, aluminum
Valvetrain
Valvetrain drive systemChain
Compression ratio8.2:1, 8.3:1, 8.4:1, 8.5:1, 8.6:1, 9.0:1, 9.1:1, 9.5:1, 10.25:1, 10.9:1, 11.0:1, 14.25:1[2]
RPM range
Max. engine speed4,800-7,200[3]
Combustion
Fuel systemCarburetor, fuel injection
Fuel typeGasoline
Cooling systemWater-cooled
Output
Power output110–765 hp (82–570 kW)[4][5]
Torque output215–620 lb⋅ft (292–841 N⋅m)[6][7]
Dimensions
Dry weight389–600 lb (176–272 kg)[8][9][10][11]
Chronology
PredecessorChevrolet Series D, Cadillac OHV, Oldsmobile "Rocket" OHV
SuccessorGM LS-based small-block engine

Generation I and Generation II LT engines[12] are distinct from subsequent LS-based small-block engines. The Generation II engine is largely an improved version of the Generation I, having many interchangeable parts and dimensions. Later generation engines have only the rod bearings, transmission-to-block bolt pattern and bore spacing in common with the Generation I and II engines.[13]

Production of the original small-block began in late 1954 for the 1955 model year, with a displacement of 265 cu in (4.3 L), growing over time to 400 cu in (6.6 L) by 1970. Among the intermediate displacements were the 283 cu in (4.6 L), 327 cu in (5.4 L), and numerous 350 cu in (5.7 L) versions. Introduced as a performance engine in 1967, the 350 went on to be employed in both high- and low-output variants across the entire Chevrolet product line.

Although all of Chevrolet's siblings of the period (Buick, Cadillac, Oldsmobile, Pontiac, and Holden) designed their own V8s, it was the Chevrolet 305 and 350 cu in (5.0 and 5.7 L) small-block that became the GM corporate standard. Over the years, every GM division in America, except Saturn and Geo, used it and its descendants in their vehicles.[14]

Finally superseded by the Generation III LS in 1997 and discontinued in 2003, the engine is still made by a GM subsidiary in Springfield, MO as a crate engine for replacement and hot rodding purposes. In all, over 100,000,000 small-blocks had been built in carbureted and fuel injected forms since 1955 as of November 29, 2011. The small-block family line was honored as one of the 10 Best Engines of the 20th Century by automotive magazine Ward's AutoWorld.[14]

In February 2008, a Wisconsin businessman reported that his 1991 Chevrolet C1500 pickup had logged over one million miles without any major repairs to its small-block V8 engine.[15]

All first- and second-generation Chevrolet small-block V8 engines share the same firing order of 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2.

Overview edit

The first generation of Chevrolet small-blocks began with the 1955 Chevrolet 265 cu in (4.3 L) V8 offered in the Corvette and Bel Air. The engine quickly gained popularity among stock car racers, and was nicknamed the "Mighty Mouse," after the then-popular cartoon character, later abbreviated to "Mouse".[16] By 1957 the engine had grown to 283 cu in (4.6 L). Fitted with the optional Rochester mechanical fuel injection (FI) and a Duntov high-lift camshaft, it was one of the first production engines to produce 1 hp (0.7 kW) per 1 cu in (16.4 cc). The 283 was adopted by other Chevrolet models, replacing the 265 V8s.

A high-performance 327 cu in (5.4 L) variant followed, turning out as much as 375 hp (280 kW) (SAE gross power, not SAE net power or the current SAE certified power values) and raising horsepower per cubic inch to 1.15 hp (0.86 kW). From 1954 to 1974, the small-block engine was known as the "Turbo-Fire" or "High Torque" V8. However, it was the 350 cu in (5.7 L) series that became the best-known Chevrolet small-block.

Installed in everything from station wagons and sports cars to commercial vehicles, boats, industrial equipment, and even (in highly modified form) in aircraft, the 350 is the most widely-used small-block engine of all time. Though not offered in GM vehicles since 2003, the 350 series is still in production at a GM subsidiary in Springfield, Missouri, under the company's "GM Genuine Parts" brand, and is also manufactured as an industrial and marine engine by GM Powertrain under the "Vortec" name.

3.750 in. bore family (1955–1957) edit

All Chevrolet V8s, from the big-blocks to today's LS7 and LS9, evolved from the 265 / 283 cu in (4.3 / 4.6 L) small-block family. Of the three engines in this family, two of them, the 265 and the 283, made automotive history. The first of this family was the 265, introduced in 1954. The 265 had a 3.750 inches (95.25 mm) bore. The stroke of the 265 was 3 in (76.2 mm), like the 283.

265 edit

 
Original 265 beside a 1955 Chevrolet

The 265 cu in (4.3 L) "Turbo-Fire" V8 was the second Chevrolet small-block; the first Chevrolet V8 was produced in 1917. The 265 cu in Turbo Fire engine was designed by Ed Cole's group at Chevrolet to provide a more powerful engine for the 1955 Corvette than the model's original " Blue Flame" in-line six, the 162 hp (121 kW) 2-barrel debut version went from drawings to production in just 15 weeks.[17]

Cole's design borrowed the valve train design scheduled to be used at the time in the Pontiac V8. Internal GM rules at the time stated that once an automotive division had introduced a technological innovation, no other GM division could use it for a period of two years. The stud-mounted independent ball rocker arm design patented by Pontiac engineer Clayton Leach, was scheduled for introduction in the Pontiac 1955 V8. GM forced the Pontiac division to share its valvetrain design in Chevrolet's new 265 V8 in 1955, so that both engines were introduced the same year with the same valve train design.[17] A side note to Pontiac's V8 was that the engine was supposed to be introduced with 1953 cars, and all 1953 and 1954 Pontiac cars' chassis and suspensions were designed for the engine that did not make it into a Pontiac until late 1954. This was because the Buick division lobbied GM to postpone the release of Pontiac's engine, as it affected Buick's release of its new OHV V8 engine.

A pushrod engine with hydraulic lifters, the small-block was available with an optional four-barrel Rochester carburetor, increasing engine output to 180 hp (134 kW), or 195 hp (145 kW) in the Corvette. The short-stroke 3.75 in × 3 in (95.25 mm × 76.20 mm) bore × stroke engine's 4.4 in (111.8 mm) bore spacing would continue in use for decades.[18]

Also available in the Bel Air sedan, the basic passenger car version produced 162 hp (121 kW) with a two-barrel carburetor. Upgraded to a four-barrel Rochester, dual exhaust "Power Pack" version, the engine was conservatively rated at 180 hp (134 kW), and with the "Super Power Pack," it was boosted up to the power level of the Corvette.[18]

A shortcoming of the 1955 265 was its lack of any provision for oil filtration built into the block, instead relying on an add-on filter mounted on the thermostat housing, and that was an "option only." In spite of its novel green sand foundry construction, the lack of adequate oil filtration leaves it typically only desirable to period collectors.[citation needed]

The 1956 Corvette introduced three versions of this engine—210 hp (157 kW) with a single 4-barrel carburetor, 225 hp (168 kW) with twin 4-barrels, and 240 hp (179 kW) with two four-barrel carburetors and a high-lift camshaft.[18]

3.875 in. bore family (1957–1973) edit

The 283 had a 3.875 inches (98.43 mm) bore. The stroke of the 283 was 3 in (76.2 mm), like the 265. The 283, famous for being one of the first engines to make one hp per cubic inch, is also famous for being the evolutionary stepping stone that would later give rise to small blocks and to the "W" blocks, ultimately culminating in the Chevrolet big-blocks. The last of this family was the 307 cu in (5.0 L), which was a stroked 283 with a medium journal.

283 edit

 
Fuel injected 283 cu in (4.6 L) engine installed in a 1959 Corvette

The 265 cu in (4.3 L) V8 engine was bored out to 3.875 in (98.43 mm) in 1957, giving it a 283 cu in (4.6 L) displacement. The first 283 motors used the stock 265 blocks. However, the overbore to these blocks resulted in thin cylinder walls. Future 283 blocks were cast to accept the 3.875 bore. Five different versions between 188 hp (140 kW) and 283 hp (211 kW) were available, depending on whether a single carb, twin carbs, or fuel injection was used.

Horsepower was up a bit each year for 1958, 1959, and 1960. The 1957 Rochester Ramjet mechanical fuel injection version produced an even one hp per one cu in (283 hp (211 kW), an impressive feat at the time. This was the second U.S.-built production V8 to produce one horsepower per cubic inch, after the 1956 Chrysler 300B.[19]

Besides being available in the Chevrolet line, it was optional in Checker Taxis beginning in 1965.[20] A version of it that was built by GM Canada was also available in Studebaker vehicles produced in Canada for 1965 and 1966.

307 edit

A 307 cu in (5.0 L) version was produced from 1968 through 1973. Engine bore and stroke was 3.875 in × 3.25 in (98.4 mm × 82.6 mm). All 307s had large 2.45-inch (62.2 mm) journals to accept the 327's crankshaft. Pistons used with the 307 share the same pin height as the 327 but retaining the 283's bore size (prior to 1968, it was possible to stroke a 283 into a 307 where aftermarket pistons had to be used).

Vehicles using the 307

4.000 in bore family (1962–2002) edit

Originally intended as the performance block, this engine family through the 350 cu in (5.7 L) became an all-purpose engine that saw use in many applications from Corvettes to commercial vehicles. All engines in this family share the same block dimensions and sometimes even the same casting number; the latter meaning engines were of the same block, but with different strokes (e.g., the casting number 3970010 was used by all three engines: 302, 327, and 350). This engine family was updated in 1968 for the use of 2.45 in (62.2 mm) medium-sized journals. The first engine in this family was the small journal 327 in 1962 and the last being 2000s medium journal 350 in pickup trucks and commercial vehicles. The medium journal 350 was further developed into the Generation II LT1/4 350 in the early 1990s.

302 edit

In 1966, General Motors designed a special 302 cu in (4.9 L) engine for the production Z/28 Camaro in order for it to meet the Sports Car Club of America (SCCA) Trans-Am Series road racing rules limiting engine displacement to 305 cu in (5.0 L) from 1967 to 1969. It was the product of placing the 283 cu in (4.6 L) 3 in (76.2 mm) stroke crankshaft into a 4 in (101.6 mm) bore 327 cu in (5.4 L) cylinder-block. The 1967 302 used the same crankshaft stroke as the 283, with a forged steel crank that was also produced. This block is one of three displacements, 302/327/350, that underwent a crankshaft bearing diameter transformation for 1968 when the rod-journal size was increased from the 2 in (50.8 mm) diameter small-journal to a 2.1 in (53.3 mm) large-journal and a main-journal size that was increased from 2.3 in (58.4 mm) to 2.45 in (62.2 mm). DZ 302.

The large-journal connecting rods were thicker (heavier) and used 38 in (9.5 mm) diameter cap-bolts to replace the small-journal's 11/32. 1968 blocks were made in 2-bolt and 4-bolt versions with the 4-bolt center-three main caps each fastened by two additional bolts which were supported by the addition of thicker crankcase main-web bulkheads. When the journal size increased to the standard large-journal size, the crankshaft for the 302 was specially built of tufftride-hardened forged 1053-steel and fitted with a high-rpm 8 in (203.2 mm) diameter harmonic balancer. It had a 3/4-length semi-circular windage tray, heat-treated, magnafluxed, shot-peened forged 1038-steel 'pink' connecting rods, floating-pin in 1969, forged-aluminum pistons with higher scuff-resistance and better sealing single-moly rings.

Its solid-lifter cam, known as the "30-30 Duntov" cam named after its 0.03 in (0.8 mm)/0.030 in hot intake/exhaust valve-lash and Zora Arkus-Duntov (the first Duntov cam was the 0.012 in (0.3 mm)/0.018 in (0.5 mm) 1957 grind known as the '097, which referred to the last three digits of the casting number) the "Father of the Corvette", was also used in the 1964-1965 carbureted 327/365 and fuel injected 327/375 engines. It used the '202' 2.02 in (51.3 mm)/1.6 in (40.6 mm) valve diameter high-performance 327 double-hump '186 and 461 heads, pushrod guide plates, hardened 'blue-stripe' pushrods, edge-orifice lifters to keep more valvetrain oil in the crankcase for high-rpm lubrication, and stiffer valvesprings. In 1967, a new design high-rise cast-aluminum dual-plane intake manifold with larger smoother turn runners was introduced for the Z/28 that the 350 cu in (5.7 L)/370 hp 1970 LT-1 also used.

1969 Corvette and 1970 Z/28 engines were equipped with a Holley carburetor until the Q-jet carburetor returned in 1973. Unlike the Corvette, the exhaust manifolds were the more restrictive rear outlet 'log' design to clear the Camaro chassis's front cross-member. It had a chrome oil filler tube in the front of the intake manifold next to the thermostat housing from 1967 to 1968. The first year had unique chrome valve covers with Chevrolet stamped into them without an engine displacement decal pad. In 1968, the engine had the chrome covers, but without the Chevrolet name, connected to a PCV valve and a chrome 14 in × 3 in (355.6 mm × 76.2 mm) drop-base open-element air cleaner assembly fitted with a crankcase breather on a 780 cu ft/min (22 m3/min) vacuum secondary Holley 4-Bbl carburetor. A 'divorced' exhaust crossover port heated well-choke thermostat coil was used to provide cleaner and faster engine warm-up. Its distributor came in two styles, dual-point (Camaro) and transistorized (Corvette). The dual point had an ignition point cam designed to reduce point bounce at high rpm. Both distributors had a vacuum diaphragm to advance ignition timing at part-throttle for economy and emissions.

Pulleys for the balancer, alternator, water-pump, as well as optional power steering, were deep-groove to retain the drive belt(s) at high rpm. In 1969, the 302 shared the finned cast aluminium valve covers with the LT-1 350 Corvette engine. Conservatively rated at 290 hp (216 kW) (SAE gross) at 5800 rpm and 290 lb⋅ft (393 N⋅m) at 4800, actual output with its production 11.0:1 compression ratio was around 376 hp (280 kW) with 1.625 in (41.3 mm) primary x 3 in (76.2 mm) collector Sanderson tubular headers that came in the trunk when ordered with a 1967 Z/28, and associated carburetor main jet and ignition timing tuning.[citation needed] In 1968, the last year for factory headers, they had 1.75 in (44.5 mm) primaries x 3 in (76.2 mm) collectors. A stock 1968 Z/28 with the close-ratio transmission, optional transistorized-ignition and 4.88 gear, fitted with little more than the factory cowl plenum cold-air hood induction and headers, was capable of running 12.9 second/108 mph (174 km/h) 14 mile (402 m) times on street tires.

After the 1967 Trans-Am campaign with the four-barrel induction system producing more horsepower than the competing automakers' eight-barrel systems, for 1968, Chevrolet developed a factory 'cross-ram' aluminum intake-manifold package using two Holley 600 cu ft/min (17 m3/min) mechanical secondary carburetors for Trans-Am racing. It was available only as off-road service parts purchased over the Chevrolet dealership parts counter. With the Chevrolet 140 1st-design off-road cam, the package increased a stock 302's horsepower from 360 hp (268 kW) to approximately 400 hp (298 kW). Chevrolet went so far as to carry the positive crankcase ventilation system (PCV) over to the cross-ram induction system to retain emissions compliance mandated for U.S.-produced cars beginning in 1967, that also provided full-throttle crankcase pressure venting to the intake air to burn its vapors.

Engines prepared for competition use were capable of producing 465 hp (347 kW) with little more than the eight-barrel induction, ported heads with higher pressure valvesprings, roller rocker arms, and the 754 2nd-design road-race cam. 1967/1968 models' cowl-induction system had an enclosed air-cleaner assembly ducted from its passenger side into the firewall cowl above the heater core.

In 1969, factory Z/28's could be ordered with the ZL-1 aluminum-block 427 adaptation of the 1967 L-88 427 Corvette cowl-induction 'ZL-2' hood available for both single and dual four-barrel induction systems that were sealed to the air cleaner base ensuring dense cooler, high-pressure, oxygen-laden air from the center of the base of the windshield was supplied to the engine for combustion smoothness and maximum power production.

Another popular service-parts-only component used on the 302 was the magnetic-pulse Delco transistor-ignition ball bearing distributor. Introduced in 1963 on Pontiac's 389 and 421 cu in (6.4 and 6.9 L) drag racing engines, General Motors fitted it to the 1967 Z/28 before they used it on the L88 427 cu in (7.0 L) Corvette. It eliminated the production breaker-point ignition allowing greater spark energy and more stable ignition timing at all engine speeds including idle. This was one of the least talked about yet most transformative and comprehensive performance and durability upgrades of its time. Many of the 302s off-road service parts were the development work of racers like Roger Penske. Every part in a SCCA Trans-Am engine had to be available through local Chevrolet parts departments to encourage their use by anyone who wanted them.

While the 302 became a strong Limited Sportsman oval track racing engine in the hands of racers like Bud Lunsford in his 1966 Chevy II, its bore/stroke and rod/stroke geometries made it a natural high-rpm road-racing engine and were responsible for its being among the more reliable production street engines homologated for full competition across all the American makes, winning back-to-back Trans-Am Championships at the hands of Mark Donohue in 1968 and 1969. However, with engines built by Al Bartz, Falconer & Dunn and Traco Engineering, the pinnacle of the 302's use in professional racing was its being the primary engine that powered the outstanding but overshadowed 1968-1976 Formula 5000 Championship Series, a SCCA Formula A open-wheel class designed for lower cost.

The engine was also popular in Formula 5000 racing around the world, especially in Australia and New Zealand where it proved more powerful than the Repco-Holden V8. Weighing 1,350 lb (610 kg), with a 525–550 hp (391–410 kW) iron block and head engine positioned near the car's polar moment of inertia for responsive turn pivoting, a Hewland 5-speed magnesium transaxle, and 10 in (254.0 mm) wide 13 in (330.2 mm) front/20 in (508.0 mm) wide 15 in (381.0 mm) rear magnesium wheels, it produced incredibly exciting racing. They ran 0–60 mph (0–97 km/h) in 2.8 seconds and over 180 mph (290 km/h).

Reminiscing about the series, mid-70s Australian F5000 driver Bruce Allison said, "We never used first gear at the start. We started in second, and even then there was so much torque, you'd get wheelspin through third and fourth gears." Prepared with a Lucas-McKay mechanically timed individual-stack magnesium fuel-injection induction system that was paired with ported production car double-hump iron heads, a rev-kit fitted roller lifter camshaft, roller bearing rocker arms, and a virtually stock production crankshaft, it had a lasting impact on the series' ability to conduct high car-count finishes and close competition events by the degree of mechanical success it provided to a series filled with star international Grand Prix drivers like David Hobbs, Brian Redman, Jody Scheckter and Mario Andretti.

327 edit

 
Fuel-injected 327 cu in (5.4 L) engine installed in a 1963 Corvette

The 327 cu in (5.4 L) V8, introduced in 1962, had a bore of 4.00in and 3.25in stroke. The exact displacement is 326.7256 cu in (5,354 cc). Power ranged from 225 to 383 hp (168 to 286 kW) depending on the choice of carburetor or fuel injection, camshaft, cylinder heads, pistons and intake manifold. In 1962, the Duntov solid lifter cam versions produced 340 hp (254 kW), 344 lb⋅ft (466 N⋅m) with single Carter 4-barrel, and 360 hp (268 kW), 358 lb⋅ft (485 N⋅m) with Rochester fuel-injection. In 1964, horsepower increased to 366 hp (273 kW) for the newly named L-76 version, and 375 hp (280 kW) for the fuel injected L-84, making the L-84 the most powerful naturally aspirated, single-cam, production small block V8 until the appearance of the 385 hp (287 kW), 395 lb⋅ft (536 N⋅m) Generation III LS6 in 2001. This block is one of three displacements that underwent a major change in 1968 when the main journal size was increased from 2.3 to 2.45 in (58.4 to 62.2 mm). In 1965, Chevrolet released the now-legendary L-79, which was nothing more than an L-76 (11.0:1 forged pop-up pistons, forged steel rods and crank, 2.02 Corvette heads), but with the 30-30 Duntov cam replaced by the No. 151 hydraulic cam.

In 1966, Checker began offering the 327 as an option.[21] The Avanti II and its successors were powered by the 327 and later versions of the small-block V8.

