Sorry stupid ??? from a beginner.
A little more reasurch shows that the 6.0L had both, small block and big block configuration to it. It was a big block from the 60's until the mid 90's and was used in trucks and school buses.benz604 said:according to gm its a big block just a small one, 5.3 is their small block
The 4.8 has a 3.267" stroke crank and shares the same block and bore size as a 5.3 because of it. The LS7 ( 7.0) has a 4" stroke crank. The 5.3, 6.0, and 6.2 use the 3.622" stroke.07nnbs4x4 said:LS engine vary from 4.8-7.0 LS7 CI and share a 3.622 Stroke.
400 SBC....there is a rare animal. Not as rare as a 69 302 SBC..remember those ? Pikes peak motor.Chasmanian said:GM has been all over the place with engine's over the years. Heck they even had a small block 400 and a big block 396.
As of now most of the factory production engines would be a small foot print, and getting crazy HP out of them compared to what they were pulling out of older (big blocks).
Fwiw05Canuck said:400 SBC....there is a rare animal. Not as rare as a 69 302 SBC..remember those ? Pikes peak motor.Chasmanian said:GM has been all over the place with engine's over the years. Heck they even had a small block 400 and a big block 396.
As of now most of the factory production engines would be a small foot print, and getting crazy HP out of them compared to what they were pulling out of older (big blocks).
The 302 was a bad ass lil engine05Canuck said:400 SBC....there is a rare animal. Not as rare as a 69 302 SBC..remember those ? Pikes peak motor.Chasmanian said:GM has been all over the place with engine's over the years. Heck they even had a small block 400 and a big block 396.
As of now most of the factory production engines would be a small foot print, and getting crazy HP out of them compared to what they were pulling out of older (big blocks).
Chev made a 302?!?! That's wild I always thought only ford had!The 302 was a bad ass lil engine
Gm hasn't used the "current" ls platform since 2014. There are no more ls engines.Ol'Jim said:Like others said, the current family of GM V-8's, (in production vehicles, anyway), are called LS engines. Completely different than the old Small blocks and Big-Blocks.
If one had to put them in one category or the other, they would definitely be considered small blocks, but because the design is so completely different, folks just call them LS motors.
As for non-production vehicle crate engines, you can buy a 572 cubic inch crate big-block form GM, (9.4 Liters), with a pump gas option that puts out 620 HP, or a higher compression race gas version, good for 720 HP.And they come with a 1 year warranty! :mrgreen:
The Chevy SS did still use it (LS3) until production shut down in 2017.ferraiolo1 said:Gm hasn't used the "current" ls platform since 2014. There are no more ls engines.Ol'Jim said:Like others said, the current family of GM V-8's, (in production vehicles, anyway), are called LS engines. Completely different than the old Small blocks and Big-Blocks.
If one had to put them in one category or the other, they would definitely be considered small blocks, but because the design is so completely different, folks just call them LS motors.
As for non-production vehicle crate engines, you can buy a 572 cubic inch crate big-block form GM, (9.4 Liters), with a pump gas option that puts out 620 HP, or a higher compression race gas version, good for 720 HP.And they come with a 1 year warranty! :mrgreen:
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but those ecotec blocks are externally the same as the earlier ls engines, no?ferraiolo1 said:Yeah and I forgot about the 6.0 in the hd trucks. I need my morning coffee.
But it's still not really the "current" family of gm engines. Since the ecotec took over.
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