FOR RELEASE:
2004-07-28
CONTACTS
GM Powertrain
Opens Performance Build Center
New Vortec
6.0-liter Gen IV, Half-Century of Small-Block V-8s Celebrated
- GM Powertrain inaugurates $10
million Performance Build Center to produce hand-built
high-performance engines. First engine produced: LS7 V-8,
beginning second-quarter 2005
- Vortec 6000 6.0-liter
all-aluminum V-8 (LS2), fourth generation of GM's hallowed
small-block design, will be available in the 2005 Chevrolet
SSR
- Fifty years of small-block
heritage commemorated with launch of LS2 and exhibit area at
Performance Build Center
DETROIT - General Motors
Corp. is adding more muscle to its claim of "World's Best
Powertrains" with the official opening of its Performance Build
Center, a $10 million facility dedicated to building
high-performance engines for low-volume, premium vehicles.
The first hand-built engine
variant to come from the Performance Build Center will be the
LS7 OHV V-8 that is the heart of the Z06 performance package
earmarked for the 2006 Corvette; specifications and details for
the LS7 will be provided at the 2005 North American
International Auto Show.
Another variant of GM
Powertrain's newly revised small-block engine family, the Vortec
6000 6.0-liter V-8 (LS2), powers the 2005 Chevrolet SSR. It is
an all-aluminum version of the new fourth generation of GM's
timeless small-block V-8. The Gen IV design comprises the latest
series of technical revisions to the engine.
The new Gen IV small-block V-8
also will launch in several 2005 GM SUVs. Those trucks will use
Gen IV V-8s with cast aluminum cylinder blocks and feature GM
Powertrain's efficiency enhancing Displacement on Demand
cylinder deactivation technology.
The 2005 launch of the Gen IV
also marks the 50th anniversary of the small-block's launch in
the '55 Chevrolet lineup. The Gen IV variant makes the
small-block one of the most enduring designs of any
mass-producing industrial sector.
Performance Build Center
The GM Powertrain Performance Build Center, a 100,000 square
foot facility in the Detroit suburb of Wixom, is the culmination
of former GM Powertrain Vice President Ned McClurg's vision to
see the company's Powertrain division - the world's
highest-volume producer of automotive engines - establish a
reputation as a builder of hand-crafted, high-performance
"niche" engines for low-volume specialty vehicles.
"Ned saw a strong market niche GM
had not gone after in the past," said Timothy M. Schag, site
manager for the Performance Build Center. The idea went to the
highest levels of the corporation - but ultimately needed little
selling. GM executives and planners already had foreseen the
need to compete with other automakers crafting high-performance
"image powertrains" for premium vehicles, said Schag.
Schag, a GM engineer with decades
of powertrain manufacturing and engineering experience, traveled
the world with other Powertrain engineers to study competitive
niche-engine building facilities and benchmark race teams'
operations.
The Performance Build Center will
combine the best practices of contemporary niche-engine
construction with the volume-manufacturing system that has
enabled GM Powertrain to claim leadership in a string of recent
J.D. Power and Associates rankings of manufacturing quality.
Schag says, in fact, that while the Performance Build Center's
volumes may be purposely small - capacity is 15,000 engines
annually - all of the quality standards that apply to every GM
Powertrain manufacturing facility will be fully in place. The
facility will achieve TS 16949 certification by the end of the
year and the site will be compatible with GM Global
Manufacturing System processes.
Engines built at the Performance
Build Center will be constructed by specially trained
craftspeople from United Auto Workers Local 653, based in
Pontiac, Mich. Each technician on the 80-person force receives
extensive high-level instruction - every technician has built
complete engines before.
This philosophy of craftsmanship
and "ownership" is the crux of the Performance Build Center's
philosophy. One technician will build a complete engine from
start to finish. The Performance Build Center's highly flexible
manufacturing concept and tooling, combined with technicians'
ability to assemble any engine, mean that throughput of
different engines can be quickly adjusted to address shifting
market demand.
The Performance Build Center will
be the focal point of GM's goal to make expressive and emotional
vehicles, with powertrains that match that excitement. "It's a
much more efficient way to get these special, high-performance
engines to the street," said Schag.
The LS7 OHV V-8 for 2006
Chevrolet Corvette ZO6 is the first engine confirmed for the
Performance Build Center, but others will follow.
"Performance means different
things to different people. Sometimes it's pure horsepower.
Maybe it's sophistication. Whatever the definition, this
facility will deliver world-class engines," Said Schag.
Performance Build Center Fast
Facts
- A $10 million, 100,000 sq. ft.
facility in Wixom, Mich.
- First product: Gen IV LS7
small-block V-8 for 2006 Chevrolet Corvette Z06
- Specially trained technicians
from UAW Local 653; each technician builds an engine from
start to finish
- Capacity: 15,000 engines
annually; highly flexible "mix" can respond to quickly
changing market conditions
- Every engine to be hot-tested
SSR's Vortec 6000 6.0-liter
ushers in fourth generation of small-block V-8
The new Gen IV Vortec 6000 6.0-liter V-8 (LS2) small block
injects a new level of performance for the 2005 Chevrolet SSR.
Also new for 2005, the Gen IV
Vortec 5300 5.3-liter small-block V-8 will feature GM
Powertrain's Displacement on Demand cylinder deactivation to be
rolled out in various 2005-model GM SUVs. In all applications,
the Gen IV is revised in several key areas to enhance efficiency
and durability, reduce friction and improve airflow.