The 327 was fitted in the English Gordon-Keeble. Ninety-nine cars were made between 1964 and 1967. It was also installed in many Isos, until 1972 when General Motors started demanding cash in advance and the Italian manufacturer switched to the Ford Cleveland V8.[22]

In 1968, the 327 L73 developing 250 hp (186 kW) was part of the CKD packages exported to Australia from Canada for use in the locally assembled (by General Motors Holdens) Chevrolet Impala and Pontiac Parisienne. GMH used the same specification engine in the Holden HK Monaro GTS327. The engine was used in the Monaro GTS327 to make it the new Holden Muscle Car, and so it could compete in the local improved production (Australian Group C). The car had modified suspension just before release to also be used in local Series Production racing (Australian Group E). A special build 327 was built for GMH for the final run of the HK GTS327 by the Canadian McKinnon Industries. It was a lower compression version of the 1968 engine first used on the HK GTS327, and was dressed as a 1969 engine sporting all 1969 parts. The 327 was replaced in the mid-1969 HT Monaro by the 350 L48 developing 300 hp (224 kW).

350 edit

 
350 cu in (5.7 L) engine installed in a 1968 Camaro SS

The 350 cu in (5.7 L), with a 3.48 in (88.39 mm) stroke, first appeared as a high-performance L-48 option for the 1967 Camaro. The exact displacement is 349.85 cu in (5,733 cc). One year later, it was made available in the Chevrolet Nova, and finally in 1969, the rest of the Chevrolet line could be ordered with a 350. As had been the case with earlier versions of the small-block, the 350 was available in the Beaumont sold by Pontiac Canada, which unlike its U.S. counterparts, used Chevrolet chassis and drivelines. Many variants followed.

L46 edit

Years: 1969–1970

The L46 became an optional engine for the 1969 Chevrolet Corvette. It was a higher-performance version of the base 350 cu in (5.7 L) V8 with casting number 186 2.02 / 1.6 in (51.3 / 40.6 mm) valve heads and had an 11.0:1 compression ratio requiring high octane gas. This produced 350 hp (261 kW) (SAE gross power) and 380 lb⋅ft (515 N⋅m) torque.[23] It was also available in 1970 with a four-barrel Quadrajet carburetor and L46 hydraulic cam, dome piston (+0.16 cu in (2.6 cc)), 186 heads, and a four-bolt block.

L48 edit

Years: 1967–1980

The L48 is the original 350 cu in (5.7 L) engine. It was introduced for 1967 in the Super Sport (SS) version of the Camaro (which used it until 1969) and for 1968 in the Chevy II/Nova (which used it until 1979). In 1969, it was used in almost all car lines—Camaros, Caprices, Impalas, El Caminos, Chevelles, and Novas. The 1969 L48s use a hydraulic cam, 4bbl Quadrajet carburetor, cast pistons, 4-bolt main casting number 010 blocks and casting number 041 or 186 heads. Power output was 300 hp (224 kW) SAE and 380 lb⋅ft (515 N⋅m) torque. Compression ratio was 10.25:1. The compression ratio of the L48 was lowered to 8.5:1 in 1971.

In 1972, the L48 (four-barrel V8) option for the Nova was part of the SS package. This is indicated by the fifth digit in the VIN being a K. 1972 was the only year the SS package could be verified by the VIN.

The L48 engine was exported to Australia, where it appeared in the Holden Monaro from 1969 through 1974, and in the Statesman from 1971 through 1974. Towards the end of the HQ series in 1973–74, due to US emissions regulations, the performance of these engines had dropped to the same or lower than Holden's locally manufactured 308 cu in (5.0 L) V8, which was not yet subject to similar regulations, so Holden discontinued using the engine.

The L48 V8 was the standard engine in the 1975–1980 Chevrolet Corvette. The L48 V8 Corvette engine produced 165 hp (123 kW) in 1975. Power increased to 180 hp (134 kW) in 1976 and stayed the same in 1977. The 1978 saw 175 hp (130 kW) for California or high altitude areas and 185 hp (138 kW) everywhere else. Power increased to 195 hp (145 kW) in 1979 but decreased to 190 hp (142 kW) in 1980.[23]

L65 edit

The 1970 model year Camaro had a 250 hp (186 kW) high-performance two-barrel Rochester carburetor. In 1971, it dropped to 245 hp (183 kW), and net performance further dropped to 165 hp (123 kW) for 1972 and 145 hp (108 kW) for 1973–1976. It was basically the two-barrel version of the L48 350. It was produced until the 1976 model year. It had 255 lb⋅ft (346 N⋅m) of torque.

LM1 edit

The LM1 is the base 350 cu in with a four-barrel carburetor (usually with a Rochester Quadrajet) 155–175 hp (116–130 kW) engine in passenger cars to 1979 as a retail option (its final use in a retail passenger car was the 1981 Camaro Z28) and police package 9C1 A/G (Malibu to 1981) and B-bodies (Caprice, Impala) until 1988 retail market GM rear wheel drive/V8s sold to the general public had a maximum 5.0 liter displacement with the exception of its muscle car survivors; such as the Corvette and F-bodies (Camaro IROC Z or Trans Am). Throughout its lifespan, it used mechanical ignition points, electronic, or computer-controlled spark system, and conventional or feedback carburetors. The LM1 was superseded by the L05 powerplant after 1988. The LM1 was first introduced for 1969 model year as a 9.0:1 255 hp engine. It was essentially an L48 engine in all ways except for 75cc combustion chambers rather than the L48's 64cc, and less spark advance to allow it to run on regular-grade fuel. It was replaced at the end of December 1968 by the L65 and re-appeared again in the 1970s. This engine was fitted to automatic versions of the 1969 and 1970 Holden Monaro GTS350 in Australia where it was rated at 275 hp most likely due to the use of higher octane fuel and far more spark advance than was fitted to North American versions of the engine.

ZQ3 edit

Years: 1969-1974

The ZQ3 is the standard engine in the 1969–1974 Chevrolet Corvette.

In 1969 and 1970 it was a 300 hp (224 kW) version of the 350 cu in (5.7 L) small-block, with 10.25:1 compression and hydraulic lifters. It used a Rochester "4MV" Quadra-Jet 4-barrel carburetor and a L48 camshaft.[23]

In 1971, power decreased to 270 hp (201 kW) (gross) and 300 lb⋅ft (407 N⋅m) (gross) of torque with a lower 8.5:1 compression. 1972 saw 200 hp (149 kW) (net) and 270 lb⋅ft (366 N⋅m) (net) of torque. In 1973 power decreased to 190 hp (142 kW), but increased slightly in 1974 to 195 hp (145 kW).[23]

Post-1971 blocks possibly had a lower nickel content but thicker cylinder deck, and post 1974 heads of the small block Chevrolet used less iron, and were lighter weight, crack-prone, and were less powerful because of the lower compression ratios used.[citation needed]

LT-1 edit

 
LT-1 in a 1970 Chevrolet Camaro Z28

Years: 1970–1972

The LT-1 was one of the most well-known SBC V8s becoming available in 1970. It used solid lifters, 11.0:1 compression, the "178" high-performance camshaft, and a 780 cu ft/min (22 m3/min) vacuum secondary Holley four-barrel carburetor on a special high-rise aluminum intake, with special 2.5" outlet rams' horn exhaust manifolds in the Corvette, Delco transistor ignition and a low-restriction exhaust factory rated at 370 hp (276 kW) in the Corvette, and 360 hp (268 kW) at 6000 rpm and 380 lb⋅ft (515 N⋅m) at 4000 rpm in the Camaro Z28[24] (the NHRA rated it at 425 hp (317 kW) for classification purposes). Redline was 6,500 rpm but power fell off significantly past 6,200 rpm. The LT-1 was available in the Corvette and Camaro Z28. Power was down in 1971 to dual-rated 330 hp (246 kW) (gross)/255 hp (190 kW) (net) and 360 lb⋅ft (488 N⋅m) of torque with 9.0:1 compression, and again in 1972 (the last year of the LT-1, now rated using net only, rather than gross, measurement) to 255 hp (190 kW) and 280 lb⋅ft (380 N⋅m).

L82 edit

Years: 1973–1980

The 1973–1974 L82 was a "performance" version of the 350 that still used the casting number 624 76cc chamber "2.02" heads but with a Rochester Quadra-jet 4bbl carburetor and dual-plane aluminum intake manifold, the earlier L46 350 hp (261 kW) 350 hydraulic-lifter cam, and 9.0:1 compression forged-aluminum pistons producing 250 hp (186 kW) (1971 was the first year for SAE net hp rating, as installed in the vehicle with accessories and mufflers) and 285 lb⋅ft (386 N⋅m) of torque. Its cast-aluminum LT-1 valvecovers were painted crinkle-black contrasting with the aluminum manifold and distributor housing. It was down to 205 hp (153 kW) and 255 lb⋅ft (346 N⋅m) of torque for 1975. It produced 210 hp (157 kW) in the Corvette for 1976–1977. The 1978 L82 recovered somewhat, producing 220 hp (164 kW) and 260 lb⋅ft (353 N⋅m) in the Corvette and in 1979 it produced 225 hp (168 kW) in the Corvette. In 1980, its final year, it produced a peak of 230 hp (172 kW).[23] This engine was also available on the Chevrolet Camaro in 1973 and 1974.

L81 edit

Years: 1981

The L81 was the only 5.7 L (350 cu in) Corvette engine for 1981. It produced 190 hp (142 kW) and 280 lb⋅ft (380 N⋅m) of torque from 8.2:1 compression, exactly the same as the 1980 L48, but added hotter cam and computer control spark advance, replacing the vacuum advance.[23] The L81 was the first Corvette engine to employ a "smart carburetor." The 1980 Rochester Quadrajet was modified to allow electronic mixture control, and an ECM (Engine Control Module) supplied with data from an exhaust oxygen sensor, modified the air–fuel mixture being fed to the engine.

LS9 edit

Years: 1969–1986

The LS9 was GM's 350 cubic inch truck engine used in C/K and G-series models up to 8,500 lb (3,856 kg) GVWR (gross vehicle weight rating). The LS9 used a Rochester four-barrel carburetor, and its power ratings for 1984 were 165 hp (123 kW) at 3800 rpm, and 275 lb⋅ft (373 N⋅m) torque at 1600 rpm. A version using a closed-loop carburetor was used with the California emissions package in its final years. The LS9 and LT9 engines were replaced for 1987 by the L05 TBI (throttle-body fuel injection) engines. Most of the small-block engines in this timeframe were built at either the Flint engine plant in south Flint, Michigan, or at St. Catharines, Ontario. The Flint plant was producing about 5,200 engines per day in the mid-1980s, and had a slower, separate line for the TPI engines used in the Camaro and Corvette.[25]

LT9 edit

Years: 1981–1986[26]

The LT9 served as GM's heavy-duty (over 8,500 lb (3,856 kg) GVWR) emissions[27] variant of the 5.7 L (350 cu in). It was used in C/K 20/30 pickups, G30 passenger and cargo vans (built in Lordstown, OH, and later in Flint, MI), and P30 chassis used for motorhomes and step vans.

The LT9's listed specifications are 160 hp (119 kW) at 3,800 rpm and 250 lb⋅ft (339 N⋅m) of torque at 2,800 rpm with 8.3:1 compression.[28] LT9 engines were carbureted with Rochester Quadrajets from the factory and generally have four-bolt mains. The LT9 is often known as the "M-code 350," from the eighth character of the VIN.[27]

L83 edit

Years: 1982 and 1984

The 1982 L83 was again the only Corvette engine, producing 200 hp (149 kW) and 285 lb⋅ft (386 N⋅m) of torque from 9.0:1 compression. Since GM did not assign a 1983 model year to production Corvettes, there was no L83 for 1983.[23] This was also the only engine on the 1984 Corvette, at 205 hp (153 kW) and 290 lb⋅ft (393 N⋅m) of torque. The L83 added "Cross-Fire" fuel injection (twin throttle-body fuel injection).

L98 edit

Years: 1985–1992

The new 1985 L98 350 added tuned-port fuel injection (TPI), which was standard on all 1985–1991 Corvettes. It was rated at 230 hp (172 kW) for 1985–1986, 240 hp (179 kW) for 1987-1989 (245 hp (183 kW) with 3.08:1 rear axle ratio (1988-1989 only)), and 245 hp (183 kW) in 1990–1991 (250 hp (186 kW) with 3.08:1 rear axle). Aluminum cylinder heads (Corvette only) were released part way through the 1986 model run, modified for 1987 with D-ports, and continued through the end of L98 Corvette production in 1991 (still used on ZZx 350 crate engines until 2015 when the ZZ6 received the fast burn heads).[23] The L98 V8 was optional on January 1987–1992 Chevrolet Camaro and Pontiac Firebird models (rated at 225 hp (168 kW)-245 hp (183 kW) and 330 lb⋅ft (447 N⋅m)–345 lb⋅ft (468 N⋅m)) The 1987 versions had 20 hp (15 kW) and 15 lb⋅ft (20 N⋅m) more and a change to hydraulic roller camshaft. Compression was up again in 1990 to 9.5:1 Camaro/Firebird and 10:1 Corvettes, but rated output stayed the same.

Vehicles using the L98:

L05 edit

The L05 was introduced in 1987 for use in Chevrolet/GMC trucks in the GMT400 (introduced in April 1987 as 1988 models) and the R/V series trucks such as the K5 Blazer, Suburban, and rounded-era pickups (including chassis cabs and four-door crew cabs). The L05 was also used in the G-van models and the P30 step vans, as well as in 9C1-optioned police package Caprices, and in the following other vehicles:

Vehicles using the L05

L05s were used primarily with casting number 14102193 (64cc combustion chambers) cylinder heads with swirled intake ports—the intake ports were designed for fuel economy (the design was also shared with the 103 heads used on the 4.3L with TBI). The swirl ports (known to GM as a vortex chamber) along with the irregular shape of the combustion chambers limit the airflow and horsepower output where they did not provide a fast burn, later phased in with the 1996 Vortec heads. A majority of the L05s used with the trucks and vans had conventional flat tappet camshafts, while the Caprice 9C1 (1989–93) had a roller cam. L05 usage was replaced by the LT1 after 1993 in GM B-bodies and D-bodies until production ceased in 1996.

A single belt (serpentine belt) accessory drive was introduced on the L05, the 5.0L L03, and the 4.3L V6 LB4 engines used in the 1988 GMT400 models, but not on the older R/V models (R/V models received the serpentine belt drive in 1989 when the front grille was facelifted in appearance to the GMT400 lineup). In mid-1996, the L05 was equipped with heads used in the 1996 G30. In February 2008, a Wisconsin businessman reported that his 1991 Chevrolet C1500 pickup had logged over 1 million miles without any major repairs to its L05 engine.[15] The article also mentioned that the Flint engine plant that built the engine, had produced 45 million engines in its 45-year history, before closing in 1999.

L31 edit

The Vortec 5700 L31 (VIN code "R") is a 5.7L V8 truck engine. It is Chevrolet's last production first-generation small-block. The cylinder heads feature combustion chambers and intake ports very similar to those of the LT1 V8, but lacking the LT1's reverse-flow cooling and higher compression. As such, the L31 head is compatible with all older small-blocks, and is a very popular upgrade. It offers the airflow of more expensive heads, at a much lower cost. It does, however, require a specific intake manifold (the L31 has four bolts per head attaching the intake manifold, as opposed to the "traditional" six bolts per head found on older Chevrolet small-blocks). Chevrolet's L31 was replaced by GM's LS-based 5.3L LM7 and 6.0L LQ4. The Vortec 5700 produces 255 hp (190 kW) to 350 hp (261 kW) at 4600 rpm and 330 lb⋅ft (447 N⋅m) to 350 lb⋅ft (475 N⋅m) of torque at 2800 rpm. Known as the GEN 1+, the final incarnation of the 1950s-vintage small-block ended production in 2003. It is still[when?] in current production as a crate engine for marine applications and automotive hobbyists as the 'RamJet 350' with minor modifications. Volvo Penta and Mercury Marine also still produce the L31. The "Marine" intake, despite its cast iron construction, is an L31 upgrade that allows use of common Bosch-style injectors with various flow rates while still maintaining emission compliance.

L31 applications:

TBI L31 applications:

  • 1996 G30 vans over 8,500 lb (3,856 kg) GVWR with 4L80E transmission

Special applications:

4.125 in bore family (1970–1980) edit

400 edit

 
A 400ci small-block V8 in a 1975 Avanti II

The 400.9 cu in (6.6 L; 6,569 cc) is the only engine in this family; it was introduced in 1970 and produced for ten years. It has a 4.125-inch (104.8 mm) bore and a 3.750-inch (95.25 mm) stroke. The 400 differed from other small blocks in that the cylinders were siamesed and therefore required 'steam' holes in the block, head gaskets, and heads to help alleviate 'hot-spots' in the cooling system at the point above the siamesed cylinders. Overheating and damage are likely if head gaskets or heads without 'steam' holes are used on a 400 block. The 400 is the only engine that uses a 2.65 in (67.3 mm) main bearing journal and a 2.1 in (53.3 mm) rod bearing journal. The connecting rod was also 400 specific being 5.565 in (141.4 mm) as opposed to the 5.7 in (144.8 mm) rod used in all other small block Chevrolet engines. The 400 was made in 4-bolt main journal from 1970 to 1972 and in 2-bolt main journal from 1973 to 1979. The 400 can have either 2 or 3 frost-plugs per side though all 400 blocks have the provisions for a 3rd frost-plug on each side. The 400 was rated at 245–265 hp (183–198 kW) gross (150–180 hp (112–134 kW) SAE net) through its life. The 400 saw extensive use in full-size Chevrolet and GMC trucks; K5 Blazer/Jimmy, 1/2-ton, 3/4-ton, 1-ton, and even larger 'medium duty' trucks had an option to be equipped with a 400. The engine was available in midsize A-Body and full-size B-Body passenger cars until the end of the 1976 model year. Early models produced 265 hp (198 kW) with a two-barrel carburetor. All 400s came with a two-barrel carburetor until 1973. A four-barrel carburetor option became available in 1974.

The 400 was never intended as a high-performance engine and never saw large factory horsepower numbers; nevertheless, it developed a reputation for creating tremendous torque (up to 400 lb⋅ft (542 N⋅m) in 1970) and has since become popular for many types of racing, both on- and off-road. It was also used for the limited production Avanti for a few years in the 1970s.

3.671 in bore family (1975–1976) edit

262 edit

The 1975–1976 262 was a 262.5 cu in (4.3 L; 4,301 cc) 90° pushrod V8 with an iron block and heads. Bore and stroke were 3.671 in × 3.1 in (93.2 mm × 78.7 mm). Power output for 1975 was 110 hp (82 kW) at 3600 rpm and 195 lb⋅ft (264 N⋅m) at 2000 rpm. The 262 was replaced with the 305 for the 1977 model year.

This was Chevrolet's second 4.3L power plant; four other Chevrolet engines displaced 4.3L: the Vortec 4300 (a V6 based on the Chevrolet 350 cu in (5.7 L), with two cylinders removed), the original 265 cu in (4.3 L) V8 in 1954, a bored version of the stovebolt-era 235 inline six displacing 261 cu in (4.3 L), and a derivative of the Generation II LT engines known as the L99 (using the 305's 3.736 in (94.9 mm) bore, 5.94 in (150.9 mm)-long connecting rods, and a 3 in (76.2 mm) stroke).

This engine was used in the following cars:

3.736 in bore family (1976–1998) edit

305 edit

Designed and built during the era of the gas embargo, CAFE mandates, and tighter emissions, this engine family was designed to become Chevrolet's cost-effective, all-purpose "economy V8" engine line. Introduced in 1976 models, it had a displacement of 305 cu in (5.0 L). It was intended to fill the gap where the venerable 283 and 307 had been. Bore and stroke were 3.736 in × 3.48 in (94.9 mm × 88.4 mm), using the 350's crankshaft throw. This new engine family would provide better gas economy than the 350, share its basic architecture and many parts with the 350 (thus reducing production costs), and provide customers with more horsepower and torque than Chevrolet's 1970s-era inline 6 and V6 engines. During the early 1980s, when GM was streamlining their engine lineups, the Chevrolet 305 would rise to prominence as General Motors' "corporate" engine, signified by being the standard (and often only) V8 in many GM vehicles. Through much of the 1980s, the 305 became General Motors' most common V8, followed closely by Oldsmobile's 307. The 305 also became the standard V8 in GM's C/K truck series, and was even used in the Corvette for California in 1980.

