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List of GM engines

This list of GM engines encompasses all engines manufactured by General Motors and used in their cars.

Divisions Edit

 
Share of the Northway Motors Corporation, issued 21. May 1920

When General Motors was created in 1908, it started out with Buick and soon after acquired Oldsmobile, Cadillac and Oakland. There were dozens of other smaller companies that William Durant acquired during his first employment term until he was let go due to financially overextending his purchases. He regained control when he brought on Chevrolet in 1917 which was short lived until he was let go for the second time. This meant that the different core brands designed and manufactured their own engines with few interchangeable parts between brands, while sharing chassis, suspension and transmissions.

One of the companies Durant bought in 1909 was the Northway Motor and Manufacturing Company founded by Ralph Northway who had previously supplied engines to Buick, Oakland, Cartercar and other 1900s manufacturers, including V8 engines to Oldsmobile, Oakland and Cadillac when they were independent companies.[1] When Durant bought companies that became part of GM, Northway continued to supply engines to his former clients and added Cadillac, GMC and Oldsmobile to the list, then Northway Motors became the Northway Motor and Manufacturing Division in 1925 and became part of the GM Intercompany Parts Group.[2]

When Fisher Body was bought in 1925, coachwork was shared and with the introduction of the Art and Color Section also in the late 1920, GM products shared appearances. The core items that made each brand unique were the engines. Buick and Chevrolet used overhead valves while Cadillac, Oldsmobile, Oakland used side valve or flathead engines and the divisions no longer outsourced their engines and manufactured them according to particular brand requirements. The original factory location was located at Maybury Grand Avenue, Buchanan Street and the Grand Trunk Railway in Detroit then later became GM truck Plant No. 7 in 1926 to manufacture front and rear axles and parts for past model Chevrolets. Starting around 1925 engine blocks and cylinder heads were now developed at each brand but were cast at Saginaw Metal Casting Operations.[3] In the mid-1960s, there were 8 separate families of GM V8 engines on sale in the USA.[4][1]

By the 1970s, GM began to see problems with their approach. For instance, four different North American divisions (Chevrolet, Pontiac, Oldsmobile and Buick) offered four completely different versions of a 350 cu in V8 engine - very few parts would interchange between the four designs despite their visual similarities, resulting in confusion for owners who naturally assumed that replacement parts would be usable across brands. In addition to these issues and the obvious overlap in production costs, the cost of certifying so many different engines for tightening worldwide emissions regulations threatened to become very costly.

Thus, by the early 1980s, GM had consolidated its powertrain engineering efforts into a few distinct lines. Generally, North American and European engineering units remained separate, with Australia's Holden and other global divisions borrowing designs from one or the other as needed. GM also worked out sharing agreements with other manufacturers such as Isuzu and Nissan to fill certain gaps in engineering. Similarly, the company also purchased other automotive firms (including Saab and Daewoo), eventually folding their engine designs into the corporate portfolio as well. GM later reorganized its Powertrain Division into GM Global Propulsion Systems, located at 800 N Glenwood Ave in Pontiac, Michigan,[5] which became the GM Global Product Group in March 2020 and is in close proximity to the old location of Pontiac Assembly.[6]

GM's German subsidiary, Opel, relies on a range of three-, four- and six-cylinder gasoline and diesel engines. A survey[citation needed] of their range shows a reliance on petrol and diesel four-cylinders, and in 2014, there was only one 3-cylinder engine and one 6 cylinder engine in service in Opel's passenger car range.

In addition to automobile and truck engines, GM produced industrial engines, which were sold by brands such as Detroit Diesel, Allison, and Electro-Motive. Most of these engine designs are unrelated to GM's automotive engines.[citation needed]

Automotive gasoline engines Edit

Two-cylinder Edit

Three-cylinder Edit

 
Daewoo M-TEC inline-three engine

Inline-3 Edit

 
GM Family 1 inline-four engine

Four-cylinder Edit

 
Cadillac inline-four engine
 
Saab H inline-four engine

Inline-4 Edit

Flat-4 Edit

Five-cylinder Edit

 
GM Atlas inline-five engine

Six-cylinder Edit

 
Chevrolet Stovebolt inline-six engine

Inline-6 Edit

 
Chevrolet Corvair flat-six engine

Flat-6 Edit

 
Buick V6 engine

V6 Edit

Eight-cylinder Edit

From the 1950s through the 1970s, each GM division had its own V8 engine family. Today, there are only two families of V8 engines in production for road vehicles: the Generation IV small-block and its Generation V small-block derivative.

