grimmjeeper
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Roy
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- May 6, 2021
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- enginerd
LS1 was introduced in 1997 in the Corvette. Made it into the Camarobird in 1998. It was a clean sheet design that basically shared nothing with the previous small block. The transmission bellhousing pattern and the 4.4" bore spacing, along with the OHV layout are about it.Except today’s Chevy V8 shares only the names with the original small and big blocks.
LS1 being the first of the new generation, 1999-2000?
The iron block 4.8/5.3/6.0 series showed up around 1999-2000. They were based on the LS1 design.
The original LS6 was a 454 big block in the early 70s. The original LT1 was a high performance 350 small block around the same time.
The 90s saw the second generation LT1, just before the LS1. It shared much with the original small block Chevy but had some significant changes.
The second LS6 came out in mid 2000s. It was a high performance LS1 small block with only minor changes. The third generation LT1 replaced the LS1 family. It is an evolution of the LS platform.
And apparently we have a brand new 3rd generation LS6 now but I haven't read much about it. I suspect it's also a small block.
The 6.6 engine is a small block that is about as big as you can reliably make it. GM got out of the big block game as far as light duty vehicles a long time ago.
I haven't checked recently but some of their Kodiak medium duty truck line uses the big block. Or at least they used to.
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