Crankshafts used with the 305 had the same casting number as the 350 with one discernible difference—the 305 crank is lighter in weight to compensate for engine balancing. As a result, the counterweights are smaller, which makes it unsuitable for use in a 350 where metal would have to be welded back on. The medium journal 305, like its big-brother 350, would be further developed in the 1990s, although with a reduced 3 in (76.2 mm) stroke using 5.94 in (150.9 mm) connecting rods, into the Generation II LT engine L99 263.

The 305 was used in the following vehicles:

The Chevrolet 305 is a reliable, fuel efficient V8, easily capable of 200,000 miles, if maintained. From 1976 onward into the early 1980s, these engines were prone to wearing out their camshaft lobes prematurely due to a combination of improper manufacturing and poor quality controls (a result of GM's cost-cutting measures). The 305 is sometimes dismissed in performance circles because of its lackluster performance, small bore size, and difficulty flowing large volumes of air at high RPM. However, two variants of the 1983 to 1992 305 were notable performers: the 1983–1988 L69 High Output 5.0L (only used in late 1983–early 1986 F-body and late 1983–1988 Monte Carlo SS) and the 1985–1992 LB9 Tuned Port Injection 5.0L (F-body only).

After 1993, its usage was limited to light trucks and SUVs until the 1999 model year while vans and commercial vehicles continued until 2002. The 305 was sold as a crate motor under the Mr. Goodwrench brand as a replacement motor and as a boat engine for Mercury Marine until late 2014 when it was discontinued. The cylinder block is still in production by GM (part number 10243869) for Sprint Car Spec Racing.[30]

LG3 edit

The first iteration of the 305, the LG3 was introduced in 1976. This variant used a Rochester 2GC carburetor from 1976 to 1978. In 1979, the more fuel-efficient Rochester Dual-Jet two-barrel carburetor replaced the older 2GC. This change also resulted in a drop in power to 130 hp (97 kW) and 125 hp (93 kW) for California emissions cars. All years had an 8.5:1 compression ratio. It was discontinued in 1982.

LG4 edit

The LG4 produced 150–170 hp (112–127 kW) and 240–250 lb⋅ft (325–339 N⋅m). Introduced in 1978, the LG4 was essentially an LG3 with the addition of a four-barrel carburetor and larger valves. The engine saw a series of gradual improvements, increasing reliability, fuel economy, and power output through its production run. In 1981 (1980 for California models), Chevrolet added GM's new "Computer Command Control" (CCC) engine management system to the LG4 engines (except Canadian models). The CCC system included the electronic Rochester 4-bbl E4ME Quadra-Jet, with computer-adjusted fuel metering on the primary venturis and a throttle position sensor allowing the CCC to calculate engine load. In the ignition system, CCC was fully responsible for the timing curve; mechanical and vacuum advances were eliminated from the distributor. The more precise spark timing provided by the CCC made possible a series of increases in compression ratio from a pre-CCC 8.4:1, to 8.6:1, to a knock-sensor–assisted 9.5:1, all while still only requiring 87 AKI regular unleaded fuel.

In 1983, Chevrolet replaced the cast-iron intake with an aluminum version and used either 14014416 ("416") or 14022601 ("601") heads with 1.84 inch intake valves, 1.50 inch exhaust valves, 58 cc chambers, and 178 cc runners. For 1985, the 4-valve-relief, flat top pistons from the L69 were added to the LG4, which resulted in another increase in compression. Also added was a knock sensor to allow the "CCC" engine management system to compensate for the increase in compression and a more aggressive spark-timing map in the ECM. As a result, power increased for the 1985 models to 165 hp (123 kW) from the 150 hp (112 kW) rating in 1984. For 1986, Chevrolet changed over to a one-piece rear main seal engine block design to minimize leaks and warranty claims; however, some early 1986 blocks retained a two-piece rear main seal.

For 1987, Chevrolet once again made some revisions to increase overall reliability, many of them borrowed from the TBI L03, which was to replace the LG4. The coil-in-cap HEI distributor was retired, and an all-new electronic distributor design was used. The intake manifold to head bolt pattern was redesigned to improve gasket integrity—four of the center intake manifold bolts were drilled at 72° instead of 90° for the cast iron cylinder heads. Changes to the valve covers were also made. Ribbing was added to the top of the valve covers to increase surface area, acting as a heat sink. To improve intake gasket sealing, the mounting bolts were relocated to the valve cover centerline, placing all sealing pressure evenly upon the mounting flange perimeter. Thus, these became known as centerbolt valve covers, first introduced in 1985 on the LB4 4.3L V6 and the Corvette a year earlier (the aluminum cylinder heads used with the Corvette were the first to have the centerbolt valve covers). Another improvement was use of a hydraulic lifter/roller camshaft on most 1987 LG4s. Some early engines have lifter retainer provisions, but use the older, non-roller camshaft. 1987 would also be the last year for the LG4 production, however a run of LG4 engines was made to supplement the carry-over production for the 1988 Monte Carlo and the 1988 Chevrolet Caprice.

LU5 edit

Years: 1982–1984

The LU5 "Crossfire EFI 5.0L" featured a dual Throttle Body Injection set-up, based upon the original "Crossram Intake" supplied by Chevrolet for the 1969 Camaro Z28. Unlike, the original '69 version, Chevrolet did not place it in the trunk for owners to install. The system used a special version of GM's still-new "CCC" engine management system. Fuel was supplied by the two TBI units, set diagonally apart from each other, atop the unique, aluminum intake manifold. Unfortunately, the system was placed atop the basic LG4 and lacked any significant performance capability. The engine was originally planned for the long-awaited '82 Camaro Z28, however due to a last-minute GM-mandated cancellation of Pontiac's 301 V8 production & Turbo 4.9L Project (T301), the Crossfire 305 was made available in the '82 Trans Am. A 350 cubic inch version was also used in the Corvette from 1982 to 1984. Since it was fairly early into GM's electronic engine management development and electronic fuel injection programs, few dealerships had the technology, equipment, or properly trained mechanics capable of dealing with these engines. These problems were compounded by widely varying fuel quality standards, production issues, poor quality control by GM, & owners who tinkered with a system they did not understand. In a very short time, these engines obtained the notorious nickname; "Ceasefire Engine". Today, owners with these engines note that they are fairly reliable, and that a significant upgrade can be made by simply using the L69/LB9 TPI/L98 TPI exhaust manifolds/ exhaust systems... When combined with performance-built stock 305 heads w/larger valves or aftermarket heads, plus a camshaft upgrade, these engines can perform surprisingly well. Thanks mostly to a somewhat cult-like following, a number of aftermarket performance parts are also available through Crossfire-specialized manufacturers.

L69 edit

Years: late 1983–1988

The L69 High Output 5.0L was released late into the 1983 model year. It was optional in the Firebird Trans Am, Camaro Z28, and IROC-Z, and was standard in the revived Monte Carlo Super Sport.

The L69 features a compression ratio of 9.5:1 and a relatively aggressive stock camshaft. It also uses a performance-tuned CCC ECM/PROM, a knock sensor, a performance-tuned E4ME 750 cu ft/min (21 m3/min) Rochester Quadra-Jet 4 barrel carburetor, and a special, free-flowing exhaust system with large diameter exhaust manifolds, Y-pipe and catalytic converter.

The L69 F-body exhaust system components would be revised slightly and used again on the later LB9 305 and L98 350 TPI engines. Additionally, the engines came equipped with a functional cold air induction hood on the 1983-1984 Trans Am, a dual snorkel air cleaner assembly on the 1983-1986 Camaro Z28 and IROC-Z and 1985-1986 Trans Am, a large, single snorkel on the 1983-1988 Monte Carlo SS (also, rare optional dual snorkel in 1987-1988), an aluminum intake manifold, high stall torque converter on the Monte Carlo SS and 1984 F-bodies, or a lightweight flywheel on T-5 equipped F-bodies.

The L69 engine produced 190 hp (142 kW) at 4800 and 240 lb⋅ft (325 N⋅m) of torque at 3200 rpm in the F-Body and was rated at 180 hp (134 kW) in the Monte SS.[31][32]

LE9 edit

Years: 1981–1986

The LE9 5.0 L (305 cu in) was a version of the 305 with a four-barrel 650 cu ft/min (18 m3/min) carburetor, a 9.5:1 compression ratio, the LM1 cam and 14010201 casting heads featuring 1.84/1.50" valves, and 53 cc (3.2 cu in) chambers. The engine produced 165 hp (123 kW) at 4,400 and 240 lb⋅ft (325 N⋅m) at 2,000 rpm.

LB9 edit

Years: 1985–1992

The LB9 "Tuned Port Injection 5.0L" was introduced in 1985. At its core was the stout L69 shortblock and it used the same aggressive L69 camshaft profile. The induction system was unlike any system used previously by GM. It featured a large plenum made of cast aluminum, with individual runners made of tubular aluminum, feeding air to each cylinder. And each cylinder had its own fuel injector fed by a fuel rail mounted above each bank. In 1985, this engine was optional only in the Camaro Z28, IROC-Z and Trans Am equipped with the WS6 performance suspension. The LB9 was also available in the '87-92 GTA and Firebird Formula. 215 hp (160 kW) and 275 lb⋅ft (373 N⋅m) and varied between 190–230 hp (142–172 kW) (with 275–300 lb⋅ft (373–407 N⋅m) of torque) over the years offered.

L03 edit

Years: 1987–95

The L03 produced 170 hp (127 kW) at 4400 rpm and 255 lb⋅ft (346 N⋅m) of torque at 2400 rpm in 1993–1995 GM trucks. This engine used the TBI throttle body fuel injection, which was a hybrid between EFI and carburetor technology. It used an EFI system with electronically controlled injectors, which were mated to a twin barrel "carburetor" body. It featured "swirl port" heads (helped emissions, but severely stunted power output) and served as the base V8 engine in all C/K 1500 Series and 2500 Series (under 8,500 lbs GVWR) GMC/Chevrolet trucks and vans. It was also very common in Firebirds and Camaros because it was the only engine that offered a five-speed manual combination. The 350 exceeded the Borg-Warner T5's input power ratings, and as such, it was cut from the 350 cars to prevent lemon law and warranty losses.

The L03 used hydraulic roller lifters, which allowed it to recover some of the lost horsepower from its factory design, while further increasing efficiency (reduced rotational drag). Despite downfalls in its aspiration restrictions, the L03 was known for its reliability (1987–1990 F-bodies with the L03 did not use a rev limiter). The L03 used dished pistons with a 9.3:1 to 9.5:1 compression ratio. The L03 TBI featured a 3.736" bore and 3.48" stroke, the same as its TPI cousin, the LB9.

L30 edit

Years: 1996–2002

The Vortec 5000 L30 is a V8 truck engine, displacing 5,020 cc (305.4 cubic inches). Bore is 95 mm (3.7 in) and stroke is 88.4 mm (3.5 in). The compression ratio is 9.1:1.[33] It was replaced by the 4.8 L Vortec 4800 LR4 for the 1999 Chevrolet Silverado/GMC Sierra trucks and 2003 Express/Savana vans. In C/K trucks, the 5000 produces 230 hp (172 kW) net flywheel at 4600 rpm and 285 lb⋅ft (386 N⋅m) net flywheel torque at 2,800 rpm. In vans, it produces 220 hp (164 kW) net flywheel at 4600 rpm and 290 lb⋅ft (393 N⋅m) net flywheel torque at 2,800 rpm. The engine uses a hydraulic roller cam and high-flowing, fast burn–style Vortec heads. Differences include bore and stroke, intake valve size, and smaller combustion chambers.

L30 applications:

3.50 in bore family (1979–1982) edit

267 edit

The 267 was introduced in 1979 for the GM F-body (Camaro), G-body (Chevrolet Monte Carlo, El Camino), A-body (Malibu Classic, 1979–1981) and also used on GM B-body cars (Impala and Caprice models). The 4.4 L; 267.8 cu in (4,389 cc) engine had the 350's crankshaft stroke of 3.48 in (88.4 mm) and the smallest bore of any small-block, 3.5 in (88.9 mm), shared with the 200 V6 introduced a year earlier.

It was only available with a M2ME Rochester Dualjet 210–effectively a Rochester Quadrajet with no rear barrels. After 1980, electronic feedback carburetion was used on the 267. The 267 also saw use in 1980 to 1982 Checker Marathons.[34]

While similar in displacement to the other 4.3–4.4 L (265–267 cu in) V8 engines produced by General Motors (including the Oldsmobile 260 and Pontiac 265), the small bore 267 shared no parts with the other engines and was phased out after the 1982 model year due to inability to conform to emission standards. Chevrolet vehicles eventually used the 305 cu in (5.0 L) as their base V8 engine.

The 267, when introduced in the GM F-Body as the L39 4.4L, made 120 hp (89 kW) at 3600 rpm and 215 lb⋅ft (292 N⋅m) of torque at 2000 rpm (SAE net). Power output would drop in subsequent years of the engine. The 267 cu in (4.4 L) had a low 8.3:1 compression ratio.[35]

Major changes edit

The original design of the small block remained remarkably unchanged for its production run, which began in 1954 and ended, in passenger vehicles, in 2003. The engine is still being built today for many aftermarket applications, both to replace worn-out older engines and also by many builders as high-performance applications. The principal changes to it over the years include:

  • 1956 – Full-flow oil filtration was introduced, using a paper element filter in a canister that was mounted to a boss that was added to the left rear cylinder block casting and machined for this purpose.
  • 1957 – The displacement of the base V8 continued at 265 cubic inches, but optional V8 engines were introduced with a displacement of 283 cubic inches.
  • 1958 – Bosses for side motor mounts were added to the block casting, used for production mounts for this and all future model years. However, the features for front motor mounts as used in 1955–1957 remained part of the block casting in this and future years. The 265-cubic-inch version of the engine was discontinued. Also, the cylinder head valve cover mounting bolt holes were changed from the top row staggered (relative to the bottom row of bolts) to the "straight-across" pattern that remained the way of identifying the early heads from the newer ones with a valve cover design which lasted until the 1987 center-bolt-style covers.
  • 1962 – The block's cylinder wall casting was revised to allow four-inch bores, and the 327-cubic-inch version of the engine, using this bore diameter and increased stroke, was introduced.
  • 1967 - The oil filter mounting now came from the factory with an adapter and machining to allow the use of spin-on filters; canister mounting was possible by removing the adapter.
  • 1968 – The main-journal diameter was increased from 2.30" (small) to 2.45" (medium), and the connecting-rod journal diameter was increased from 2.00" to 2.10". This allowed the use of cast-iron crankshafts; the previous crankshafts were made of forged steel, which was more expensive. The rod bolts were changed from 11/32" diameter to 3/8". The oil-fill location was moved from a tube on the front of the intake manifold to a cap on the left- or right-side valve cover, depending upon the application.
  • 1970 - The "400" is introduced in September 1969 for the 1970 model year, with a bore of 4.125" and a stroke of 3.75". This engine introduced the "large-journal" crankshaft with a main journal size of 2.65" and rod bearing journals of 2.10". This engine also introduced "Siamese bores" to the Chevrolet small-block line, requiring "steam holes" in the cylinder heads and head gaskets, which were used to prevent hot spots and subsequent overheating. The connecting rods, due to the long stroke, are also shorter at 5.565", differing from the 5.7" length of all other Generation I small-block connecting rods.
  • 1980 – Weight reduction though thinner cylinder wall block and light weight head castings. Heads are prone to cracking and blocks typically cannot tolerate an overbore more than .040".
  • 1986 – The rear main seal was changed from a 2-piece rubber design to a 1-piece rubber design that used a mounting appliance to hold it in place. This necessitated a change in the flywheel/flex plate bolt pattern as well as requiring an externally balanced flex plate/flywheel.
  • 1987 – The valve cover surfaces were changed so that the mounting lip was raised and the bolt location was moved from 4 bolts on the perimeter to 4 bolts along the centerline of the valve covers (this design debuted on the Corvette in 1986, and the Chevrolet 4.3L 90 degree V6 the year before). Also changed were the mounting angles of the two center bolts on each side of the intake manifold (from 90 to 73 degrees), and the lifter bosses were increased in height to accept roller lifters; the aluminum-alloy heads for use on the Corvette engines retained the non-angled bolts. Also, all carburetors(except some 1987-89 F-body and B-body models, also the 30 and 3500 model 1-ton trucks through 1989 with either the M-code 350 or W-code 454 engines, in which all retained the 4bbl Rochester E4ME carbs) were replaced by TBI (throttle-body injection) fuel injection.
  • 1996 – The cylinder heads were redesigned, using improved ports and combustion chambers similar to those in the Generation II LT1, resulting in significant power increases. The intake manifold bolt pattern was also changed to four bolts per cylinder head instead of the "traditional" six bolts. The cylinder block timing cover lip was thickened for use with the plastic timing cover (redesigned for use with a crankshaft position sensor with integrated dowel pins - cylinder blocks for 1996+ do not have dowel pins in the timing cover flange) held with 8 bolts and the water pump bypass hole on the RH deck and below the water pump passage undrilled. Also the fuel pump boss is still present but undrilled (which dates back to the 1992 model year for production engines without a fuel pump block-off plate - some marine/industrial blocks and crate motors sold over the counter via GM dealerships e.g. Goodwrench, ZZ6, 350 H.O. retain the use of a mechanical fuel pump).
This was the last change for the Generation I engine, which continued through the end of the production run in 2003; all 1997–2003 Generation I engines were "Vortec" truck engines.

Details edit

Chevrolet Generation I V8 Small Block Engine Table

note 1: depending upon vehicle application; horsepower, torque, and fuel requirements will vary.