 
Oldsmobile Rocket V8 engine
 
GM LS V8 engine

Inline-8 Edit

 
Pontiac Silver Streak eight engine

V8 Edit

 
Cadillac Twelve engine

Twelve-cylinder Edit

Sixteen-cylinder Edit

Gasoline-electric hybrid Edit

Automotive diesel engines Edit

Three-cylinder Edit

  • 2020–present

Four-cylinder Edit

  • 1970-1977 Opel 2.1 liter
  • 1975-1981 Opel 2.0 liter
  • 1982-1988 Opel Family II 1.6 liter (16DA/16D)
  • 1982-1993 Opel 2.3 liter (23YD/23YDT/23DTR)[20]
  • 1982-2000 Isuzu E (1.5 and 1.7 liter engines marketed as D or TD for Opel/Isuzu cars)
  • 1990–2014 Isuzu Circle L (marketed as Ecotec DTI, DI or CDTI; acquired via GM's takeover of DMAX)
  • 1996–2005 Opel 2.0 and 2.2 liter SOHC 16V (X20DTL/X20DTH/Y20DTL/Y20DTH/X22DTL/X22DTH/Y22DTL/Y22DTH/Y22DTR) (marketed as "Ecotec DTI" or "Ecotec DI")
  • 2003–present Fiat 1.3 JTD (marketed as Ecotec CDTI or Ecotec depending on brand)
  • 2003-2010 VM Motori RA 420 (marketed as Ecotec 2.0 CDTI or 2.0 VCDi depending on brand)
  • 2004–2009 Fiat 1.9 JTD (marketed as Ecotec 1.9 CDTI or 1.9 TiD/TTiD depending on brand)
  • 2008–present GM Family B "2.0 CDTI"
  • 2011–present Family Z (marketed as "2.0", "2.2 VCDi" or "2.2 CDTI")
  • 2012–present 2.5 and 2.8 litre Duramax[21]
  • 2013–present GM Medium Diesel "1.6 CDTI Ecotec"[22]
  • 2014–present GM Large Diesel "2.0 CDTI Ecotec"[23]

Six-cylinder Edit

Eight-cylinder Edit

Other diesel engines Edit

 
Detroit Diesel Series 92 engines

GM entered the diesel field with its acquisition of the Cleveland-based Winton Engine Company in 1930. Winton's main client was the Electro Motive Company, a producer of internal combustion-electric rail motorcars. GM acquired Electro Motive at roughly the same time as Winton.

A partnership of GM's Research and Development Division and their Winton Engine Corporation delivered their first diesel engines suitable for mobile use starting in 1934. The engines were also sold for marine and stationary applications. In a 1938 reorganization, Winton Engine Corporation became the GM Cleveland Diesel Engine Division, and GM's Detroit Diesel Engine Division began production of smaller (50–149 cu in (0.8–2.4 L) per cylinder) diesel engines. Locomotive engines were moved under the GM Electro Motive Division (EMD) in 1941, while Cleveland Diesel retained development and production of large marine and stationary engines.

Cleveland Diesel was dissolved in 1962 and their remaining production moved to EMD. In 1988, the Detroit Diesel Engine Division was incorporated as an independent company, later acquired by DaimlerChrysler in 2005. EMD was sold off by GM in 2005 and is now a subsidiary of Progress Rail.

Locomotive engines Edit

Marine/stationary diesel engines Edit

  • 1934-1938 Winton 201-A (multi-purpose)
  • 248 (8, 12, 16 cylinder)
  • 258 (12 cylinder, 4 stroke, direct reversing)
  • 258S (16 cylinder, 4 stroke, turbocharged, direct reversing)
  • 268 (3, 4, 6, 8 cylinder)
  • 268A (3, 4, 6, 8 cylinder)
  • 268A NM (8 cylinder)
  • 278 (6, 8, 12, 16 cylinder)
  • 278A (6, 8, 12, 16 cylinder)
  • 278A NM (8, 12 cylinder)
  • 241 (6 cylinder - 4 stroke)
  • 288 (12 cylinder, direct reversing)
  • 338 (16 cylinder, vertical radial)
  • 498 (8, 12, 16 cylinder)
  • 498 NM (8 cylinder)
  • 358H (16 cylinder, horizontal radial)

Heavy and off-road diesel engines Edit

Turboshaft engines for land Edit

GM Whirlfire engine, including:

  • 1953 GT-300
  • 1954 GT-302
  • 1956 GT-304
  • 1958 GT-305
  • 1964 GT-309
  • 1971 GT-404

Aircraft engines Edit

Piston Edit

Propfan Edit

1987-1989 *Allison 578-DX

Turboprop Edit

Turboshaft Edit

Turbojet Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "Northway Motor (Detroit, Michigan)". Wikimapia. Wikimapia. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  2. ^ "100 years GMC History" (PDF). GM Heritage Center. General Motors. Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  3. ^ "Olds FAQ - Engines". 442.com. Retrieved 2014-02-16.
  4. ^ "Class of 1965: When GM Had Eight V8 Engine Families". The Truth About Cars. 2010-12-18. Retrieved 2014-02-16.
  5. ^ GM Global Propulsion Systems
  6. ^ Murphy, Tom. "GM Motors On Without Powertrain Division". Wards Auto. Informa USA. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  7. ^ e (2007-06-05). "HowStuffWorks "How Buick Works"". Auto.howstuffworks.com. Retrieved 2014-02-16.
  8. ^ "Pontiac Buggy Company | Pontiac Spring & Wagon Works | Oakland Motor Car | Pontiac |". My1955.com. 1941-03-01. Retrieved 2014-02-16.
  9. ^ a b [1] August 14, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ "1906, Buick Goes Four-Cylinder - Generations of GM". History.gmheritagecenter.com. Retrieved 2014-02-16.
  11. ^ "Buick Pre 1930 General Specs".
  12. ^ "Buick Pre 1930 General Specs".
  13. ^ "1922 Buick 22-35 specifications, information, data, photos 44759". Carfolio.com. Retrieved 2014-02-16.
  14. ^ "1909 Oakland Model 40". Conceptcarz.com. Retrieved 2014-02-16.
  15. ^ . customs-n-classics.dk. Archived from the original on 2013-05-29. Retrieved 2014-02-16.
  16. ^ http://media.gm.com/media/de/de/opel/company_opel/Werke/Kaiserslautern.html. Retrieved 23 May 2014. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  17. ^ "Holden stops Family II engine Production". ZerCustoms. Retrieved 23 May 2014.
  18. ^ history.gmheritagecenter.com http://history.gmheritagecenter.com/wiki/index.php/GM_do_Brasil_Milestones:_1980_-_1989. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  19. ^ "Werk Aspern Plant. Facts and Figures". Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  20. ^ "1988 Opel Omega A 2.3 TD Specs". media.opel.de. 2011-10-15. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  21. ^ "New Diesels Power Chevy's Global Midsize Trucks". media.opel.de. 2011-10-15. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  22. ^ "New 1.6-liter diesel engine continues powertrain renewal at Opel". media.opel.de. 2013-01-16. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  23. ^ "All-new Opel 2.0 CDTI: New Generation Large Diesel Debuts in Paris". media.opel.de. 2014-09-10. Retrieved 2014-12-14.
  24. ^ Blattenberg, Adam (2016-04-06). "Diesel History Retrospective: Oldsmobile's Other Diesel". Diesel World. Retrieved 2022-11-14.
General Motors automotive engine timeline, 1980 to present
1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
Gasoline Flat 4 EJ
Inline OHV Ecotec
Iron Duke Family 0
CIH H AZ
G Quad 4 ZZ ZR
Slant-4 A S-TEC
Starfire Saturn Atlas MGE
Family II SGE
Family 1
122 L3B
X G
J
5 Atlas
3 G S-TEC
Family 0
SGE
E-Turbo
6 Chevrolet
Red Blue Black RB30 Atlas
CIH E-TEC
V Buick
90°
60°
54° High Feature
H J
Shortstar High Value Ecotec3
16 16
8 Rocket Northstar Blackwing
Pontiac High Technology
Big Block
Holden
Cadillac LS
Small Block
Diesel Detroit Duramax
Oldsmobile
6 Oldsmobile DMAX
Inline M51 Duramax
Detroit 60
6H
4 JTD
RA Family Z
E Circle L
Family II Family B
A
MDE
  • non-GM engines used in
  • GM vehicles italicized
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s