Gen I Years Engine option code (VIN identifier) Power
hp (kW)
Torque
lb-ft (Nm)
Displacement
c.i. (cc)
Fuel (octane) Bore x Stroke
in (mm)
Compression ratio Block & heads (iron or aluminum) Block features
I 1967-69 Z28 290 hp (216 kW) at 5800 290 lb⋅ft (393 N⋅m) at 4200 302 cu in (4,942 cc) 100+ 4 in × 3 in (101.6 mm × 76.2 mm) 11.0:1 Iron only Camaro Z/28, 1968 Cross-Ram intake-manifold with 2 Carter 4bbl
I 1996-02 L30 (M) 220 hp (164 kW) at 4600 290 lb⋅ft (393 N⋅m) at 2800 305 cu in (5,001 cc) 3.736 in × 3.48 in (94.9 mm × 88.4 mm) 9.1:1 Iron Truck/van only
I 1987-95 L03 (E/H) 170 hp (127 kW) at 4400 255 lb⋅ft (346 N⋅m) at 2400 305 cu in (5,001 cc) 3.736 in × 3.48 in (94.9 mm × 88.4 mm) 9.1:1 Iron TBI; passenger car used roller cam
I 1988-96 L05 (K) 210 hp (157 kW) at 4400 300 lb⋅ft (407 N⋅m) at 2800 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) 9.3:1 Iron TBI; 9C1 optioned Caprice and F-bodies had hydraulic roller cam
I 1978-88 LG4 (F/H) 150–170 hp (112–127 kW) at 4600 240–250 lb⋅ft (325–339 N⋅m) at 2800 305 cu in (5,001 cc) 3.736 in × 3.48 in (94.9 mm × 88.4 mm) 8.6:1 Iron 4bbl Quadrajet
I 1981-86 LE9 (F) 165 hp (123 kW) at 4400 240 lb⋅ft (325 N⋅m) at 2000 305 cu in (5,001 cc) 3.736 in × 3.48 in (94.9 mm × 88.4 mm) 9.5:1 Iron Truck/Van only - electronic spark control module used
I 1982-83 LU5 165–175 hp (123–130 kW) 305 cu in (5,001 cc) 3.736 in × 3.48 in (94.9 mm × 88.4 mm) Iron "Crossfire EFI 5.0L"
I 1968-73 L14 200 hp (149 kW) at 4600 300 lb⋅ft (407 N⋅m) at 2400 307 cu in (5,031 cc) 3.875 in × 3.25 in (98.4 mm × 82.6 mm) 9.0:1 Iron
I 1967-80 L48 (K) 165–195 hp (123–145 kW) 380 lb⋅ft (515 N⋅m) 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) 8.25-10.5:1 Iron
I 1969-70 L46 350 hp (261 kW) 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 100+ 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) 11.0:1 Iron Corvette only
I 1969-76 L65 145 hp (108 kW) 220 lb⋅ft (298 N⋅m) 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 87 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) 8.5:1 Iron 2bbl
I 1969-88 LM1 (L) 155–175 hp (116–130 kW) 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) Iron 4bbl Rochester Quadrajet (4MV, M4MC, E4ME); retail option until 1981 when last used with the Camaro Z28; post-1980 use of the LM1 was for 9C1-optioned B (Caprice, Impala) and G-bodies (Malibu)
I 1970-74 ZQ3 190–300 hp (142–224 kW) 270 lb⋅ft (366 N⋅m) at 3500 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) 8.5-10.25:1 Iron 4bbl, Corvette. L48 camshaft
I 1970-72 LT1 250–370 hp (186–276 kW) at 6000 270–300 lb⋅ft (366–407 N⋅m) at 4000 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) 9.1:1 Iron 4bbl
II 1992-97 LT1 (P) 260–305 hp (194–227 kW) at 4800-5200 325–340 lb⋅ft (441–461 N⋅m) at 2400-3400 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 87 or 91 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) 10.4:1 Iron for B & D bodies
Aluminum for F and Y bodies
Reverse cooling
I 1973-80 L82 205–250 hp (153–186 kW) 255–285 lb⋅ft (346–386 N⋅m) 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) 9:1 Iron 4bbl Rochester Quadrajet; flat top pistons with a D-shaped relief cut for valve clearance
I 1981 L81 190 hp (142 kW) 280 lb⋅ft (380 N⋅m) 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) 8.2:1 Iron 4bbl Rochester Quadrajet (E4ME), Corvette
I 1970-86 LS9 (L) 165 hp (123 kW) at 3800 275 lb⋅ft (373 N⋅m) at 1600 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) 8.2:1 Iron 4bbl, truck
I 1981-86 LT9 (M) 160 hp (119 kW) at 3800 250 lb⋅ft (339 N⋅m) at 2800 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) 8.3:1 Iron 4bbl, truck
I 1982-84 L83 200–205 hp (149–153 kW) 285–290 lb⋅ft (386–393 N⋅m) 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) 9.0:1 Iron CrossFire
I 1985-92 L98 (8) 225–250 hp (168–186 kW) at 4000 330–345 lb⋅ft (447–468 N⋅m) at 3200 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) 9.5-10:1 Iron/Aluminum (Corvette) TPI
I 1996-02 L31 (R) 255–350 hp (190–261 kW) at 4600 330–350 lb⋅ft (447–475 N⋅m) at 2800 350 cu in (5,733 cc) 4.0 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) Iron truck, Vortec
I 1970-80 245–265 hp (183–198 kW) 400 cu in (6,554 cc) 4.125 in × 3.75 in (104.8 mm × 95.3 mm) Iron 1970-72 4-bolt main, 1973–80 2-bolt main
I 1975-76 110 hp (82 kW) 133 lb⋅ft (180 N⋅m) at 3600 262 cu in (4,301 cc) 3.671 in × 3.1 in (93.2 mm × 78.7 mm) Iron Nova and Monza only; 2bbl Rochester 2GC carburetor
II 1994-96 L99 (W) 200 hp (149 kW) 245 lb⋅ft (332 N⋅m) 263 cu in (4,311 cc) 3.75 in × 3.0 in (95.3 mm × 76.2 mm) Iron reverse cooling, Chevy Caprice sedans ONLY, including police vehicles
I 1983-88 L69 (G) 180–190 hp (134–142 kW) at 4800 240 lb⋅ft (325 N⋅m) at 3200 305 cu in (5,001 cc) 3.736 in × 3.48 in (94.9 mm × 88.4 mm) 9.5:1 Iron H.O., Firebird/Camaro, Monte Carlo SS only
I 1985-92 LB9 (F) 190–230 hp (142–172 kW) 275–300 lb⋅ft (373–407 N⋅m) 305 cu in (5,001 cc) 3.736 in × 3.48 in (94.9 mm × 88.4 mm) Iron TPI, Firebird/Camaro only
I 1976-82 LG3 (U) 145 hp (108 kW) at 4400 245 lb⋅ft (332 N⋅m) at 2400 305 cu in (5,001 cc) 3.736 in × 3.48 in (94.9 mm × 88.4 mm) 8.5:1 Iron 2bbl

Generation II GM small-block (1992–1997) edit

Generation II
 
Overview
ManufacturerGeneral Motors
Also calledGM LT engine
Production1991-1997[36][37]
Layout
ConfigurationNaturally aspirated 90° V8
Displacement
  • 4.3 L; 263.1 cu in (4,311 cc)
  • 5.7 L; 349.8 cu in (5,732 cc)
  • 5.7 L; 349.8 cu in (5,733 cc)
Cylinder bore
  • 94.9 mm (3.736 in)
  • 99 mm (3.9 in)
  • 100 mm (4 in)
Piston stroke
  • 76.2 mm (3 in)
  • 93 mm (3.66 in)
  • 88 mm (3.48 in)
Cylinder block materialAluminum, Cast iron
Cylinder head materialAluminum, Cast iron
ValvetrainPushrod, 1.5:1 ratio rocker arms; 2 valves per cylinder
Combustion
Fuel system
Fuel type
Oil systemWet sump
Cooling systemWater-cooled
Chronology
PredecessorGeneration I
SuccessorGeneration III

General Motors' Generation II LT1 is a small block V8 engine. Making its debut in the 1992 Chevrolet Corvette, the new LT1 sought to draw upon the heritage of the 1970 Chevrolet LT-1.

A significant improvement over the original Generation I V8 is the Generation II LT1's "reverse cooling" system, allowing coolant to start at the heads and flow down through the block. This keeps the heads cooler, affording greater power through a higher compression ratio and greater spark advance at the same time it maintains higher and more consistent cylinder temperatures.

Some parts from the Generation II are interchangeable with the Generation I one-piece rear main seal engine. The interchangeable parts include the rotating assembly (crank shaft, pistons, connecting rods, and flywheel/flex-plate) one piece rear main seal housing, oil pan and valve cover gaskets and valvetrain assembly (not including timing set, which includes a gear to drive the water pump). The LT1 uses a new engine block, cylinder head, timing cover, water pump, intake manifold and accessory brackets. The harmonic damper also does not interchange; it is a unique damper/pulley assembly. Engine mounts and bell housing bolt pattern remain the same, permitting a newer engine to be readily swapped into an older vehicle.

4.00 in bore blocks edit

5.7 L edit

LT1 edit
 
GM LT1 from a 1993 Chevrolet Camaro Z28

In 1991, GM created a new-generation small-block engine called the "LT1 350", distinct from the high-output Generation I LT-1 of the 1970s. It displaced 5.7 L (350 cu in), and was a 2-valve pushrod design. The LT1 used a reverse-flow cooling system which cooled the cylinder heads first, maintaining lower combustion chamber temperatures and allowing the engine to run at a higher compression than its immediate predecessors.

This engine was used in:

There were a few different versions of the LT1. All feature a cast iron block, with aluminum heads in the Y and F bodies, and cast iron heads in the B and D bodies. Corvette blocks had four-bolt main caps, while most other blocks were two-bolt main caps. Block castings remained the same between 2 and 4 bolt mains.

The 92–93 LT1s used speed density fuel management, batch-fire fuel injection and a dedicated Engine Control Module (ECM). In 94 the LT1 switched to a mass airflow sensor and sequential port injection. A new, more capable computer controlled the transmission as well as the engine and got a new name: Powertrain Control Module (PCM). Where the ECM held its calibration information in a replaceable PROM chip, the 94-95 OBD1 PCMs are reprogrammable through the diagnostic port.

The early Optispark distributor had durability problems, and a revised version was introduced on the 1994 B-Bodies and on the 1995 Y and F-Bodies. Changes include a vacuum port to draw filtered air through the distributor to remove moisture and ozone and a revised drive system which uses an extended dowel pin on the camshaft rather than a separate splined shaft in the camshaft gear. 1996 saw major revisions for OBD-II: a second catalytic converter on the F-body cars, rear oxygen sensors to monitor catalyst efficiency, and a new engine front cover with a crankshaft position sensor. Some OBD-II features had been added to the Corvette starting in 1994 for testing purposes.[citation needed] The 1997 model year Camaro and Firebird were the last year for this engine in a GM production car before it was replaced by the LS1, which was already in the Corvette for 1997.

1992 LT1s in Corvettes were factory rated at 300 hp (220 kW) and 330 lb⋅ft (447 N⋅m). 1996 LT1 Corvettes were rated at 300 hp (220 kW) and 340 lb⋅ft (461 N⋅m).

The 93–95 F-bodies were rated at 275 hp (205 kW) and 325 lb⋅ft (441 N⋅m), while the 96–97 cars were rated at 285 hp (213 kW) and 335 lb⋅ft (454 N⋅m). The 96–97 WS6 and SS F-bodies were rated at 305 hp (227 kW).

The 94–96 B- and D-body version was rated at 260 hp (194 kW) and 330 lb⋅ft (447 N⋅m) (250 hp (186 kW) with V08 mechanical fan as part of V92 or V4P towing option groups).

LT4 edit

The LT4 was the special high-performance version of the new-generation LT1. It featured a slightly more aggressive camshaft profile, 1.6:1 aluminum roller rocker arms, lighter hollow intake valves and liquid-sodium filled exhaust valves, larger fuel injectors, performance crankshaft, higher 10.8:1 compression ratio and high-flow intake manifold (painted red) with extra material above the port available to allow port matching to the raised port LT4 cylinder heads. The LT4 was conservatively underrated at 330 hp (246 kW) and 340 lb⋅ft (461 N⋅m). It was introduced in the 1996 model year, for the last year of the C4 Corvette, and came standard on all manual transmission (ZF 6-speed equipped) C4 Corvettes. The engine was passed down to 1997 SLP Camaros SS and SLP Firehawks with 6-speed manual transmissions.

The LT4 was available on the following vehicles:

  • 1996 Chevrolet Corvette only when equipped with 6-speed manual transmission (includes all Grand Sports) (Production: 6,359)
  • 1997 Chevrolet Camaro SLP/LT4 SS 6-speed (Production: 100 for the U.S., 6 for Canada. There were 2 prototypes)
  • 1997 Pontiac Firebird SLP/LT4 Firehawk 6-speed (Production: 29)

All 135 production engines for the Firehawks and SSs were completely disassembled, balanced, blueprinted and honed with stress plates. One in 5 engines was tested on a Superflow engine dyno. Every car was tested on a chassis dyno and then performed a 6-mile (10 km) road test.

3.90 in bore blocks edit

5.7 L edit

LT5 edit
 
A GM LT5 engine

For model year 1990, Chevrolet released the Corvette ZR-1 with the radical Lotus Engineering-designed double overhead cam LT5 engine. Engineered in the UK but produced and assembled in Stillwater, Oklahoma by specialty engine builder Mercury Marine, the all-aluminum LT5 shared only the 4.4 inch bore spacing with any previous SBC engine. It does not have reverse cooling and is generally not considered a small block Chevrolet.

Used only in Corvettes,[38] the LT5 was the work of a team headed by Design manager David Whitehead, and was hand built by one headed by project engineer Terry D. Stinson.[39] It displaced 5.7 L; 349.5 cu in (5,727 cc) and had a bore x stroke 3.90 in × 3.66 in (99 mm × 93 mm) instead of the usual 4 in × 3.48 in (101.6 mm × 88.4 mm) and featured Lotus-designed DOHC 4 valves per cylinder rather than the usual Chevrolet 16-Valve OHV Heads. The preproduction LT5 initially produced 385 hp (287 kW), but was reduced to 375 hp (280 kW) and 370 lb⋅ft (502 N⋅m) for the 1990-1992 Corvette ZR-1. The power ratings jumped to 405 hp (411 PS; 302 kW) at 5800 rpm and 385 lb⋅ft (522 N⋅m) of torque at 5200 rpm from 1993 until its final year in 1995,[40] thanks to cam timing changes and improvements to the engine porting. 1993 also added 4-bolt main bearing caps and an exhaust gas recirculation system.

A second generation of the LT5 was in the testing phase as early as 1993. What little information survived showed that it would have used a dual plenum system similar to the first generation Dodge Viper as well as variable valve timing. The next generation LT5 was set to produce between 450 hp (336 kW) and 475 hp (354 kW). Unfortunately, the cost to produce the LT5 along with its weight, dimensions (would not fit the C5 pilot cars without extensive modifications) and internal GM politics over using an engine that was not designed and built in house killed the LT5 after six years of production. GM canceled the ZR-1 option beginning model year 1993. Engines that were to be installed in the as yet unbuilt ZR-1's were sealed and crated for long-term storage. After they were built at the Mercruiser plant in Stillwater, Oklahoma they were shipped to Bowling Green, Kentucky and stored in the Corvette assembly plant until the 1994 and 1995 ZR-1s went down the assembly line. A total of 6,939 cars were produced.[41] The LT5 wasn't an evolutionary dead end. Despite being discontinued, a new class of premium V8s for Cadillac and eventually Oldsmobile, the dual overhead cam V8 Northstar and its derivatives, drew heavily from the LT5's design and lessons learned from its production.[42] GM also took lessons learned from producing a completely aluminum engine and applied them to the new LS series of engines.

The LT5 was available on the following vehicles:

  • 1990-1995 Chevrolet Corvette C4 ZR-1 equipped with 6-speed manual transmission (Production: 6,939). Although the LT5 was never used in another production GM vehicle, it did make its way into several Corvette concepts, race cars and even into a limited run of the Lotus Elise GT1.

3.74 in bore blocks edit

4.3 L edit

L99 edit

The L99 4.3 L (263.1 cu in; 4,311 cc) V8, produced from 1994–1996, shared a 3.736 in (94.9 mm) cylinder bore with the 305 cu in (5.0 L) but had a 3 in (76.2 mm) stroke compared to 3.48 in (88.4 mm) of the 305 cu in (5.0 L).[43] The pistons used in the 4.3 L V8 were the same as the Vortec 5000's, but longer 5.94 in (150.9 mm) connecting rods were used to compensate for the shorter stroke. The L99 featured updated Generation II block architecture, and is externally identical to the larger 5.7 L LT1 Generation II V8. Like the LT1, it features sequential fuel injection, reverse-flow cooling with a cam-driven water pump, and an optical ignition pickup. Output is 200 hp (149 kW) and 245 lb⋅ft (332 N⋅m).

The L99 4.3 L V8 was the base engine in 1994-1996 Chevrolet Caprice sedans, including 9C1 police package sedans, and was not available in any other vehicles. The L99's smaller displacement provided slightly better EPA fuel economy than the 5.7 L LT1, but at significantly reduced horsepower and torque levels.

LT6 and LT7 edit

The LT6 and LT7 are not actually part of the LT family. See Oldsmobile Diesel engine for more information.

See also edit

References edit

  • McGuire, Bill (June 20, 2005). . AutoWeek. Archived from the original on November 20, 2010. Retrieved June 15, 2005.
  1. ^ "Small-Block Chevy Crate Engines". April 13, 2021.
  2. ^ "434/765HP Small Block Chevy Drag Race Engine".
  3. ^ "434/710HP Small Block Chevy Drag Race Engine".
  4. ^ "Lola".
  5. ^ "1975 Lola T400 Chevrolet Specifications".
  6. ^ "Lola T332 HU16".
  7. ^ "SSRE's 700hp Pump-Gas Big Dawg 434 Small-Block is Wicked". March 30, 2015.
  8. ^ "How Much Does a Small Block Chevy Engine Weight? – McNally Institute".[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ "What is the weight of a Chevy 454 engine?".
  10. ^ "Engine Weights II".
  11. ^ "How much does a Chevy engine weigh?". idswater.com.
  12. ^ Worner, Randy (October 14, 2022). "SBC BBC V6 Chevy Engines Specs and Sizes [With Chart]". Chevy Geek. Retrieved April 15, 2023.
  13. ^ "The Novak Guide to the GM Generation III+ V8 Engines". www.novak-adapt.com. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  14. ^ a b Sherman, Don (January 1, 2000). . Ward's AutoWorld. Archived from the original on August 12, 2009. Retrieved October 1, 2016.
  15. ^ a b Siegel, Robert (February 8, 2008). "Wisconsin Man Drives Millionth Mile in '91 Chevy". NPR.
  16. ^ Borroz, Tony (September 22, 2011). "Chevrolet's Mouse That Roared". Wired. Retrieved October 1, 2016.
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  19. ^ Niedermeyer, Paul, ed. (June 15, 2016). "1957 Chevrolet Fuel-Injected 283 V8 – Ahead Of Its Time And The Competition". curbsideclassic.com. Retrieved June 19, 2018.
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  21. ^ Flory, p.411.
  22. ^ Crawford, John (February 8, 2016). . Driving & Life. Archived from the original on April 21, 2018.
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  24. ^ Gunnell, John, 360 hp (268 kW) with the Camaro's 'log' manifold exhaust system and points ignition. Standard Catalog of Corvette, 1953-2005. Krause Publications, 2004
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  27. ^ a b "LT9 engine - ChevyTalk -The Social Network for Chevy Fans". ChevyTalk. Retrieved November 22, 2013.
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  29. ^ "Chevrolet Sonora: Un nuevo territorio".
  30. ^ "HISTORY: 305". www.chevytech.com. Retrieved May 26, 2019.
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  32. ^ "HISTORY: 305". www.chevytech.com. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  33. ^ . Automotive.com. Archived from the original on September 17, 2010. Retrieved January 25, 2012.
  34. ^ Standard Catalog of Independents, pp. 41-42
  35. ^ Zal, Pawel. "1980 Chevrolet Camaro Sport Coupé 4.4 L V-8 automatic". Automobile-catalog.com. Retrieved December 27, 2018.
  36. ^ "LT1 6.2L Engine Specs: Performance, Bore & Stroke, Cylinder Heads, Cam Specs & More". Onallcylinders. February 8, 2018.
  37. ^ "Rebirth of the Gen V LT1 Small-Block...Part Two!". March 11, 2013.
  38. ^ . Zr1netregistry.com. February 28, 2012. Archived from the original on July 4, 2012. Retrieved June 4, 2012. // via archive.org
  39. ^ "Orbital Appoints Terry Stinson as Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director". Reuters. May 20, 2008. Archived from the original on September 8, 2012. Retrieved June 4, 2012.
  40. ^ "Chevrolet Corvette ZR-1, 1993 MY 1YZ07 US". Carfolio.com. February 28, 2013. Retrieved September 11, 2018.
  41. ^ . Zr1netregistry.com. Archived from the original on June 10, 2012. Retrieved June 4, 2012.
  42. ^ Hib Halverson (2001). "Corvette LS6 - Ruthless Pursuit of Power" (PDF). If a cam is going into a Cadillac Escalade for instance (luxury SUV powered by the truck version of the Gen III), we wouldn't have aggressive valve openings and closings. We'd skew the profile's ramps towards lower noise
  43. ^ Kristian, Erick. "The Difference Between the LT1 & the L99". It Still Runs. Leaf Group Ltd.

External links edit

  • Mortec: Small-Block Engine Enthusiasts
  • Video : First start up SBC engine (& zoomies flames)
  • Video : Let's see Chevy first start up, and what NOT to do ! ("Dark" humor)

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The Chevrolet small block engine is a series of gasoline powered V8 automobile engines produced by the Chevrolet division of General Motors between 1954 and 2003 using the same basic engine block Referred to as a small block for its size relative to the physically much larger Chevrolet big block engines the small block family spanned from 262 cu in 4 3 L to 400 cu in 6 6 L in displacement Engineer Ed Cole is credited with leading the design for this engine The engine block and cylinder heads were cast at Saginaw Metal Casting Operations in Saginaw Michigan Chevrolet small block engine1985 Chevrolet Corvette L98OverviewManufacturerGeneral MotorsAlso calledChevrolet Turbo FireNascarProduction1954 2003 Flint North engine block and heads Saginaw Metal Casting OperationsLayoutConfiguration90 V8Displacement262 cu in 4 3 L 1975 1976 263 cu in 4 3 L 1994 1996 265 cu in 4 3 L 1955 1957 267 cu in 4 4 L 1979 1982 283 cu in 4 6 L 1957 1967 302 cu in 4 9 L 1967 1969 305 cu in 5 0 L 1976 2002 307 cu in 5 0 L 1968 1973 327 cu in 5 4 L 1962 1969 350 cu in 5 7 L 1967 2003 396 cu in 6 5 L Aftermarket 400 cu in 6 6 L 1970 1981 427 cu in 7 0 L Aftermarket 434 cu in 7 1 L Aftermarket 1 Cylinder bore3 5 in 88 9 mm 3 67 in 93 2 mm 3 736 in 94 9 mm 3 75 in 95 3 mm 3 875 in 98 4 mm 4 in 101 6 mm 4 125 in 104 8 mm 4 155 in 105 5 mm Aftermarket Piston stroke3 in 76 2 mm 3 1 in 78 7 mm 3 25 in 82 6 mm 3 48 in 88 4 mm 3 75 in 95 3 mm 4 in 101 6 mm Aftermarket Cylinder block materialCast iron aluminumCylinder head materialCast iron aluminumValvetrainOHV 2 valves cyl DOHC 4 valves cyl LT5 Valvetrain drive systemChainCompression ratio8 2 1 8 3 1 8 4 1 8 5 1 8 6 1 9 0 1 9 1 1 9 5 1 10 25 1 10 9 1 11 0 1 14 25 1 2 RPM rangeMax engine speed4 800 7 200 3 CombustionFuel systemCarburetor fuel injectionFuel typeGasolineCooling systemWater cooledOutputPower output110 765 hp 82 570 kW 4 5 Torque output215 620 lb ft 292 841 N m 6 7 DimensionsDry weight389 600 lb 176 272 kg 8 9 10 11 ChronologyPredecessorChevrolet Series D Cadillac OHV Oldsmobile Rocket OHVSuccessorGM LS based small block engineGeneration I and Generation II LT engines 12 are distinct from subsequent LS based small block engines The Generation II engine is largely an improved version of the Generation I having many interchangeable parts and dimensions Later generation engines have only the rod bearings transmission to block bolt pattern and bore spacing in common with the Generation I and II engines 13 Production of the original small block began in late 1954 for the 1955 model year with a displacement of 265 cu in 4 3 L growing over time to 400 cu in 6 6 L by 1970 Among the intermediate displacements were the 283 cu in 4 6 L 327 cu in 5 4 L and numerous 350 cu in 5 7 L versions Introduced as a performance engine in 1967 the 350 went on to be employed in both high and low output variants across the entire Chevrolet product line Although all of Chevrolet s siblings of the period Buick Cadillac Oldsmobile Pontiac and Holden designed their own V8s it was the Chevrolet 305 and 350 cu in 5 0 and 5 7 L small block that became the GM corporate standard Over the years every GM division in America except Saturn and Geo used it and its descendants in their vehicles 14 Finally superseded by the Generation III LS in 1997 and discontinued in 2003 the engine is still made by a GM subsidiary in Springfield MO as a crate engine for replacement and hot rodding purposes In all over 100 000 000 small blocks had been built in carbureted and fuel injected forms since 1955 as of November 29 2011 The small block family line was honored as one of the 10 Best Engines of the 20th Century by automotive magazine Ward s AutoWorld 14 In February 2008 a Wisconsin businessman reported that his 1991 Chevrolet C1500 pickup had logged over one million miles without any major repairs to its small block V8 engine 15 All first and second generation Chevrolet small block V8 engines share the same firing order of 1 8 4 3 6 5 7 2 Contents 1 Overview 2 3 750 in bore family 1955 1957 2 1 265 3 3 875 in bore family 1957 1973 3 1 283 3 2 307 4 4 000 in bore family 1962 2002 4 1 302 4 2 327 4 3 350 4 3 1 L46 4 3 2 L48 4 3 3 L65 4 3 4 LM1 4 3 5 ZQ3 4 3 6 LT 1 4 3 7 L82 4 3 8 L81 4 3 9 LS9 4 3 10 LT9 4 3 11 L83 4 3 12 L98 4 3 13 L05 4 3 14 L31 5 4 125 in bore family 1970 1980 5 1 400 6 3 671 in bore family 1975 1976 6 1 262 7 3 736 in bore family 1976 1998 7 1 305 7 1 1 LG3 7 1 2 LG4 7 1 3 LU5 7 1 4 L69 7 1 5 LE9 7 1 6 LB9 7 1 7 L03 7 1 8 L30 8 3 50 in bore family 1979 1982 8 1 267 9 Major changes 10 Details 11 Generation II GM small block 1992 1997 11 1 4 00 in bore blocks 11 1 1 5 7 L 11 1 1 1 LT1 11 1 1 2 LT4 11 2 3 90 in bore blocks 11 2 1 5 7 L 11 2 1 1 LT5 11 3 3 74 in bore blocks 11 3 1 4 3 L 11 3 1 1 L99 11 4 LT6 and LT7 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksOverview editThe first generation of Chevrolet small blocks began with the 1955 Chevrolet 265 cu in 4 3 L V8 offered in the Corvette and Bel Air The engine quickly gained popularity among stock car racers and was nicknamed the Mighty Mouse after the then popular cartoon character later abbreviated to Mouse 16 By 1957 the engine had grown to 283 cu in 4 6 L Fitted with the optional Rochester mechanical fuel injection FI and a Duntov high lift camshaft it was one of the first production engines to produce 1 hp 0 7 kW per 1 cu in 16 4 cc The 283 was adopted by other Chevrolet models replacing the 265 V8s A high performance 327 cu in 5 4 L variant followed turning out as much as 375 hp 280 kW SAE gross power not SAE net power or the current SAE certified power values and raising horsepower per cubic inch to 1 15 hp 0 86 kW From 1954 to 1974 the small block engine was known as the Turbo Fire or High Torque V8 However it was the 350 cu in 5 7 L series that became the best known Chevrolet small block Installed in everything from station wagons and sports cars to commercial vehicles boats industrial equipment and even in highly modified form in aircraft the 350 is the most widely used small block engine of all time Though not offered in GM vehicles since 2003 the 350 series is still in production at a GM subsidiary in Springfield Missouri under the company s GM Genuine Parts brand and is also manufactured as an industrial and marine engine by GM Powertrain under the Vortec name 3 750 in bore family 1955 1957 editAll Chevrolet V8s from the big blocks to today s LS7 and LS9 evolved from the 265 283 cu in 4 3 4 6 L small block family Of the three engines in this family two of them the 265 and the 283 made automotive history The first of this family was the 265 introduced in 1954 The 265 had a 3 750 inches 95 25 mm bore The stroke of the 265 was 3 in 76 2 mm like the 283 265 edit nbsp Original 265 beside a 1955 ChevroletThe 265 cu in 4 3 L Turbo Fire V8 was the second Chevrolet small block the first Chevrolet V8 was produced in 1917 The 265 cu in Turbo Fire engine was designed by Ed Cole s group at Chevrolet to provide a more powerful engine for the 1955 Corvette than the model s original Blue Flame in line six the 162 hp 121 kW 2 barrel debut version went from drawings to production in just 15 weeks 17 Cole s design borrowed the valve train design scheduled to be used at the time in the Pontiac V8 Internal GM rules at the time stated that once an automotive division had introduced a technological innovation no other GM division could use it for a period of two years The stud mounted independent ball rocker arm design patented by Pontiac engineer Clayton Leach was scheduled for introduction in the Pontiac 1955 V8 GM forced the Pontiac division to share its valvetrain design in Chevrolet s new 265 V8 in 1955 so that both engines were introduced the same year with the same valve train design 17 A side note to Pontiac s V8 was that the engine was supposed to be introduced with 1953 cars and all 1953 and 1954 Pontiac cars chassis and suspensions were designed for the engine that did not make it into a Pontiac until late 1954 This was because the Buick division lobbied GM to postpone the release of Pontiac s engine as it affected Buick s release of its new OHV V8 engine A pushrod engine with hydraulic lifters the small block was available with an optional four barrel Rochester carburetor increasing engine output to 180 hp 134 kW or 195 hp 145 kW in the Corvette The short stroke 3 75 in 3 in 95 25 mm 76 20 mm bore stroke engine s 4 4 in 111 8 mm bore spacing would continue in use for decades 18 Also available in the Bel Air sedan the basic passenger car version produced 162 hp 121 kW with a two barrel carburetor Upgraded to a four barrel Rochester dual exhaust Power Pack version the engine was conservatively rated at 180 hp 134 kW and with the Super Power Pack it was boosted up to the power level of the Corvette 18 A shortcoming of the 1955 265 was its lack of any provision for oil filtration built into the block instead relying on an add on filter mounted on the thermostat housing and that was an option only In spite of its novel green sand foundry construction the lack of adequate oil filtration leaves it typically only desirable to period collectors citation needed The 1956 Corvette introduced three versions of this engine 210 hp 157 kW with a single 4 barrel carburetor 225 hp 168 kW with twin 4 barrels and 240 hp 179 kW with two four barrel carburetors and a high lift camshaft 18 3 875 in bore family 1957 1973 editThe 283 had a 3 875 inches 98 43 mm bore The stroke of the 283 was 3 in 76 2 mm like the 265 The 283 famous for being one of the first engines to make one hp per cubic inch is also famous for being the evolutionary stepping stone that would later give rise to small blocks and to the W blocks ultimately culminating in the Chevrolet big blocks The last of this family was the 307 cu in 5 0 L which was a stroked 283 with a medium journal 283 edit nbsp Fuel injected 283 cu in 4 6 L engine installed in a 1959 CorvetteThe 265 cu in 4 3 L V8 engine was bored out to 3 875 in 98 43 mm in 1957 giving it a 283 cu in 4 6 L displacement The first 283 motors used the stock 265 blocks However the overbore to these blocks resulted in thin cylinder walls Future 283 blocks were cast to accept the 3 875 bore Five different versions between 188 hp 140 kW and 283 hp 211 kW were available depending on whether a single carb twin carbs or fuel injection was used Horsepower was up a bit each year for 1958 1959 and 1960 The 1957 Rochester Ramjet mechanical fuel injection version produced an even one hp per one cu in 283 hp 211 kW an impressive feat at the time This was the second U S built production V8 to produce one horsepower per cubic inch after the 1956 Chrysler 300B 19 Besides being available in the Chevrolet line it was optional in Checker Taxis beginning in 1965 20 A version of it that was built by GM Canada was also available in Studebaker vehicles produced in Canada for 1965 and 1966 307 edit A 307 cu in 5 0 L version was produced from 1968 through 1973 Engine bore and stroke was 3 875 in 3 25 in 98 4 mm 82 6 mm All 307s had large 2 45 inch 62 2 mm journals to accept the 327 s crankshaft Pistons used with the 307 share the same pin height as the 327 but retaining the 283 s bore size prior to 1968 it was possible to stroke a 283 into a 307 where aftermarket pistons had to be used Vehicles using the 3071968 1971 Chevrolet Camaro 1968 1973 Chevrolet Chevelle 1968 1969 Chevrolet Impala 1968 1973 Chevrolet Nova 1971 1972 Pontiac Ventura 1972 Chevrolet C104 000 in bore family 1962 2002 editOriginally intended as the performance block this engine family through the 350 cu in 5 7 L became an all purpose engine that saw use in many applications from Corvettes to commercial vehicles All engines in this family share the same block dimensions and sometimes even the same casting number the latter meaning engines were of the same block but with different strokes e g the casting number 3970010 was used by all three engines 302 327 and 350 This engine family was updated in 1968 for the use of 2 45 in 62 2 mm medium sized journals The first engine in this family was the small journal 327 in 1962 and the last being 2000s medium journal 350 in pickup trucks and commercial vehicles The medium journal 350 was further developed into the Generation II LT1 4 350 in the early 1990s 302 edit In 1966 General Motors designed a special 302 cu in 4 9 L engine for the production Z 28 Camaro in order for it to meet the Sports Car Club of America SCCA Trans Am Series road racing rules limiting engine displacement to 305 cu in 5 0 L from 1967 to 1969 It was the product of placing the 283 cu in 4 6 L 3 in 76 2 mm stroke crankshaft into a 4 in 101 6 mm bore 327 cu in 5 4 L cylinder block The 1967 302 used the same crankshaft stroke as the 283 with a forged steel crank that was also produced This block is one of three displacements 302 327 350 that underwent a crankshaft bearing diameter transformation for 1968 when the rod journal size was increased from the 2 in 50 8 mm diameter small journal to a 2 1 in 53 3 mm large journal and a main journal size that was increased from 2 3 in 58 4 mm to 2 45 in 62 2 mm DZ 302 The large journal connecting rods were thicker heavier and used 3 8 in 9 5 mm diameter cap bolts to replace the small journal s 11 32 1968 blocks were made in 2 bolt and 4 bolt versions with the 4 bolt center three main caps each fastened by two additional bolts which were supported by the addition of thicker crankcase main web bulkheads When the journal size increased to the standard large journal size the crankshaft for the 302 was specially built of tufftride hardened forged 1053 steel and fitted with a high rpm 8 in 203 2 mm diameter harmonic balancer It had a 3 4 length semi circular windage tray heat treated magnafluxed shot peened forged 1038 steel pink connecting rods floating pin in 1969 forged aluminum pistons with higher scuff resistance and better sealing single moly rings Its solid lifter cam known as the 30 30 Duntov cam named after its 0 03 in 0 8 mm 0 030 in hot intake exhaust valve lash and Zora Arkus Duntov the first Duntov cam was the 0 012 in 0 3 mm 0 018 in 0 5 mm 1957 grind known as the 097 which referred to the last three digits of the casting number the Father of the Corvette was also used in the 1964 1965 carbureted 327 365 and fuel injected 327 375 engines It used the 202 2 02 in 51 3 mm 1 6 in 40 6 mm valve diameter high performance 327 double hump 186 and 461 heads pushrod guide plates hardened blue stripe pushrods edge orifice lifters to keep more valvetrain oil in the crankcase for high rpm lubrication and stiffer valvesprings In 1967 a new design high rise cast aluminum dual plane intake manifold with larger smoother turn runners was introduced for the Z 28 that the 350 cu in 5 7 L 370 hp 1970 LT 1 also used 1969 Corvette and 1970 Z 28 engines were equipped with a Holley carburetor until the Q jet carburetor returned in 1973 Unlike the Corvette the exhaust manifolds were the more restrictive rear outlet log design to clear the Camaro chassis s front cross member It had a chrome oil filler tube in the front of the intake manifold next to the thermostat housing from 1967 to 1968 The first year had unique chrome valve covers with Chevrolet stamped into them without an engine displacement decal pad In 1968 the engine had the chrome covers but without the Chevrolet name connected to a PCV valve and a chrome 14 in 3 in 355 6 mm 76 2 mm drop base open element air cleaner assembly fitted with a crankcase breather on a 780 cu ft min 22 m3 min vacuum secondary Holley 4 Bbl carburetor A divorced exhaust crossover port heated well choke thermostat coil was used to provide cleaner and faster engine warm up Its distributor came in two styles dual point Camaro and transistorized Corvette The dual point had an ignition point cam designed to reduce point bounce at high rpm Both distributors had a vacuum diaphragm to advance ignition timing at part throttle for economy and emissions Pulleys for the balancer alternator water pump as well as optional power steering were deep groove to retain the drive belt s at high rpm In 1969 the 302 shared the finned cast aluminium valve covers with the LT 1 350 Corvette engine Conservatively rated at 290 hp 216 kW SAE gross at 5800 rpm and 290 lb ft 393 N m at 4800 actual output with its production 11 0 1 compression ratio was around 376 hp 280 kW with 1 625 in 41 3 mm primary x 3 in 76 2 mm collector Sanderson tubular headers that came in the trunk when ordered with a 1967 Z 28 and associated carburetor main jet and ignition timing tuning citation needed In 1968 the last year for factory headers they had 1 75 in 44 5 mm primaries x 3 in 76 2 mm collectors A stock 1968 Z 28 with the close ratio transmission optional transistorized ignition and 4 88 gear fitted with little more than the factory cowl plenum cold air hood induction and headers was capable of running 12 9 second 108 mph 174 km h 1 4 mile 402 m times on street tires After the 1967 Trans Am campaign with the four barrel induction system producing more horsepower than the competing automakers eight barrel systems for 1968 Chevrolet developed a factory cross ram aluminum intake manifold package using two Holley 600 cu ft min 17 m3 min mechanical secondary carburetors for Trans Am racing It was available only as off road service parts purchased over the Chevrolet dealership parts counter With the Chevrolet 140 1st design off road cam the package increased a stock 302 s horsepower from 360 hp 268 kW to approximately 400 hp 298 kW Chevrolet went so far as to carry the positive crankcase ventilation system PCV over to the cross ram induction system to retain emissions compliance mandated for U S produced cars beginning in 1967 that also provided full throttle crankcase pressure venting to the intake air to burn its vapors Engines prepared for competition use were capable of producing 465 hp 347 kW with little more than the eight barrel induction ported heads with higher pressure valvesprings roller rocker arms and the 754 2nd design road race cam 1967 1968 models cowl induction system had an enclosed air cleaner assembly ducted from its passenger side into the firewall cowl above the heater core In 1969 factory Z 28 s could be ordered with the ZL 1 aluminum block 427 adaptation of the 1967 L 88 427 Corvette cowl induction ZL 2 hood available for both single and dual four barrel induction systems that were sealed to the air cleaner base ensuring dense cooler high pressure oxygen laden air from the center of the base of the windshield was supplied to the engine for combustion smoothness and maximum power production Another popular service parts only component used on the 302 was the magnetic pulse Delco transistor ignition ball bearing distributor Introduced in 1963 on Pontiac s 389 and 421 cu in 6 4 and 6 9 L drag racing engines General Motors fitted it to the 1967 Z 28 before they used it on the L88 427 cu in 7 0 L Corvette It eliminated the production breaker point ignition allowing greater spark energy and more stable ignition timing at all engine speeds including idle This was one of the least talked about yet most transformative and comprehensive performance and durability upgrades of its time Many of the 302s off road service parts were the development work of racers like Roger Penske Every part in a SCCA Trans Am engine had to be available through local Chevrolet parts departments to encourage their use by anyone who wanted them While the 302 became a strong Limited Sportsman oval track racing engine in the hands of racers like Bud Lunsford in his 1966 Chevy II its bore stroke and rod stroke geometries made it a natural high rpm road racing engine and were responsible for its being among the more reliable production street engines homologated for full competition across all the American makes winning back to back Trans Am Championships at the hands of Mark Donohue in 1968 and 1969 However with engines built by Al Bartz Falconer amp Dunn and Traco Engineering the pinnacle of the 302 s use in professional racing was its being the primary engine that powered the outstanding but overshadowed 1968 1976 Formula 5000 Championship Series a SCCA Formula A open wheel class designed for lower cost The engine was also popular in Formula 5000 racing around the world especially in Australia and New Zealand where it proved more powerful than the Repco Holden V8 Weighing 1 350 lb 610 kg with a 525 550 hp 391 410 kW iron block and head engine positioned near the car s polar moment of inertia for responsive turn pivoting a Hewland 5 speed magnesium transaxle and 10 in 254 0 mm wide 13 in 330 2 mm front 20 in 508 