42°39′45″N 83°17′08″W / 42.6623635°N 83.2856193°W / 42.6623635; -83.2856193

list, engines, this, list, engines, encompasses, engines, manufactured, general, motors, used, their, cars, contents, divisions, automotive, gasoline, engines, cylinder, three, cylinder, inline, four, cylinder, inline, flat, five, cylinder, cylinder, inline, f. This list of GM engines encompasses all engines manufactured by General Motors and used in their cars Contents 1 Divisions 2 Automotive gasoline engines 2 1 Two cylinder 2 2 Three cylinder 2 2 1 Inline 3 2 3 Four cylinder 2 3 1 Inline 4 2 3 2 Flat 4 2 4 Five cylinder 2 5 Six cylinder 2 5 1 Inline 6 2 5 2 Flat 6 2 5 3 V6 2 6 Eight cylinder 2 6 1 Inline 8 2 6 2 V8 2 7 Twelve cylinder 2 8 Sixteen cylinder 2 9 Gasoline electric hybrid 3 Automotive diesel engines 3 1 Three cylinder 3 2 Four cylinder 3 3 Six cylinder 3 4 Eight cylinder 4 Other diesel engines 4 1 Locomotive engines 4 2 Marine stationary diesel engines 5 Heavy and off road diesel engines 6 Turboshaft engines for land 7 Aircraft engines 7 1 Piston 7 2 Propfan 7 3 Turboprop 7 4 Turboshaft 7 5 Turbojet 8 See also 9 ReferencesDivisions Edit nbsp Share of the Northway Motors Corporation issued 21 May 1920When General Motors was created in 1908 it started out with Buick and soon after acquired Oldsmobile Cadillac and Oakland There were dozens of other smaller companies that William Durant acquired during his first employment term until he was let go due to financially overextending his purchases He regained control when he brought on Chevrolet in 1917 which was short lived until he was let go for the second time This meant that the different core brands designed and manufactured their own engines with few interchangeable parts between brands while sharing chassis suspension and transmissions One of the companies Durant bought in 1909 was the Northway Motor and Manufacturing Company founded by Ralph Northway who had previously supplied engines to Buick Oakland Cartercar and other 1900s manufacturers including V8 engines to Oldsmobile Oakland and Cadillac when they were independent companies 1 When Durant bought companies that became part of GM Northway continued to supply engines to his former clients and added Cadillac GMC and Oldsmobile to the list then Northway Motors became the Northway Motor and Manufacturing Division in 1925 and became part of the GM Intercompany Parts Group 2 When Fisher Body was bought in 1925 coachwork was shared and with the introduction of the Art and Color Section also in the late 1920 GM products shared appearances The core items that made each brand unique were the engines Buick and Chevrolet used overhead valves while Cadillac Oldsmobile Oakland used side valve or flathead engines and the divisions no longer outsourced their engines and manufactured them according to particular brand requirements The original factory location was located at Maybury Grand Avenue Buchanan Street and the Grand Trunk Railway in Detroit then later became GM truck Plant No 7 in 1926 to manufacture front and rear axles and parts for past model Chevrolets Starting around 1925 engine blocks and cylinder heads were now developed at each brand but were cast at Saginaw Metal Casting Operations 3 In the mid 1960s there were 8 separate families of GM V8 engines on sale in the USA 4 1 By the 1970s GM began to see problems with their approach For instance four different North American divisions Chevrolet Pontiac Oldsmobile and Buick offered four completely different versions of a 350 cu in V8 engine very few parts would interchange between the four designs despite their visual similarities resulting in confusion for owners who naturally assumed that replacement parts would be usable across brands In addition to these issues and the obvious overlap in production costs the cost of certifying so many different engines for tightening worldwide emissions regulations threatened to become very costly Thus by the early 1980s GM had consolidated its powertrain engineering efforts into a few distinct lines Generally North American and European engineering units remained separate with Australia s Holden and other global divisions borrowing designs from one or the other as needed GM also worked out sharing agreements with other manufacturers such as Isuzu and Nissan to fill certain gaps in engineering Similarly the company also purchased other automotive firms including Saab and Daewoo eventually folding their engine designs into the corporate portfolio as well GM later reorganized its Powertrain Division into GM Global Propulsion Systems located at 800 N Glenwood Ave in Pontiac Michigan 5 which became the GM Global Product Group in March 2020 and is in close proximity to the old location of Pontiac Assembly 6 GM s German subsidiary Opel relies on a range of three four and six cylinder gasoline and diesel engines A survey citation needed of their range shows a reliance on petrol and diesel four cylinders and in 2014 there was only one 3 cylinder engine and one 6 cylinder engine in service in Opel s passenger car range In addition to automobile and truck engines GM produced industrial engines which were sold by brands such as Detroit Diesel Allison and Electro Motive Most of these engine designs are unrelated to GM s automotive engines citation needed Automotive gasoline engines EditTwo cylinder Edit 1904 1911 Buick OHV flat twin 7 World s first production overhead valve engine 1909 Oakland vertical engine 8 9 Three cylinder Edit nbsp Daewoo M TEC inline three engineInline 3 Edit 1991 present Daewoo M TEC S TEC acquired with purchase of Daewoo 1984 present Suzuki G designed and built by Suzuki 1996 present GM Family 0 2013 present Small Gasoline Engine 2018 present GM E Turbo engine 2020 present LXD engine Small diesel Opel Models nbsp GM Family 1 inline four engineFour cylinder Edit nbsp Cadillac inline four engine nbsp Saab H inline four engineInline 4 Edit 1905 1914 Cadillac Model D side valve acquired as part of the founding of GM 1906 1923 Oldsmobile Model S side valve acquired as part of the founding of GM 1906 1911 Buick Model D inline 4 10 T head design the only non OHV Buick engine ever made 11 1909 1915 1917 1918 Buick OHV 12 Model 10 had OHV 4 1917 1924 Buick Series 30 OHV 170 cu in 2 8 L inline 4 13 1909 Oakland Model 40 9 14 acquired as part of the founding of GM 1913 1928 Chevrolet inline 4 acquired as part of Chevrolet s merger into GM 1923 Chevrolet Series M Copper Cooled 1937 1965 Opel Olympia OHV 1960 1963 Pontiac Trophy 4 derived from the Pontiac 389 1961 1992 Chevrolet 153 derived from the Chevrolet inline six 1962 1993 Opel OHV Kadett 1963 1983 Vauxhall Viva OHV 1965 1994 Opel CIH 15 1966 1988 Vauxhall Slant 4 1970 1977 Chevrolet 2300 aluminium block 1976 1993 Iron Duke built by Pontiac 1979 1986 Starfire built by Holden 1976 1986 Isuzu G161 SOHC A different Brazilian based engine was used in the Chevrolet Chevette 1980 2014 Family II SOHC DOHC designed by Opel 16 17 18 1981 2003 GM 122 Vortec 2200 1981 2009 Saab H acquired as part of Saab s merger into GM 1982 present Family 1 SOHC DOHC designed by Opel 19 1987 2001 Quad 4 DOHC produced by Oldsmobile 1989 1997 Toyota A 4A GE 4A FE used in the Geo Prizm 1990 2002 Saturn I4 SOHC DOHC 1996 present Family 0 Ecotec DOHC designed by Opel 2000 present L850 Ecotec DOHC designed jointly by Opel Saab and GM Powertrain 2003 2008 Toyota ZZ DOHC Found in the 1st Gen Pontiac Vibe 2009 2010 Toyota ZR DOHC Found in the 2nd Gen Pontiac Vibe 2009 2010 Toyota AZ DOHC Found in the 2nd Gen Pontiac Vibe 2002 present Daewoo S TEC SOHC DOHC acquired as part of Daewoo s merger into GM 2003 2012 Atlas Vortec DOHC 2012 present Medium Gasoline Ecotec DOHC designed by Opel 2013 present Small Gasoline Ecotec DOHC designed by Opel 1995 2002 Suzuki G used in the Chevrolet Tracker 1995 2002 Suzuki J used in the Chevrolet Tracker 1990 1993 Isuzu X used in the Geo Storm 2018 present L3BFlat 4 Edit 1989 2011 Subaru EJ used in the Saab 9 2X Five cylinder Edit nbsp GM Atlas inline five engine2003 2012 Atlas Vortec inline 5Six cylinder