0 mm wide 15 in 381 0 mm rear magnesium wheels it produced incredibly exciting racing They ran 0 60 mph 0 97 km h in 2 8 seconds and over 180 mph 290 km h Reminiscing about the series mid 70s Australian F5000 driver Bruce Allison said We never used first gear at the start We started in second and even then there was so much torque you d get wheelspin through third and fourth gears Prepared with a Lucas McKay mechanically timed individual stack magnesium fuel injection induction system that was paired with ported production car double hump iron heads a rev kit fitted roller lifter camshaft roller bearing rocker arms and a virtually stock production crankshaft it had a lasting impact on the series ability to conduct high car count finishes and close competition events by the degree of mechanical success it provided to a series filled with star international Grand Prix drivers like David Hobbs Brian Redman Jody Scheckter and Mario Andretti 327 edit nbsp Fuel injected 327 cu in 5 4 L engine installed in a 1963 CorvetteThe 327 cu in 5 4 L V8 introduced in 1962 had a bore of 4 00in and 3 25in stroke The exact displacement is 326 7256 cu in 5 354 cc Power ranged from 225 to 383 hp 168 to 286 kW depending on the choice of carburetor or fuel injection camshaft cylinder heads pistons and intake manifold In 1962 the Duntov solid lifter cam versions produced 340 hp 254 kW 344 lb ft 466 N m with single Carter 4 barrel and 360 hp 268 kW 358 lb ft 485 N m with Rochester fuel injection In 1964 horsepower increased to 366 hp 273 kW for the newly named L 76 version and 375 hp 280 kW for the fuel injected L 84 making the L 84 the most powerful naturally aspirated single cam production small block V8 until the appearance of the 385 hp 287 kW 395 lb ft 536 N m Generation III LS6 in 2001 This block is one of three displacements that underwent a major change in 1968 when the main journal size was increased from 2 3 to 2 45 in 58 4 to 62 2 mm In 1965 Chevrolet released the now legendary L 79 which was nothing more than an L 76 11 0 1 forged pop up pistons forged steel rods and crank 2 02 Corvette heads but with the 30 30 Duntov cam replaced by the No 151 hydraulic cam In 1966 Checker began offering the 327 as an option 21 The Avanti II and its successors were powered by the 327 and later versions of the small block V8 The 327 was fitted in the English Gordon Keeble Ninety nine cars were made between 1964 and 1967 It was also installed in many Isos until 1972 when General Motors started demanding cash in advance and the Italian manufacturer switched to the Ford Cleveland V8 22 In 1968 the 327 L73 developing 250 hp 186 kW was part of the CKD packages exported to Australia from Canada for use in the locally assembled by General Motors Holdens Chevrolet Impala and Pontiac Parisienne GMH used the same specification engine in the Holden HK Monaro GTS327 The engine was used in the Monaro GTS327 to make it the new Holden Muscle Car and so it could compete in the local improved production Australian Group C The car had modified suspension just before release to also be used in local Series Production racing Australian Group E A special build 327 was built for GMH for the final run of the HK GTS327 by the Canadian McKinnon Industries It was a lower compression version of the 1968 engine first used on the HK GTS327 and was dressed as a 1969 engine sporting all 1969 parts The 327 was replaced in the mid 1969 HT Monaro by the 350 L48 developing 300 hp 224 kW 350 edit nbsp 350 cu in 5 7 L engine installed in a 1968 Camaro SSThe 350 cu in 5 7 L with a 3 48 in 88 39 mm stroke first appeared as a high performance L 48 option for the 1967 Camaro The exact displacement is 349 85 cu in 5 733 cc One year later it was made available in the Chevrolet Nova and finally in 1969 the rest of the Chevrolet line could be ordered with a 350 As had been the case with earlier versions of the small block the 350 was available in the Beaumont sold by Pontiac Canada which unlike its U S counterparts used Chevrolet chassis and drivelines Many variants followed L46 edit Years 1969 1970The L46 became an optional engine for the 1969 Chevrolet Corvette It was a higher performance version of the base 350 cu in 5 7 L V8 with casting number 186 2 02 1 6 in 51 3 40 6 mm valve heads and had an 11 0 1 compression ratio requiring high octane gas This produced 350 hp 261 kW SAE gross power and 380 lb ft 515 N m torque 23 It was also available in 1970 with a four barrel Quadrajet carburetor and L46 hydraulic cam dome piston 0 16 cu in 2 6 cc 186 heads and a four bolt block L48 edit Years 1967 1980The L48 is the original 350 cu in 5 7 L engine It was introduced for 1967 in the Super Sport SS version of the Camaro which used it until 1969 and for 1968 in the Chevy II Nova which used it until 1979 In 1969 it was used in almost all car lines Camaros Caprices Impalas El Caminos Chevelles and Novas The 1969 L48s use a hydraulic cam 4bbl Quadrajet carburetor cast pistons 4 bolt main casting number 010 blocks and casting number 041 or 186 heads Power output was 300 hp 224 kW SAE and 380 lb ft 515 N m torque Compression ratio was 10 25 1 The compression ratio of the L48 was lowered to 8 5 1 in 1971 In 1972 the L48 four barrel V8 option for the Nova was part of the SS package This is indicated by the fifth digit in the VIN being a K 1972 was the only year the SS package could be verified by the VIN The L48 engine was exported to Australia where it appeared in the Holden Monaro from 1969 through 1974 and in the Statesman from 1971 through 1974 Towards the end of the HQ series in 1973 74 due to US emissions regulations the performance of these engines had dropped to the same or lower than Holden s locally manufactured 308 cu in 5 0 L V8 which was not yet subject to similar regulations so Holden discontinued using the engine The L48 V8 was the standard engine in the 1975 1980 Chevrolet Corvette The L48 V8 Corvette engine produced 165 hp 123 kW in 1975 Power increased to 180 hp 134 kW in 1976 and stayed the same in 1977 The 1978 saw 175 hp 130 kW for California or high altitude areas and 185 hp 138 kW everywhere else Power increased to 195 hp 145 kW in 1979 but decreased to 190 hp 142 kW in 1980 23 L65 edit The 1970 model year Camaro had a 250 hp 186 kW high performance two barrel Rochester carburetor In 1971 it dropped to 245 hp 183 kW and net performance further dropped to 165 hp 123 kW for 1972 and 145 hp 108 kW for 1973 1976 It was basically the two barrel version of the L48 350 It was produced until the 1976 model year It had 255 lb ft 346 N m of torque LM1 edit The LM1 is the base 350 cu in with a four barrel carburetor usually with a Rochester Quadrajet 155 175 hp 116 130 kW engine in passenger cars to 1979 as a retail option its final use in a retail passenger car was the 1981 Camaro Z28 and police package 9C1 A G Malibu to 1981 and B bodies Caprice Impala until 1988 retail market GM rear wheel drive V8s sold to the general public had a maximum 5 0 liter displacement with the exception of its muscle car survivors such as the Corvette and F bodies Camaro IROC Z or Trans Am Throughout its lifespan it used mechanical ignition points electronic or computer controlled spark system and conventional or feedback carburetors The LM1 was superseded by the L05 powerplant after 1988 The LM1 was first introduced for 1969 model year as a 9 0 1 255 hp engine It was essentially an L48 engine in all ways except for 75cc combustion chambers rather than the L48 s 64cc and less spark advance to allow it to run on regular grade fuel It was replaced at the end of December 1968 by the L65 and re appeared again in the 1970s This engine was fitted to automatic versions of the 1969 and 1970 Holden Monaro GTS350 in Australia where it was rated at 275 hp most likely due to the use of higher octane fuel and far more spark advance than was fitted to North American versions of the engine ZQ3 edit Years 1969 1974The ZQ3 is the standard engine in the 1969 1974 Chevrolet Corvette In 1969 and 1970 it was a 300 hp 224 kW version of the 350 cu in 5 7 L small block with 10 25 1 compression and hydraulic lifters It used a Rochester 4MV Quadra Jet 4 barrel carburetor and a L48 camshaft 23 In 1971 power decreased to 270 hp 201 kW gross and 300 lb ft 407 N m gross of torque with a lower 8 5 1 compression 1972 saw 200 hp 149 kW net and 270 lb ft 366 N m net of torque In 1973 power decreased to 190 hp 142 kW but increased slightly in 1974 to 195 hp 145 kW 23 Post 1971 blocks possibly had a lower nickel content but thicker cylinder deck and post 1974 heads of the small block Chevrolet used less iron and were lighter weight crack prone and were less powerful because of the lower compression ratios used citation needed LT 1 edit For the Generation II V8 used from 1991 1997 see LT1 For the new Generation V V8 see LS based GM small block engine LT1 nbsp LT 1 in a 1970 Chevrolet Camaro Z28Years 1970 1972The LT 1 was one of the most well known SBC V8s becoming available in 1970 It used solid lifters 11 0 1 compression the 178 high performance camshaft and a 780 cu ft min 22 m3 min vacuum secondary Holley four barrel carburetor on a special high rise aluminum intake with special 2 5 outlet rams horn exhaust manifolds in the Corvette Delco transistor ignition and a low restriction exhaust factory rated at 370 hp 276 kW in the Corvette and 360 hp 268 kW at 6000 rpm and 380 lb ft 515 N m at 4000 rpm in the Camaro Z28 24 the NHRA rated it at 425 hp 317 kW for classification purposes Redline was 6 500 rpm but power fell off significantly past 6 200 rpm The LT 1 was available in the Corvette and Camaro Z28 Power was down in 1971 to dual rated 330 hp 246 kW gross 255 hp 190 kW net and 360 lb ft 488 N m of torque with 9 0 1 compression and again in 1972 the last year of the LT 1 now rated using net only rather than gross measurement to 255 hp 190 kW and 280 lb ft 380 N m L82 edit Years 1973 1980The 1973 1974 L82 was a performance version of the 350 that still used the casting number 624 76cc chamber 2 02 heads but with a Rochester Quadra jet 4bbl carburetor and dual plane aluminum intake manifold the earlier L46 350 hp 261 kW 350 hydraulic lifter cam and 9 0 1 compression forged aluminum pistons producing 250 hp 186 kW 1971 was the first year for SAE net hp rating as installed in the vehicle with accessories and mufflers and 285 lb ft 386 N m of torque Its cast aluminum LT 1 valvecovers were painted crinkle black contrasting with the aluminum manifold and distributor housing It was down to 205 hp 153 kW and 255 lb ft 346 N m of torque for 1975 It produced 210 hp 157 kW in the Corvette for 1976 1977 The 1978 L82 recovered somewhat producing 220 hp 164 kW and 260 lb ft 353 N m in the Corvette and in 1979 it produced 225 hp 168 kW in the Corvette In 1980 its final year it produced a peak of 230 hp 172 kW 23 This engine was also available on the Chevrolet Camaro in 1973 and 1974 L81 edit Years 1981The L81 was the only 5 7 L 350 cu in Corvette engine for 1981 It produced 190 hp 142 kW and 280 lb ft 380 N m of torque from 8 2 1 compression exactly the same as the 1980 L48 but added hotter cam and computer control spark advance replacing the vacuum advance 23 The L81 was the first Corvette engine to employ a smart carburetor The 1980 Rochester Quadrajet was modified to allow electronic mixture control and an ECM Engine Control Module supplied with data from an exhaust oxygen sensor modified the air fuel mixture being fed to the engine LS9 edit Years 1969 1986The LS9 was GM s 350 cubic inch truck engine used in C K and G series models up to 8 500 lb 3 856 kg GVWR gross vehicle weight rating The LS9 used a Rochester four barrel carburetor and its power ratings for 1984 were 165 hp 123 kW at 3800 rpm and 275 lb ft 373 N m torque at 1600 rpm A version using a closed loop carburetor was used with the California emissions package in its final years The LS9 and LT9 engines were replaced for 1987 by the L05 TBI throttle body fuel injection engines Most of the small block engines in this timeframe were built at either the Flint engine plant in south Flint Michigan or at St Catharines Ontario The Flint plant was producing about 5 200 engines per day in the mid 1980s and had a slower separate line for the TPI engines used in the Camaro and Corvette 25 LT9 edit Years 1981 1986 26 The LT9 served as GM s heavy duty over 8 500 lb 3 856 kg GVWR emissions 27 variant of the 5 7 L 350 cu in It was used in C K 20 30 pickups G30 passenger and cargo vans built in Lordstown OH and later in Flint MI and P30 chassis used for motorhomes and step vans The LT9 s listed specifications are 160 hp 119 kW at 3 800 rpm and 250 lb ft 339 N m of torque at 2 800 rpm with 8 3 1 compression 28 LT9 engines were carbureted with Rochester Quadrajets from the factory and generally have four bolt mains The LT9 is often known as the M code 350 from the eighth character of the VIN 27 L83 edit Years 1982 and 1984The 1982 L83 was again the only Corvette engine producing 200 hp 149 kW and 285 lb ft 386 N m of torque from 9 0 1 compression Since GM did not assign a 1983 model year to production Corvettes there was no L83 for 1983 23 This was also the only engine on the 1984 Corvette at 205 hp 153 kW and 290 lb ft 393 N m of torque The L83 added Cross Fire fuel injection twin throttle body fuel injection L98 edit For the new Generation IV V8 see LS based GM small block engine L98 Years 1985 1992The new 1985 L98 350 added tuned port fuel injection TPI which was standard on all 1985 1991 Corvettes It was rated at 230 hp 172 kW for 1985 1986 240 hp 179 kW for 1987 1989 245 hp 183 kW with 3 08 1 rear axle ratio 1988 1989 only and 245 hp 183 kW in 1990 1991 250 hp 186 kW with 3 08 1 rear axle Aluminum cylinder heads Corvette only were released part way through the 1986 model run modified for 1987 with D ports and continued through the end of L98 Corvette production in 1991 still used on ZZx 350 crate engines until 2015 when the ZZ6 received the fast burn heads 23 The L98 V8 was optional on January 1987 1992 Chevrolet Camaro and Pontiac Firebird models rated at 225 hp 168 kW 245 hp 183 kW and 330 lb ft 447 N m 345 lb ft 468 N m The 1987 versions had 20 hp 15 kW and 15 lb ft 20 N m more and a change to hydraulic roller camshaft Compression was up again in 1990 to 9 5 1 Camaro Firebird and 10 1 Corvettes but rated output stayed the same Vehicles using the L98 1985 1991 Chevrolet Corvette 1987 1992 Chevrolet Camaro optional 1987 1992 Pontiac Firebird optional L05 edit The L05 was introduced in 1987 for use in Chevrolet GMC trucks in the GMT400 introduced in April 1987 as 1988 models and the R V series trucks such as the K5 Blazer Suburban and rounded era pickups including chassis cabs and four door crew cabs The L05 was also used in the G van models and the P30 step vans as well as in 9C1 optioned police package Caprices and in the following other vehicles Vehicles using the L051992 1993 Buick Roadmaster sedan and station wagon 1990 1992 Cadillac Brougham optional engine 1993 Cadillac Fleetwood 1989 1993 Chevrolet Caprice 9C1 police package roller cam 1A2 optioned special service station wagon 1992 1993 Chevrolet Caprice wagon optional engine 1993 Chevrolet Caprice LTZ 1992 Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser wagon optional engine 1991 1994 GMC W4500 Tiltmaster Isuzu NPR 1995 1996 AM General Hummer H1 L05s were used primarily with casting number 14102193 64cc combustion chambers cylinder heads with swirled intake ports the intake ports were designed for fuel economy the design was also shared with the 103 heads used on the 4 3L with TBI The swirl ports known to GM as a vortex chamber along with the irregular shape of the combustion chambers limit the airflow and horsepower output where they did not provide a fast burn later phased in with the 1996 Vortec heads A majority of the L05s used with the trucks and vans had conventional flat tappet camshafts while the Caprice 9C1 1989 93 had a roller cam L05 usage was replaced by the LT1 after 1993 in GM B bodies and D bodies until production ceased in 1996 A single belt serpentine belt accessory drive was introduced on the L05 the 5 0L L03 and the 4 3L V6 LB4 engines used in the 1988 GMT400 models but not on the older R V models R V models received the serpentine belt drive in 1989 when the front grille was facelifted in appearance to the GMT400 lineup In mid 1996 the L05 was equipped with heads used in the 1996 G30 In February 2008 a Wisconsin businessman reported that his 1991 Chevrolet C1500 pickup had logged over 1 million miles without any major repairs to its L05 engine 15 The article also mentioned that the Flint engine plant that built the engine had produced 45 million engines in its 45 year history before closing in 1999 L31 edit The Vortec 5700 L31 VIN code R is a 5 7L V8 truck engine It is Chevrolet s last production first generation small block The cylinder heads feature combustion chambers and intake ports very similar to those of the LT1 V8 but lacking the LT1 s reverse flow cooling and higher compression As such the L31 head is compatible with all older small blocks and is a very popular upgrade It offers the airflow of more expensive heads at a much lower cost It does however require a specific intake manifold the L31 has four bolts per head attaching the intake manifold as opposed to the traditional six bolts per head found on older Chevrolet small blocks Chevrolet s L31 was replaced by GM s LS based 5 3L LM7 and 6 0L LQ4 The Vortec 5700 produces 255 hp 190 kW to 350 hp 261 kW at 4600 rpm and 330 lb ft 447 N m to 350 lb ft 475 N m of torque at 2800 rpm Known as the GEN 1 the final incarnation of the 1950s vintage small block ended production in 2003 It is still when in current production as a crate engine for marine applications and automotive hobbyists as the RamJet 350 with minor modifications Volvo Penta and Mercury Marine also still produce the L31 The Marine intake despite its cast iron construction is an L31 upgrade that allows use of common Bosch style injectors with various flow rates while still maintaining emission compliance L31 applications 1996 1999 Chevrolet GMC C K 1500 2500 and 3500 but not the C3500HD 1996 1999 Chevrolet GMC Suburban 1996 2000 Chevrolet Tahoe GMC Yukon and 2000 Tahoe Limited 2000 Tahoe Z71 2000 mid 2003 Sonora models 29 1999 2000 Cadillac Escalade 1996 2002 Chevrolet Express GMC Savana TBI L31 applications 1996 G30 vans over 8 500 lb 3 856 kg GVWR with 4L80E transmissionSpecial applications Oscar Mayer Wienermobile 1996 2003 GMC W4500 Tiltmaster Isuzu NPR4 125 in bore family 1970 1980 edit400 edit nbsp A 400ci small block V8 in a 1975 Avanti IIThe 400 9 cu in 6 6 L 6 569 cc is the only engine in this family it was introduced in 1970 and produced for ten years It has a 4 125 inch 104 8 mm bore and a 3 750 inch 95 25 mm stroke The 400 differed from other small blocks in that the cylinders were siamesed and therefore required steam holes in the block head gaskets and heads to help alleviate hot spots in the cooling system at the point above the siamesed cylinders Overheating and damage are likely if head gaskets or heads without steam holes are used on a 400 block The 400 is the only engine that uses a 2 65 in 67 3 mm main bearing journal and a 2 1 in 53 3 mm rod bearing journal The connecting rod was also 400 specific being 5 565 in 141 4 mm as opposed to the 5 7 in 144 8 mm rod used in all other small block Chevrolet engines The 400 was made in 4 bolt main journal from 1970 to 1972 and in 2 bolt main journal from 1973 to 1979 The 400 can have either 2 or 3 frost plugs per side though all 400 blocks have the provisions for a 3rd frost plug on each side The 400 was rated at 245 265 hp 183 198 kW gross 150 180 hp 112 134 kW SAE net through its life The 400 saw extensive use in full size Chevrolet and GMC trucks K5 Blazer Jimmy 1 2 ton 3 4 ton 1 ton and even larger medium duty trucks had an option to be equipped with a 400 The engine was available in midsize A Body and full size B Body passenger cars until the end of the 1976 model year Early models produced 265 hp 198 kW with a two barrel carburetor All 400s came with a two barrel carburetor until 1973 A four barrel carburetor option became available in 1974 The 400 was never intended as a high performance engine and never saw large factory horsepower numbers nevertheless it developed a reputation for creating tremendous torque up to 400 lb ft 542 N m in 1970 and has since become popular for many types of racing both on and off road It was also used for the limited production Avanti for a few years in the 1970s 3 671 in bore family 1975 1976 edit262 edit The 1975 1976 262 was a 262 5 cu in 4 3 L 4 301 cc 90 pushrod V8 with an iron block and heads Bore and stroke were 3 671 in 3 1 in 93 2 mm 78 7 mm Power output for 1975 was 110 hp 82 kW at 3600 rpm and 195 lb ft 264 N m at 2000 rpm The 262 was replaced