Edit nbsp Chevrolet Stovebolt inline six engineInline 6 Edit 1908 1912 Oldsmobile Limited acquired as part of the founding of GM 1913 1923 Oakland Series 60 1913 1915 Oldsmobile Series 50 1914 1916 Buick Cast In Pairs 1916 1923 Buick Non Removable Head 1916 1927 Oldsmobile Series 30 inline 6 1923 1930 Buick Removable Head 1923 1928 Oakland inline 6 1926 1927 Pontiac Split Head also modified for GMC trucks 1928 1936 Chevrolet Stovebolt 1928 1950 Oldsmobile F Series also used in Buick Marquette 1928 1954 Pontiac GMR also modified for GMC trucks 1930 1966 Opel inline 6 as used in the Opel Kapitan 1936 1962 Chevrolet Blue Flame inline 6 also used in some GMC trucks 1939 1962 GMC inline 6 1948 1962 Holden Grey 1962 2001 Chevrolet Turbo Thrift 1964 1965 Pontiac OHV derived from the Chevrolet Turbo Thrift 1966 1969 Pontiac OHC 1963 1980 Holden Red 1966 1993 Opel CIH 1980 1984 Holden Blue 1984 1986 Holden Black 1986 1988 Nissan RB30 used in the Holden Commodore VL 1999 2011 Daewoo XK inline 6 marketed as E TEC used in Daewoo Magnus via GM s purchase of Daewoo Motor 2001 2009 Atlas Vortec nbsp Chevrolet Corvair flat six engineFlat 6 Edit 1960 1969 Chevrolet Turbo Air 6 developed and used exclusively for the Chevrolet Corvair nbsp Buick V6 engineV6 Edit 1960 1974 GMC V6 1962 2009 Buick V6 marketed as Fireball V6 3800 Dauntless V6 in 1966 1971 Jeeps and Ecotec in Holdens 1977 2013 Chevrolet 90 V6 engine derived from the Chevrolet Small Block V8 now marketed as GM Vortec V6 or Vortec 4300 or EcoTec3 V6 1979 2010 Chevrolet 60 Degree V6 1994 2005 Opel 54 Degree L81 V6 used in the Saturn Vue Cadillac Catera and Saturn L series 1995 present Suzuki H used in several models built for GM by Suzuki 2004 2008 Honda J used in the Saturn Vue 1998 2002 Shortstar LX5 based on the Northstar V8 2003 2011 GM High Value an evolution of the Chevrolet 60 Degree V6 2004 present GM High Feature 2012 present Chevrolet Indy V6 IndyCar Series technically designed built and assembled by Ilmor Engineering Eight cylinder Edit From the 1950s through the 1970s each GM division had its own V8 engine family Today there are only two families of V8 engines in production for road vehicles the Generation IV small block and its Generation V small block derivative nbsp Oldsmobile Rocket V8 engine nbsp GM LS V8 engineInline 8 Edit 1931 1936 Buick Straight 8 1932 1948 Oldsmobile Straight 8 1932 1954 Pontiac Silver Streak 1934 1936 LaSalle Oldsmobile Straight 8 in a unique to LaSalle displacement assembled by LaSalle Cadillac from Oldsmobile supplied components 1936 1953 Buick Fireball nbsp Pontiac Silver Streak eight engineV8 Edit 1914 1935 Cadillac Type 51 also used in the LaSalle 1915 1917 Oakland Model 50 1915 1923 Oldsmobile Model 40 1917 1918 Chevrolet Series D acquired as part of Chevrolet s merger into GM 1929 1931 Viking V8 1930 1932 Oakland V8 used in Pontiac models during its final year 1935 1948 Cadillac Series 60 also used in the LaSalle 1949 1980 Cadillac OHV V8 1949 1990 Oldsmobile Rocket V8 1953 1976 Buick Fireball V8 also referred to as Nailhead amp Buick Big Block V8 1955 2003 Chevrolet Small Block V8 Generation I originally Turbo Fire 1955 1980 Pontiac V8 also modified for GMC Truck models 1958 1965 Chevrolet W also referred to as Turbo Thrust 1961 1980 Buick small block V8 formed the basis of the 1961 1963 Oldsmobile 215 aluminum V8 now better known as the Rover V8 and also the Buick based Dauntless V8 on Jeeps or the Repco V8 Formula One engine based on the Oldsmobile version 1965 2009 Chevrolet Big Block V8 originally Turbo Jet 1967 1972 GMC Truck 60 degree V8 derived from the GMC 60 degree V6 1967 1984 Cadillac New V8 1969 1984 Holden 253 1969 2000 Holden 308 stroke reduced in 1985 making it 304 cu in 5 0 L 350 cu in 5 7 L version also produced from mid 1994 for use by HSV 1982 1995 Cadillac HT 1990 1995 Chevrolet LT5 DOHC V8 exclusive to the Chevrolet Corvette ZR 1 1993 2010 Northstar V8 also used in the Oldsmobile Aurora 1992 1997 GM LT Generation II small block V8 1997 2020 GM LS small block V8 referred to as Generation III or IV depending on type 2014 present GM LT Generation V small block V8 Also called Ecotec3 V8 2018 2020 Cadillac Blackwing twin turbo V8 2023 present Chevrolet Gemini DOHC V8 nbsp Cadillac Twelve engineTwelve cylinder Edit 1930 1937 Cadillac Twelve derived from the Cadillac Sixteen 1960s 1966 GMC Twin Six derived from the GMC V6 Sixteen cylinder Edit 1930 1937 Cadillac Sixteen OHV 1937 1940 Cadillac Sixteen L Head 2003 Cadillac Sixteen concept only Gasoline electric hybrid Edit Voltec used in the Chevrolet Volt Automotive diesel engines EditThree cylinder Edit 2020 presentFour cylinder Edit 1970 1977 Opel 2 1 liter 1975 1981 Opel 2 0 liter 1982 1988 Opel Family II 1 6 liter 16DA 16D 1982 1993 Opel 2 3 liter 23YD 23YDT 23DTR 20 1982 2000 Isuzu E 1 5 and 1 7 liter engines marketed as D or TD for Opel Isuzu cars 1990 2014 Isuzu Circle L marketed as Ecotec DTI DI or CDTI acquired via GM s takeover of DMAX 1996 2005 Opel 2 0 and 2 2 liter SOHC 16V X20DTL X20DTH Y20DTL Y20DTH X22DTL X22DTH Y22DTL Y22DTH Y22DTR marketed as Ecotec DTI or Ecotec DI 2003 present Fiat 1 3 JTD marketed as Ecotec CDTI or Ecotec depending on brand 2003 2010 VM Motori RA 420 marketed as Ecotec 2 0 CDTI or 2 0 VCDi depending on brand 2004 2009 Fiat 1 9 JTD marketed as Ecotec 1 9 CDTI or 1 9 TiD TTiD depending on brand 2008 present GM Family B 2 0 CDTI 2011 present Family Z marketed as 2 0 2 2 VCDi or 2 2 CDTI 2012 present 2 5 and 2 8 litre Duramax 21 2013 present GM Medium Diesel 1 6 CDTI Ecotec 22 2014 present GM Large Diesel 2 0 CDTI Ecotec 23 Six cylinder Edit 1980s present Detroit Diesel 60 inline 6 1982 1985 Oldsmobile V6 Diesel 4 3L the lesser known counterpart to the infamous Oldsmobile 350 diesel 24 1994 2003 BMW M51 2 5 liter X25DT U25DT Y25DT 2002 present DMAX V6 acquired via GM s takeover of DMAX 2019 present Duramax I6Eight cylinder Edit 1977 1985 Oldsmobile Diesel engine 1982 2000 Detroit Diesel V8 6 2L and 6 5L 6 5L engines are still in production by AM General for use in Humvees and various marine applications 2001 present Duramax V8 acquired via GM s 2003 takeover of DMAX Other diesel engines Edit nbsp Detroit Diesel Series 92 enginesGM entered the diesel field with its acquisition of the Cleveland based Winton Engine Company in 1930 Winton s main client was the Electro Motive Company a producer of internal combustion electric rail motorcars GM acquired Electro Motive at roughly the same time as Winton A partnership of GM s Research and Development Division and their Winton Engine Corporation delivered their first diesel engines suitable for mobile use starting in 1934 The engines were also sold for marine and stationary applications In a 1938 reorganization Winton Engine Corporation became the GM Cleveland Diesel Engine Division and GM s Detroit Diesel Engine Division began production of smaller 50 149 cu in 0 8 2 4 L per cylinder diesel engines Locomotive engines were moved under the GM Electro Motive Division EMD in 1941 while Cleveland Diesel retained development and production of large marine and stationary engines Cleveland Diesel was dissolved in 1962 and their remaining production moved to EMD In 1988 the Detroit Diesel Engine Division was incorporated as an independent company later acquired by DaimlerChrysler in 2005 EMD was sold off by GM in 2005 and is now a subsidiary of Progress Rail Locomotive engines Edit 1934 1938 Winton 201 A multi purpose 1938 1966 EMD 567 1965 1988 EMD 645 1984 present EMD 710 1998 present EMD 265Marine stationary diesel engines Edit 1934 1938 Winton 201 A multi purpose 248 8 12 16 cylinder 258 12 cylinder 4 stroke direct reversing 258S 16 cylinder 4 stroke turbocharged direct reversing 268 3 4 6 8 cylinder 268A 3 4 6 8 cylinder 268A NM 8 cylinder 278 6 8 12 16 cylinder 278A 6 8 12 16 cylinder 278A NM 8 12 cylinder 241 6 cylinder 4 stroke 288 12 cylinder direct reversing 338 16 cylinder vertical radial 498 8 12 16 cylinder 498 NM 8 cylinder 358H 16 cylinder horizontal radial Heavy and off road diesel engines Edit1938 1995 