with the 305 for the 1977 model year This was Chevrolet s second 4 3L power plant four other Chevrolet engines displaced 4 3L the Vortec 4300 a V6 based on the Chevrolet 350 cu in 5 7 L with two cylinders removed the original 265 cu in 4 3 L V8 in 1954 a bored version of the stovebolt era 235 inline six displacing 261 cu in 4 3 L and a derivative of the Generation II LT engines known as the L99 using the 305 s 3 736 in 94 9 mm bore 5 94 in 150 9 mm long connecting rods and a 3 in 76 2 mm stroke This engine was used in the following cars 1975 1976 Chevrolet Monza 1975 Chevrolet Nova Early 1977 Pontiac Ventura3 736 in bore family 1976 1998 edit305 edit Designed and built during the era of the gas embargo CAFE mandates and tighter emissions this engine family was designed to become Chevrolet s cost effective all purpose economy V8 engine line Introduced in 1976 models it had a displacement of 305 cu in 5 0 L It was intended to fill the gap where the venerable 283 and 307 had been Bore and stroke were 3 736 in 3 48 in 94 9 mm 88 4 mm using the 350 s crankshaft throw This new engine family would provide better gas economy than the 350 share its basic architecture and many parts with the 350 thus reducing production costs and provide customers with more horsepower and torque than Chevrolet s 1970s era inline 6 and V6 engines During the early 1980s when GM was streamlining their engine lineups the Chevrolet 305 would rise to prominence as General Motors corporate engine signified by being the standard and often only V8 in many GM vehicles Through much of the 1980s the 305 became General Motors most common V8 followed closely by Oldsmobile s 307 The 305 also became the standard V8 in GM s C K truck series and was even used in the Corvette for California in 1980 Crankshafts used with the 305 had the same casting number as the 350 with one discernible difference the 305 crank is lighter in weight to compensate for engine balancing As a result the counterweights are smaller which makes it unsuitable for use in a 350 where metal would have to be welded back on The medium journal 305 like its big brother 350 would be further developed in the 1990s although with a reduced 3 in 76 2 mm stroke using 5 94 in 150 9 mm connecting rods into the Generation II LT engine L99 263 The 305 was used in the following vehicles 1976 1992 Chevrolet Camaro 1977 1993 Chevrolet Caprice 1977 1985 Chevrolet Impala 1980 Chevrolet Corvette California only 1976 1988 Chevrolet Malibu Chevrolet El Camino GMC Caballero and Chevrolet Monte Carlo 1976 1979 Chevrolet Monza 1976 1979 Chevrolet Nova also GM X body clones after 1976 1977 2002 Chevrolet GMC full size trucks SUVs and vans under 8 500 lbs GVWR 1978 1987 Buick Regal 1975 1979 Buick Skylark 1991 1992 Cadillac Brougham 1977 1981 Checker Marathon 1991 1992 Oldsmobile Custom Cruiser 1977 Oldsmobile Omega 1978 1980 Oldsmobile Cutlass U S market only Canadian market 1978 1987 1977 1981 Pontiac Catalina B body 1977 1981 Pontiac Bonneville B body 1982 1986 Pontiac Bonneville G body 1977 1992 Pontiac Firebird 1981 1987 Pontiac Grand Prix 1978 1981 Pontiac Grand LeMans A G body includes Grand Am 1982 1986 Pontiac Parisienne B body 1982 1986 Pontiac Parisienne Safari B body wagon 1979 Pontiac Sunbird The Chevrolet 305 is a reliable fuel efficient V8 easily capable of 200 000 miles if maintained From 1976 onward into the early 1980s these engines were prone to wearing out their camshaft lobes prematurely due to a combination of improper manufacturing and poor quality controls a result of GM s cost cutting measures The 305 is sometimes dismissed in performance circles because of its lackluster performance small bore size and difficulty flowing large volumes of air at high RPM However two variants of the 1983 to 1992 305 were notable performers the 1983 1988 L69 High Output 5 0L only used in late 1983 early 1986 F body and late 1983 1988 Monte Carlo SS and the 1985 1992 LB9 Tuned Port Injection 5 0L F body only After 1993 its usage was limited to light trucks and SUVs until the 1999 model year while vans and commercial vehicles continued until 2002 The 305 was sold as a crate motor under the Mr Goodwrench brand as a replacement motor and as a boat engine for Mercury Marine until late 2014 when it was discontinued The cylinder block is still in production by GM part number 10243869 for Sprint Car Spec Racing 30 LG3 edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The first iteration of the 305 the LG3 was introduced in 1976 This variant used a Rochester 2GC carburetor from 1976 to 1978 In 1979 the more fuel efficient Rochester Dual Jet two barrel carburetor replaced the older 2GC This change also resulted in a drop in power to 130 hp 97 kW and 125 hp 93 kW for California emissions cars All years had an 8 5 1 compression ratio It was discontinued in 1982 LG4 edit The LG4 produced 150 170 hp 112 127 kW and 240 250 lb ft 325 339 N m Introduced in 1978 the LG4 was essentially an LG3 with the addition of a four barrel carburetor and larger valves The engine saw a series of gradual improvements increasing reliability fuel economy and power output through its production run In 1981 1980 for California models Chevrolet added GM s new Computer Command Control CCC engine management system to the LG4 engines except Canadian models The CCC system included the electronic Rochester 4 bbl E4ME Quadra Jet with computer adjusted fuel metering on the primary venturis and a throttle position sensor allowing the CCC to calculate engine load In the ignition system CCC was fully responsible for the timing curve mechanical and vacuum advances were eliminated from the distributor The more precise spark timing provided by the CCC made possible a series of increases in compression ratio from a pre CCC 8 4 1 to 8 6 1 to a knock sensor assisted 9 5 1 all while still only requiring 87 AKI regular unleaded fuel In 1983 Chevrolet replaced the cast iron intake with an aluminum version and used either 14014416 416 or 14022601 601 heads with 1 84 inch intake valves 1 50 inch exhaust valves 58 cc chambers and 178 cc runners For 1985 the 4 valve relief flat top pistons from the L69 were added to the LG4 which resulted in another increase in compression Also added was a knock sensor to allow the CCC engine management system to compensate for the increase in compression and a more aggressive spark timing map in the ECM As a result power increased for the 1985 models to 165 hp 123 kW from the 150 hp 112 kW rating in 1984 For 1986 Chevrolet changed over to a one piece rear main seal engine block design to minimize leaks and warranty claims however some early 1986 blocks retained a two piece rear main seal For 1987 Chevrolet once again made some revisions to increase overall reliability many of them borrowed from the TBI L03 which was to replace the LG4 The coil in cap HEI distributor was retired and an all new electronic distributor design was used The intake manifold to head bolt pattern was redesigned to improve gasket integrity four of the center intake manifold bolts were drilled at 72 instead of 90 for the cast iron cylinder heads Changes to the valve covers were also made Ribbing was added to the top of the valve covers to increase surface area acting as a heat sink To improve intake gasket sealing the mounting bolts were relocated to the valve cover centerline placing all sealing pressure evenly upon the mounting flange perimeter Thus these became known as centerbolt valve covers first introduced in 1985 on the LB4 4 3L V6 and the Corvette a year earlier the aluminum cylinder heads used with the Corvette were the first to have the centerbolt valve covers Another improvement was use of a hydraulic lifter roller camshaft on most 1987 LG4s Some early engines have lifter retainer provisions but use the older non roller camshaft 1987 would also be the last year for the LG4 production however a run of LG4 engines was made to supplement the carry over production for the 1988 Monte Carlo and the 1988 Chevrolet Caprice LU5 edit Years 1982 1984The LU5 Crossfire EFI 5 0L featured a dual Throttle Body Injection set up based upon the original Crossram Intake supplied by Chevrolet for the 1969 Camaro Z28 Unlike the original 69 version Chevrolet did not place it in the trunk for owners to install The system used a special version of GM s still new CCC engine management system Fuel was supplied by the two TBI units set diagonally apart from each other atop the unique aluminum intake manifold Unfortunately the system was placed atop the basic LG4 and lacked any significant performance capability The engine was originally planned for the long awaited 82 Camaro Z28 however due to a last minute GM mandated cancellation of Pontiac s 301 V8 production amp Turbo 4 9L Project T301 the Crossfire 305 was made available in the 82 Trans Am A 350 cubic inch version was also used in the Corvette from 1982 to 1984 Since it was fairly early into GM s electronic engine management development and electronic fuel injection programs few dealerships had the technology equipment or properly trained mechanics capable of dealing with these engines These problems were compounded by widely varying fuel quality standards production issues poor quality control by GM amp owners who tinkered with a system they did not understand In a very short time these engines obtained the notorious nickname Ceasefire Engine Today owners with these engines note that they are fairly reliable and that a significant upgrade can be made by simply using the L69 LB9 TPI L98 TPI exhaust manifolds exhaust systems When combined with performance built stock 305 heads w larger valves or aftermarket heads plus a camshaft upgrade these engines can perform surprisingly well Thanks mostly to a somewhat cult like following a number of aftermarket performance parts are also available through Crossfire specialized manufacturers L69 edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Years late 1983 1988The L69 High Output 5 0L was released late into the 1983 model year It was optional in the Firebird Trans Am Camaro Z28 and IROC Z and was standard in the revived Monte Carlo Super Sport The L69 features a compression ratio of 9 5 1 and a relatively aggressive stock camshaft It also uses a performance tuned CCC ECM PROM a knock sensor a performance tuned E4ME 750 cu ft min 21 m3 min Rochester Quadra Jet 4 barrel carburetor and a special free flowing exhaust system with large diameter exhaust manifolds Y pipe and catalytic converter The L69 F body exhaust system components would be revised slightly and used again on the later LB9 305 and L98 350 TPI engines Additionally the engines came equipped with a functional cold air induction hood on the 1983 1984 Trans Am a dual snorkel air cleaner assembly on the 1983 1986 Camaro Z28 and IROC Z and 1985 1986 Trans Am a large single snorkel on the 1983 1988 Monte Carlo SS also rare optional dual snorkel in 1987 1988 an aluminum intake manifold high stall torque converter on the Monte Carlo SS and 1984 F bodies or a lightweight flywheel on T 5 equipped F bodies The L69 engine produced 190 hp 142 kW at 4800 and 240 lb ft 325 N m of torque at 3200 rpm in the F Body and was rated at 180 hp 134 kW in the Monte SS 31 32 LE9 edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Years 1981 1986The LE9 5 0 L 305 cu in was a version of the 305 with a four barrel 650 cu ft min 18 m3 min carburetor a 9 5 1 compression ratio the LM1 cam and 14010201 casting heads featuring 1 84 1 50 valves and 53 cc 3 2 cu in chambers The engine produced 165 hp 123 kW at 4 400 and 240 lb ft 325 N m at 2 000 rpm LB9 edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Years 1985 1992The LB9 Tuned Port Injection 5 0L was introduced in 1985 At its core was the stout L69 shortblock and it used the same aggressive L69 camshaft profile The induction system was unlike any system used previously by GM It featured a large plenum made of cast aluminum with individual runners made of tubular aluminum feeding air to each cylinder And each cylinder had its own fuel injector fed by a fuel rail mounted above each bank In 1985 this engine was optional only in the Camaro Z28 IROC Z and Trans Am equipped with the WS6 performance suspension The LB9 was also available in the 87 92 GTA and Firebird Formula 215 hp 160 kW and 275 lb ft 373 N m and varied between 190 230 hp 142 172 kW with 275 300 lb ft 373 407 N m of torque over the years offered L03 edit Years 1987 95The L03 produced 170 hp 127 kW at 4400 rpm and 255 lb ft 346 N m of torque at 2400 rpm in 1993 1995 GM trucks This engine used the TBI throttle body fuel injection which was a hybrid between EFI and carburetor technology It used an EFI system with electronically controlled injectors which were mated to a twin barrel carburetor body It featured swirl port heads helped emissions but severely stunted power output and served as the base V8 engine in all C K 1500 Series and 2500 Series under 8 500 lbs GVWR GMC Chevrolet trucks and vans It was also very common in Firebirds and Camaros because it was the only engine that offered a five speed manual combination The 350 exceeded the Borg Warner T5 s input power ratings and as such it was cut from the 350 cars to prevent lemon law and warranty losses The L03 used hydraulic roller lifters which allowed it to recover some of the lost horsepower from its factory design while further increasing efficiency reduced rotational drag Despite downfalls in its aspiration restrictions the L03 was known for its reliability 1987 1990 F bodies with the L03 did not use a rev limiter The L03 used dished pistons with a 9 3 1 to 9 5 1 compression ratio The L03 TBI featured a 3 736 bore and 3 48 stroke the same as its TPI cousin the LB9 L30 edit Years 1996 2002The Vortec 5000 L30 is a V8 truck engine displacing 5 020 cc 305 4 cubic inches Bore is 95 mm 3 7 in and stroke is 88 4 mm 3 5 in The compression ratio is 9 1 1 33 It was replaced by the 4 8 L Vortec 4800 LR4 for the 1999 Chevrolet Silverado GMC Sierra trucks and 2003 Express Savana vans In C K trucks the 5000 produces 230 hp 172 kW net flywheel at 4600 rpm and 285 lb ft 386 N m net flywheel torque at 2 800 rpm In vans it produces 220 hp 164 kW net flywheel at 4600 rpm and 290 lb ft 393 N m net flywheel torque at 2 800 rpm The engine uses a hydraulic roller cam and high flowing fast burn style Vortec heads Differences include bore and stroke intake valve size and smaller combustion chambers L30 applications 1996 2002 Chevrolet Express and GMC Savana 1500 and 2500 series vans under 8 500 pounds GVWR 1996 1999 Chevrolet C K and GMC Sierra 1500 and 2500 full size trucks under 8 500 pounds GVWR3 50 in bore family 1979 1982 edit267 edit The 267 was introduced in 1979 for the GM F body Camaro G body Chevrolet Monte Carlo El Camino A body Malibu Classic 1979 1981 and also used on GM B body cars Impala and Caprice models The 4 4 L 267 8 cu in 4 389 cc engine had the 350 s crankshaft stroke of 3 48 in 88 4 mm and the smallest bore of any small block 3 5 in 88 9 mm shared with the 200 V6 introduced a year earlier It was only available with a M2ME Rochester Dualjet 210 effectively a Rochester Quadrajet with no rear barrels After 1980 electronic feedback carburetion was used on the 267 The 267 also saw use in 1980 to 1982 Checker Marathons 34 While similar in displacement to the other 4 3 4 4 L 265 267 cu in V8 engines produced by General Motors including the Oldsmobile 260 and Pontiac 265 the small bore 267 shared no parts with the other engines and was phased out after the 1982 model year due to inability to conform to emission standards Chevrolet vehicles eventually used the 305 cu in 5 0 L as their base V8 engine The 267 when introduced in the GM F Body as the L39 4 4L made 120 hp 89 kW at 3600 rpm and 215 lb ft 292 N m of torque at 2000 rpm SAE net Power output would drop in subsequent years of the engine The 267 cu in 4 4 L had a low 8 3 1 compression ratio 35 Major changes editThe original design of the small block remained remarkably unchanged for its production run which began in 1954 and ended in passenger vehicles in 2003 The engine is still being built today for many aftermarket applications both to replace worn out older engines and also by many builders as high performance applications The principal changes to it over the years include 1956 Full flow oil filtration was introduced using a paper element filter in a canister that was mounted to a boss that was added to the left rear cylinder block casting and machined for this purpose 1957 The displacement of the base V8 continued at 265 cubic inches but optional V8 engines were introduced with a displacement of 283 cubic inches 1958 Bosses for side motor mounts were added to the block casting used for production mounts for this and all future model years However the features for front motor mounts as used in 1955 1957 remained part of the block casting in this and future years The 265 cubic inch version of the engine was discontinued Also the cylinder head valve cover mounting bolt holes were changed from the top row staggered relative to the bottom row of bolts to the straight across pattern that remained the way of identifying the early heads from the newer ones with a valve cover design which lasted until the 1987 center bolt style covers 1962 The block s cylinder wall casting was revised to allow four inch bores and the 327 cubic inch version of the engine using this bore diameter and increased stroke was introduced 1967 The oil filter mounting now came from the factory with an adapter and machining to allow the use of spin on filters canister mounting was possible by removing the adapter 1968 The main journal diameter was increased from 2 30 small to 2 45 medium and the connecting rod journal diameter was increased from 2 00 to 2 10 This allowed the use of cast iron crankshafts the previous crankshafts were made of forged steel which was more expensive The rod bolts were changed from 11 32 diameter to 3 8 The oil fill location was moved from a tube on the front of the intake manifold to a cap on the left or right side valve cover depending upon the application 1970 The 400 is introduced in September 1969 for the 1970 model year with a bore of 4 125 and a stroke of 3 75 This engine introduced the large journal crankshaft with a main journal size of 2 65 and rod bearing journals of 2 10 This engine also introduced Siamese bores to the Chevrolet small block line requiring steam holes in the cylinder heads and head gaskets which were used to prevent hot spots and subsequent overheating The connecting rods due to the long stroke are also shorter at 5 565 differing from the 5 7 length of all other Generation I small block connecting rods 1980 Weight reduction though thinner cylinder wall block and light weight head castings Heads are prone to cracking and blocks typically cannot tolerate an overbore more than 040 1986 The rear main seal was changed from a 2 piece rubber design to a 1 piece rubber design that used a mounting appliance to hold it in place This necessitated a change in the flywheel flex plate bolt pattern as well as requiring an externally balanced flex plate flywheel 1987 The valve cover surfaces were changed so that the mounting lip was raised and the bolt location was moved from 4 bolts on the perimeter to 4 bolts along the centerline of the valve covers this design debuted on the Corvette in 1986 and the Chevrolet 4 3L 90 degree V6 the year before Also changed were the mounting angles of the two center bolts on each side of the intake manifold from 90 to 73 degrees and the lifter bosses were increased in height to accept roller lifters the aluminum alloy heads for use on the Corvette engines retained the non angled bolts Also all carburetors except some 1987 89 F body and B body models also the 30 and 3500 model 1 ton trucks through 1989 with either the M code 350 or W code 454 engines in which all retained the 4bbl Rochester E4ME carbs were replaced by TBI throttle body injection fuel injection 1996 The cylinder heads were redesigned using improved ports and combustion chambers similar to those in the Generation II LT1 resulting in significant power increases The intake manifold bolt pattern was also changed to four bolts per cylinder head instead of the traditional six bolts The cylinder block timing cover lip was thickened for use with the plastic timing cover redesigned for use with a crankshaft position sensor with integrated dowel pins cylinder blocks for 1996 do not have dowel pins in the timing cover flange held with 8 bolts and the water pump bypass hole on the RH deck and below the water pump passage undrilled Also the fuel pump boss is still present but undrilled which dates back to the 1992 model year for production engines without a fuel pump block off plate some marine industrial blocks and crate motors sold over the counter via GM dealerships e g