Detroit Diesel Series 71 1945 1965 Detroit Diesel Series 110 1950 1955 Detroit Diesel Series 51 1957 1990s Detroit Diesel Series 53 1960s 1980s Detroit Diesel Series 149 1974 1995 Detroit Diesel Series 92Turboshaft engines for land EditGM Whirlfire engine including 1953 GT 300 1954 GT 302 1956 GT 304 1958 GT 305 1964 GT 309 1971 GT 404Aircraft engines EditPiston Edit 1931 1944 Allison V 1710 1937 1944 Allison V 3420 derived from the V 1710 Propfan Edit 1987 1989 Allison 578 DX Turboprop Edit 1947 1950s Allison T38 1953 1955 Allison T40 1954 present Allison T56 501 D also produced by Rolls Royce Turboshaft Edit 1954 present Allison T56 501 D also produced by Rolls Royce 1960s present Allison 250 also produced by Rolls Royce Turbojet Edit 1944 1959 Allison J33 originally developed by General Electric and transferred to GM for production 1946 1955 Allison J35 originally developed by General Electric and transferred to GM for production 1948 1958 Allison J71See also EditList of GM bellhousing patternsReferences Edit a b Northway Motor Detroit Michigan Wikimapia Wikimapia Retrieved 6 April 2021 100 years GMC History PDF GM Heritage Center General Motors Retrieved 8 April 2021 Olds FAQ Engines 442 com Retrieved 2014 02 16 Class of 1965 When GM Had Eight V8 Engine Families The Truth About Cars 2010 12 18 Retrieved 2014 02 16 GM Global Propulsion Systems Murphy Tom GM Motors On Without Powertrain Division Wards Auto Informa USA Retrieved 14 October 2022 e 2007 06 05 HowStuffWorks How Buick Works Auto howstuffworks com Retrieved 2014 02 16 Pontiac Buggy Company Pontiac Spring amp Wagon Works Oakland Motor Car Pontiac My1955 com 1941 03 01 Retrieved 2014 02 16 a b 1 Archived August 14 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1906 Buick Goes Four Cylinder Generations of GM History gmheritagecenter com Retrieved 2014 02 16 Buick Pre 1930 General Specs Buick Pre 1930 General Specs 1922 Buick 22 35 specifications information data photos 44759 Carfolio com Retrieved 2014 02 16 1909 Oakland Model 40 Conceptcarz com Retrieved 2014 02 16 customs n classics dk customs n classics dk Archived from the original on 2013 05 29 Retrieved 2014 02 16 http media gm com media de de opel company opel Werke Kaiserslautern html Retrieved 23 May 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Holden stops Family II engine Production ZerCustoms Retrieved 23 May 2014 history gmheritagecenter com http history gmheritagecenter com wiki index php GM do Brasil Milestones 1980 1989 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Werk Aspern Plant Facts and Figures Retrieved 18 July 2014 1988 Opel Omega A 2 3 TD Specs media opel de 2011 10 15 Retrieved 2014 02 05 New Diesels Power Chevy s Global Midsize Trucks media opel de 2011 10 15 Retrieved 2014 02 05 New 1 6 liter diesel engine continues powertrain renewal at Opel media opel de 2013 01 16 Retrieved 2014 02 05 All new Opel 2 0 CDTI New Generation Large Diesel Debuts in Paris media opel de 2014 09 10 Retrieved 2014 12 14 Blattenberg Adam 2016 04 06 Diesel History Retrospective Oldsmobile s Other Diesel Diesel World Retrieved 2022 11 14 General Motors automotive engine timeline 1980 to present 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0Gasoline Flat 4 EJInline OHV EcotecIron Duke Family 0CIH H AZG Quad 4 ZZ ZRSlant 4 A S TECStarfire Saturn Atlas MGEFamily II SGEFamily 1122 L3BX GJ5 Atlas3 G S TECFamily 0SGEE Turbo6 ChevroletRed Blue Black RB30 AtlasCIH E TECV Buick90 60 54 High FeatureH JShortstar High Value Ecotec316 168 Rocket Northstar BlackwingPontiac High TechnologyBig BlockHoldenCadillac LSSmall BlockDiesel Detroit DuramaxOldsmobile6 Oldsmobile DMAXInline M51 DuramaxDetroit 606H4 JTDRA Family ZE Circle LFamily II Family BAMDEnon GM engines used inGM vehicles italicized 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 01980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s 42 39 45 N 83 17 08 W 42 6623635 N 83 2856193 W 42 6623635 83 2856193 Retrieved from https en 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