Goodwrench ZZ6 350 H O retain the use of a mechanical fuel pump This was the last change for the Generation I engine which continued through the end of the production run in 2003 all 1997 2003 Generation I engines were Vortec truck engines Details editThis section needs expansion with listings for the 265 cu in 283 and 327 versions of the Generation I engine You can help by adding to it December 2017 Chevrolet Generation I V8 Small Block Engine Tablenote 1 depending upon vehicle application horsepower torque and fuel requirements will vary Gen I Years Engine option code VIN identifier Powerhp kW Torquelb ft Nm Displacementc i cc Fuel octane Bore x Strokein mm Compression ratio Block amp heads iron or aluminum Block featuresI 1967 69 Z28 290 hp 216 kW at 5800 290 lb ft 393 N m at 4200 302 cu in 4 942 cc 100 4 in 3 in 101 6 mm 76 2 mm 11 0 1 Iron only Camaro Z 28 1968 Cross Ram intake manifold with 2 Carter 4bblI 1996 02 L30 M 220 hp 164 kW at 4600 290 lb ft 393 N m at 2800 305 cu in 5 001 cc 3 736 in 3 48 in 94 9 mm 88 4 mm 9 1 1 Iron Truck van onlyI 1987 95 L03 E H 170 hp 127 kW at 4400 255 lb ft 346 N m at 2400 305 cu in 5 001 cc 3 736 in 3 48 in 94 9 mm 88 4 mm 9 1 1 Iron TBI passenger car used roller camI 1988 96 L05 K 210 hp 157 kW at 4400 300 lb ft 407 N m at 2800 350 cu in 5 733 cc 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm 9 3 1 Iron TBI 9C1 optioned Caprice and F bodies had hydraulic roller camI 1978 88 LG4 F H 150 170 hp 112 127 kW at 4600 240 250 lb ft 325 339 N m at 2800 305 cu in 5 001 cc 3 736 in 3 48 in 94 9 mm 88 4 mm 8 6 1 Iron 4bbl QuadrajetI 1981 86 LE9 F 165 hp 123 kW at 4400 240 lb ft 325 N m at 2000 305 cu in 5 001 cc 3 736 in 3 48 in 94 9 mm 88 4 mm 9 5 1 Iron Truck Van only electronic spark control module usedI 1982 83 LU5 165 175 hp 123 130 kW 305 cu in 5 001 cc 3 736 in 3 48 in 94 9 mm 88 4 mm Iron Crossfire EFI 5 0L I 1968 73 L14 200 hp 149 kW at 4600 300 lb ft 407 N m at 2400 307 cu in 5 031 cc 3 875 in 3 25 in 98 4 mm 82 6 mm 9 0 1 IronI 1967 80 L48 K 165 195 hp 123 145 kW 380 lb ft 515 N m 350 cu in 5 733 cc 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm 8 25 10 5 1 IronI 1969 70 L46 350 hp 261 kW 350 cu in 5 733 cc 100 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm 11 0 1 Iron Corvette onlyI 1969 76 L65 145 hp 108 kW 220 lb ft 298 N m 350 cu in 5 733 cc 87 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm 8 5 1 Iron 2bblI 1969 88 LM1 L 155 175 hp 116 130 kW 350 cu in 5 733 cc 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm Iron 4bbl Rochester Quadrajet 4MV M4MC E4ME retail option until 1981 when last used with the Camaro Z28 post 1980 use of the LM1 was for 9C1 optioned B Caprice Impala and G bodies Malibu I 1970 74 ZQ3 190 300 hp 142 224 kW 270 lb ft 366 N m at 3500 350 cu in 5 733 cc 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm 8 5 10 25 1 Iron 4bbl Corvette L48 camshaftI 1970 72 LT1 250 370 hp 186 276 kW at 6000 270 300 lb ft 366 407 N m at 4000 350 cu in 5 733 cc 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm 9 1 1 Iron 4bblII 1992 97 LT1 P 260 305 hp 194 227 kW at 4800 5200 325 340 lb ft 441 461 N m at 2400 3400 350 cu in 5 733 cc 87 or 91 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm 10 4 1 Iron for B amp D bodies Aluminum for F and Y bodies Reverse coolingI 1973 80 L82 205 250 hp 153 186 kW 255 285 lb ft 346 386 N m 350 cu in 5 733 cc 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm 9 1 Iron 4bbl Rochester Quadrajet flat top pistons with a D shaped relief cut for valve clearanceI 1981 L81 190 hp 142 kW 280 lb ft 380 N m 350 cu in 5 733 cc 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm 8 2 1 Iron 4bbl Rochester Quadrajet E4ME CorvetteI 1970 86 LS9 L 165 hp 123 kW at 3800 275 lb ft 373 N m at 1600 350 cu in 5 733 cc 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm 8 2 1 Iron 4bbl truckI 1981 86 LT9 M 160 hp 119 kW at 3800 250 lb ft 339 N m at 2800 350 cu in 5 733 cc 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm 8 3 1 Iron 4bbl truckI 1982 84 L83 200 205 hp 149 153 kW 285 290 lb ft 386 393 N m 350 cu in 5 733 cc 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm 9 0 1 Iron CrossFireI 1985 92 L98 8 225 250 hp 168 186 kW at 4000 330 345 lb ft 447 468 N m at 3200 350 cu in 5 733 cc 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm 9 5 10 1 Iron Aluminum Corvette TPII 1996 02 L31 R 255 350 hp 190 261 kW at 4600 330 350 lb ft 447 475 N m at 2800 350 cu in 5 733 cc 4 0 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm Iron truck VortecI 1970 80 245 265 hp 183 198 kW 400 cu in 6 554 cc 4 125 in 3 75 in 104 8 mm 95 3 mm Iron 1970 72 4 bolt main 1973 80 2 bolt mainI 1975 76 110 hp 82 kW 133 lb ft 180 N m at 3600 262 cu in 4 301 cc 3 671 in 3 1 in 93 2 mm 78 7 mm Iron Nova and Monza only 2bbl Rochester 2GC carburetorII 1994 96 L99 W 200 hp 149 kW 245 lb ft 332 N m 263 cu in 4 311 cc 3 75 in 3 0 in 95 3 mm 76 2 mm Iron reverse cooling Chevy Caprice sedans ONLY including police vehiclesI 1983 88 L69 G 180 190 hp 134 142 kW at 4800 240 lb ft 325 N m at 3200 305 cu in 5 001 cc 3 736 in 3 48 in 94 9 mm 88 4 mm 9 5 1 Iron H O Firebird Camaro Monte Carlo SS onlyI 1985 92 LB9 F 190 230 hp 142 172 kW 275 300 lb ft 373 407 N m 305 cu in 5 001 cc 3 736 in 3 48 in 94 9 mm 88 4 mm Iron TPI Firebird Camaro onlyI 1976 82 LG3 U 145 hp 108 kW at 4400 245 lb ft 332 N m at 2400 305 cu in 5 001 cc 3 736 in 3 48 in 94 9 mm 88 4 mm 8 5 1 Iron 2bblGeneration II GM small block 1992 1997 editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Generation II nbsp OverviewManufacturerGeneral MotorsAlso calledGM LT engineProduction1991 1997 36 37 LayoutConfigurationNaturally aspirated 90 V8Displacement4 3 L 263 1 cu in 4 311 cc 5 7 L 349 8 cu in 5 732 cc 5 7 L 349 8 cu in 5 733 cc Cylinder bore94 9 mm 3 736 in 99 mm 3 9 in 100 mm 4 in Piston stroke76 2 mm 3 in 93 mm 3 66 in 88 mm 3 48 in Cylinder block materialAluminum Cast ironCylinder head materialAluminum Cast ironValvetrainPushrod 1 5 1 ratio rocker arms 2 valves per cylinderCombustionFuel systemMulti port fuel injectionSequential multi port fuel injectionFuel typeGasoline Premium Oil systemWet sumpCooling systemWater cooledChronologyPredecessorGeneration ISuccessorGeneration IIIGeneral Motors Generation II LT1 is a small block V8 engine Making its debut in the 1992 Chevrolet Corvette the new LT1 sought to draw upon the heritage of the 1970 Chevrolet LT 1 A significant improvement over the original Generation I V8 is the Generation II LT1 s reverse cooling system allowing coolant to start at the heads and flow down through the block This keeps the heads cooler affording greater power through a higher compression ratio and greater spark advance at the same time it maintains higher and more consistent cylinder temperatures Some parts from the Generation II are interchangeable with the Generation I one piece rear main seal engine The interchangeable parts include the rotating assembly crank shaft pistons connecting rods and flywheel flex plate one piece rear main seal housing oil pan and valve cover gaskets and valvetrain assembly not including timing set which includes a gear to drive the water pump The LT1 uses a new engine block cylinder head timing cover water pump intake manifold and accessory brackets The harmonic damper also does not interchange it is a unique damper pulley assembly Engine mounts and bell housing bolt pattern remain the same permitting a newer engine to be readily swapped into an older vehicle 4 00 in bore blocks edit 5 7 L edit LT1 edit nbsp GM LT1 from a 1993 Chevrolet Camaro Z28In 1991 GM created a new generation small block engine called the LT1 350 distinct from the high output Generation I LT 1 of the 1970s It displaced 5 7 L 350 cu in and was a 2 valve pushrod design The LT1 used a reverse flow cooling system which cooled the cylinder heads first maintaining lower combustion chamber temperatures and allowing the engine to run at a higher compression than its immediate predecessors This engine was used in Y body 1992 1996 Chevrolet Corvette C4 F body 1993 1997 Chevrolet Camaro Z28 B4C and SS 1993 1997 Pontiac Firebird Formula Trans Am and Firehawk B body 1994 1996 Buick Roadmaster 1994 1996 Chevrolet Caprice 1994 1996 Chevrolet Caprice Police Package 1994 1996 Chevrolet Impala SS 1994 1996 Chevrolet Caprice Wagon 1994 1996 Buick Roadmaster Wagon D body 1994 1996 Cadillac FleetwoodThere were a few different versions of the LT1 All feature a cast iron block with aluminum heads in the Y and F bodies and cast iron heads in the B and D bodies Corvette blocks had four bolt main caps while most other blocks were two bolt main caps Block castings remained the same between 2 and 4 bolt mains The 92 93 LT1s used speed density fuel management batch fire fuel injection and a dedicated Engine Control Module ECM In 94 the LT1 switched to a mass airflow sensor and sequential port injection A new more capable computer controlled the transmission as well as the engine and got a new name Powertrain Control Module PCM Where the ECM held its calibration information in a replaceable PROM chip the 94 95 OBD1 PCMs are reprogrammable through the diagnostic port The early Optispark distributor had durability problems and a revised version was introduced on the 1994 B Bodies and on the 1995 Y and F Bodies Changes include a vacuum port to draw filtered air through the distributor to remove moisture and ozone and a revised drive system which uses an extended dowel pin on the camshaft rather than a separate splined shaft in the camshaft gear 1996 saw major revisions for OBD II a second catalytic converter on the F body cars rear oxygen sensors to monitor catalyst efficiency and a new engine front cover with a crankshaft position sensor Some OBD II features had been added to the Corvette starting in 1994 for testing purposes citation needed The 1997 model year Camaro and Firebird were the last year for this engine in a GM production car before it was replaced by the LS1 which was already in the Corvette for 1997 1992 LT1s in Corvettes were factory rated at 300 hp 220 kW and 330 lb ft 447 N m 1996 LT1 Corvettes were rated at 300 hp 220 kW and 340 lb ft 461 N m The 93 95 F bodies were rated at 275 hp 205 kW and 325 lb ft 441 N m while the 96 97 cars were rated at 285 hp 213 kW and 335 lb ft 454 N m The 96 97 WS6 and SS F bodies were rated at 305 hp 227 kW The 94 96 B and D body version was rated at 260 hp 194 kW and 330 lb ft 447 N m 250 hp 186 kW with V08 mechanical fan as part of V92 or V4P towing option groups LT4 edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The LT4 was the special high performance version of the new generation LT1 It featured a slightly more aggressive camshaft profile 1 6 1 aluminum roller rocker arms lighter hollow intake valves and liquid sodium filled exhaust valves larger fuel injectors performance crankshaft higher 10 8 1 compression ratio and high flow intake manifold painted red with extra material above the port available to allow port matching to the raised port LT4 cylinder heads The LT4 was conservatively underrated at 330 hp 246 kW and 340 lb ft 461 N m It was introduced in the 1996 model year for the last year of the C4 Corvette and came standard on all manual transmission ZF 6 speed equipped C4 Corvettes The engine was passed down to 1997 SLP Camaros SS and SLP Firehawks with 6 speed manual transmissions The LT4 was available on the following vehicles 1996 Chevrolet Corvette only when equipped with 6 speed manual transmission includes all Grand Sports Production 6 359 1997 Chevrolet Camaro SLP LT4 SS 6 speed Production 100 for the U S 6 for Canada There were 2 prototypes 1997 Pontiac Firebird SLP LT4 Firehawk 6 speed Production 29 All 135 production engines for the Firehawks and SSs were completely disassembled balanced blueprinted and honed with stress plates One in 5 engines was tested on a Superflow engine dyno Every car was tested on a chassis dyno and then performed a 6 mile 10 km road test 3 90 in bore blocks edit 5 7 L edit LT5 edit nbsp A GM LT5 engineFor model year 1990 Chevrolet released the Corvette ZR 1 with the radical Lotus Engineering designed double overhead cam LT5 engine Engineered in the UK but produced and assembled in Stillwater Oklahoma by specialty engine builder Mercury Marine the all aluminum LT5 shared only the 4 4 inch bore spacing with any previous SBC engine It does not have reverse cooling and is generally not considered a small block Chevrolet Used only in Corvettes 38 the LT5 was the work of a team headed by Design manager David Whitehead and was hand built by one headed by project engineer Terry D Stinson 39 It displaced 5 7 L 349 5 cu in 5 727 cc and had a bore x stroke 3 90 in 3 66 in 99 mm 93 mm instead of the usual 4 in 3 48 in 101 6 mm 88 4 mm and featured Lotus designed DOHC 4 valves per cylinder rather than the usual Chevrolet 16 Valve OHV Heads The preproduction LT5 initially produced 385 hp 287 kW but was reduced to 375 hp 280 kW and 370 lb ft 502 N m for the 1990 1992 Corvette ZR 1 The power ratings jumped to 405 hp 411 PS 302 kW at 5800 rpm and 385 lb ft 522 N m of torque at 5200 rpm from 1993 until its final year in 1995 40 thanks to cam timing changes and improvements to the engine porting 1993 also added 4 bolt main bearing caps and an exhaust gas recirculation system A second generation of the LT5 was in the testing phase as early as 1993 What little information survived showed that it would have used a dual plenum system similar to the first generation Dodge Viper as well as variable valve timing The next generation LT5 was set to produce between 450 hp 336 kW and 475 hp 354 kW Unfortunately the cost to produce the LT5 along with its weight dimensions would not fit the C5 pilot cars without extensive modifications and internal GM politics over using an engine that was not designed and built in house killed the LT5 after six years of production GM canceled the ZR 1 option beginning model year 1993 Engines that were to be installed in the as yet unbuilt ZR 1 s were sealed and crated for long term storage After they were built at the Mercruiser plant in Stillwater Oklahoma they were shipped to Bowling Green Kentucky and stored in the Corvette assembly plant until the 1994 and 1995 ZR 1s went down the assembly line A total of 6 939 cars were produced 41 The LT5 wasn t an evolutionary dead end Despite being discontinued a new class of premium V8s for Cadillac and eventually Oldsmobile the dual overhead cam V8 Northstar and its derivatives drew heavily from the LT5 s design and lessons learned from its production 42 GM also took lessons learned from producing a completely aluminum engine and applied them to the new LS series of engines The LT5 was available on the following vehicles 1990 1995 Chevrolet Corvette C4 ZR 1 equipped with 6 speed manual transmission Production 6 939 Although the LT5 was never used in another production GM vehicle it did make its way into several Corvette concepts race cars and even into a limited run of the Lotus Elise GT1 3 74 in bore blocks edit 4 3 L edit L99 edit The L99 4 3 L 263 1 cu in 4 311 cc V8 produced from 1994 1996 shared a 3 736 in 94 9 mm cylinder bore with the 305 cu in 5 0 L but had a 3 in 76 2 mm stroke compared to 3 48 in 88 4 mm of the 305 cu in 5 0 L 43 The pistons used in the 4 3 L V8 were the same as the Vortec 5000 s but longer 5 94 in 150 9 mm connecting rods were used to compensate for the shorter stroke The L99 featured updated Generation II block architecture and is externally identical to the larger 5 7 L LT1 Generation II V8 Like the LT1 it features sequential fuel injection reverse flow cooling with a cam driven water pump and an optical ignition pickup Output is 200 hp 149 kW and 245 lb ft 332 N m The L99 4 3 L V8 was the base engine in 1994 1996 Chevrolet Caprice sedans including 9C1 police package sedans and was not available in any other vehicles The L99 s smaller displacement provided slightly better EPA fuel economy than the 5 7 L LT1 but at significantly reduced horsepower and torque levels LT6 and LT7 edit The LT6 and LT7 are not actually part of the LT family See Oldsmobile Diesel engine for more information See also editChevrolet 90 V6 engine GMC V8 engine GMC V6 engine Chevrolet Series D V8 only Chevrolet V8 engine until 1955 GM LS engine Generation III IV V small block List of GM enginesReferences editMcGuire Bill June 20 2005 Horsepower Nation Chevrolet s small block V8 celebrates its 50th birthday AutoWeek Archived from the original on November 20 2010 Retrieved June 15 2005 Small Block Chevy Crate Engines April 13 2021 434 765HP Small Block Chevy Drag Race Engine 434 710HP Small Block Chevy Drag Race Engine Lola 1975 Lola T400 Chevrolet Specifications Lola T332 HU16 SSRE s 700hp Pump Gas Big Dawg 434 Small Block is Wicked March 30 2015 How Much Does a Small Block Chevy Engine Weight McNally Institute permanent dead link What is the weight of a Chevy 454 engine Engine Weights II How much does a Chevy engine weigh idswater com Worner Randy October 14 2022 SBC BBC V6 Chevy Engines Specs and Sizes With Chart Chevy Geek Retrieved April 15 2023 The Novak Guide to the GM Generation III V8 Engines www novak adapt com Retrieved May 24 2019 a b Sherman Don January 1 2000 The 10 Best Engines of the 20th Century Ward s AutoWorld Archived from the original on August 12 2009 Retrieved October 1 2016 a b Siegel Robert February 8 2008 Wisconsin Man Drives Millionth Mile in 91 Chevy NPR Borroz Tony September 22 2011 Chevrolet s Mouse That Roared Wired Retrieved October 1 2016 a b Chevy 265 cid V8 Engine Consumer Guide April 24 2008 Retrieved October 1 2016 a b c Udy Jason November 3 2011 Small Block Chevy V8 through the Years MotorTrend Retrieved October 1 2011 Niedermeyer Paul ed June 15 2016 1957 Chevrolet Fuel Injected 283 V8 Ahead Of Its Time And The Competition curbsideclassic com Retrieved June 19 2018 Flory J Kelly Jr American Cars 1960 1972 Jefferson NC McFarland amp Coy 2004 p 341 Flory p 411 Crawford John February 8 2016 The Long Forgotten Lele Driving amp Life Archived from the original on April 21 2018 a b c d e f g h Gunnell John Standard Catalog of Corvette 1953 2005 Krause Publications 2004 Gunnell John 360 hp 268 kW with the Camaro s log manifold exhaust system and points ignition Standard Catalog of Corvette 1953 2005 Krause Publications 2004 1984 Chevrolet Truck Data Book Chevy Truck Engine Specifications RPO Codes Horsepower Displacement Torque Ratings Chuck s Chevy Truck Pages com Retrieved November 22 2013 a b LT9 engine ChevyTalk The Social Network for Chevy Fans ChevyTalk Retrieved November 22 2013 Gunnell John February 23 2008 Chevrolet Pickups 1973 1998 How To Identify Select And Restore Collector Light Trucks and El Caminos Krause Publications ISBN 9780896896147 Retrieved November 22 2013 Chevrolet Sonora Un nuevo territorio HISTORY 305 www chevytech com Retrieved May 26 2019 1983 1988 Chevrolet L69 5 0 Liter 305 CID H O V8 a Genuine 1980s Legend Old Car Memories January 30 2012 Retrieved May 24 2019 HISTORY 305 www chevytech com Retrieved May 24 2019 information on the Chevrolet C1500 w L30 engine Automotive com Archived from the original on September 17 2010 Retrieved January 25 2012 Standard Catalog of Independents pp 41 42 Zal Pawel 1980 Chevrolet Camaro Sport Coupe 4 4 L V 8 automatic Automobile catalog com Retrieved December 27 2018 LT1 6 2L Engine Specs Performance Bore amp Stroke Cylinder Heads Cam Specs amp More Onallcylinders February 8 2018 Rebirth of the Gen V LT1 Small Block Part Two March 11 2013 LT5 Engine Specs Zr1netregistry com February 28 2012 Archived from the original on July 4 2012 Retrieved June 4 2012 via archive org Orbital Appoints Terry Stinson as Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director Reuters May 20 2008 Archived from the original on September 8 2012 Retrieved June 4 2012 Chevrolet Corvette ZR 1 1993 MY 1YZ07 US Carfolio com February 28 2013 Retrieved September 11 2018 ZR 1 FAQ Zr1netregistry com Archived from the original on June 10 2012 Retrieved June 4 2012 Hib Halverson 2001 Corvette LS6 Ruthless Pursuit of Power PDF If a cam is going into a Cadillac Escalade for instance luxury SUV powered by the truck version of the Gen III we wouldn t have aggressive valve openings and closings We d skew the profile s ramps towards lower noise Kristian Erick The Difference Between the LT1 amp the L99 It Still Runs Leaf Group Ltd External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chevrolet small block engines Mortec Small Block Engine Enthusiasts Video First start up SBC engine amp zoomies flames Video Let s see Chevy first start up and what NOT to do Dark humor Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chevrolet small block engine first and second generation amp oldid 1182682162 350, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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