For the 2005 SSR, the Vortec 6000
6.0-liter Gen IV small-block develops 390 hp at 5400 rpm and 405
lb.-ft. of torque at 4400 rpm. The SSR's Vortec 6000 6.0-liter
LS2 is backed by a standard Hydra-Matic 4L65-E four-speed
automatic transmission, or new for 2005, a Tremec M10 six-speed
manual.
Numerous revisions, updates and
improvements comprise the new Gen IV small-block V-8. "The new
Gen IV engine is the best example yet of the continuous
refinement in performance and efficiency that has been part of
the small-block's legacy since day one," said Dan Nicholson,
chief engineer of small-blocks.
A summary of new or changed
components for the Gen IV architecture:
Larger 90-mm throttle body: The
6.0-liter displacement requires a higher volume of intake air;
the Gen III throttle body is 75 mm. The new throttle body is
mounted to a revised-design composite intake manifold with tuned
runners to optimize airflow to individual cylinders.
New combustion-chamber design:
Understanding of the flow characteristics in the highly tuned
LS6 small-block were applied to the new Gen IV combustion
chambers. The result is higher power output and increased
volumetric efficiency.
Higher compression ratio:
Hand-in-hand with Gen IV's new combustion chamber design is the
ability to increase compression ratio to 10.9:1 compared to the
10:1 of the High-Output Vortec 6.0-liter Gen III V-8.
High-lift cam profile: Intake
breathing is enhanced with a new, higher-lift camshaft. Also
fitted are stronger valve springs to enable a higher peak-rpm
range.
Flat-top pistons and stronger
floating wrist pins: Floating piston wrist pins enhance
durability, while engine testing and computer modeling
demonstrated flat-top pistons generate the best power.
Compact, lighter water pump: All
Gen IV V-8s are fitted with a more compact, more efficient water
pump that reduces mass, conserves underhood space and reduces
parasitic losses.
Deeper oil pan: The LS2 truck
engine is designed with a deeper oil sump than the LS2
passenger-car engine. The new oil pan also incorporates a
pass-through for a front driveshaft when used in
four-wheel-drive applications.
Reduced-tension piston rings:
Piston rings are a new, lower-tension design to reduce friction.
Redesigned crankcase vent: The
crankcase vent is repositioned to the top of the block valley,
where oil is less likely to enter during high engine speeds or
high-g maneuvers.
New accessory-drive package: A
new power steering pump and revised serpentine drive belt result
in better space utilization.
Along with the increased power
and torque when compared to the Gen III High Output Vortec
6.0-liter V-8, the new Gen IV Vortec 6000 6.0-liter continues GM
Powertrain's ongoing commitment to reducing maintenance
intervals and servicing costs.
Dexcool coolant and the
platinum-tipped spark plugs have 100,000-mile change intervals.
An Oil Life System function, built directly into the engine
control module, calculates ideal oil-change intervals based on a
variety of performance parameters.
Gen IV Vortec 6000 6.0-liter
V-8 Fast Facts
- First truck application: 2005
Chevrolet SSR
- First small-block V-8 for
truck applications to use aluminum cylinder block
- 390 hp (291 kW) at 5400 rpm
- 405 lb.-ft. (542 Nm) of torque
at 4400 rpm
- Numerous internal revisions
enhance power as well as improve efficiency
GM Powertrain marks 50 years of
small-block heritage
GM Powertrain is introducing its new Gen IV small-block V-8
architecture for several 2005 model GM vehicles exactly 50 years
after the original small-block was launched for Chevrolet in
1955. One of any engine family's most important design elements
- the distance between bore centers - remains the same 4.4
inches for today's new Gen IV as it was in Chevrolet Chief
Engineer Ed Cole's seminal initial design.
Compact, powerful and packed with
innovative technology: it's an accurate description of the new
Gen IV V-8, and those same words were used to describe the
original small-block in 1955.
In addition to its new,
all-aluminum 6.0-liter variant for car and truck applications
(LS2), the Gen IV architecture will be launched in V-8-equipped
models of the 2005 Chevrolet TrailBlazer EXT, GMC Envoy XL and
Envoy XUV, offering fuel-saving Displacement on Demand (DOD)
technology.
"The small-block V-8 not only is
a viable and relevant engine in today's market, but technology
such as Displacement on Demand demonstrates its adaptability in
the face of evolving marketplace expectations," said Dan
Nicholson, chief engineer of small-blocks.
DOD has the capability to disable
the combustion process of half the engine's cylinders in certain
driving conditions, enabling fuel savings of up to 8 percent.
The process is instantaneous and virtually imperceptible, and
the engine delivers horsepower and torque bands comparable to
previous non-DOD small-block engines.
The first passenger-car version
of the Gen IV V-8 - without DOD - debuts in the 2005 Chevrolet
Corvette.
GM Powertrain estimates that by
the end of the 2005 model year, more than 90 million
small-block-based engines will have been produced since the
original engine's 1955 introduction.
Compact design the heart of
small-block advantage
Contemporary demands for efficiency and performance refinements
were the very demands that pushed the original small-block's
development 50 years ago. It started in the early '50s with the
planned replacement of Chevy's sturdy, but antiquated,
straight-six engine - a large, heavy powerplant commonly called
the Stovebolt Six.
Although a new V-8 was on the
drawing table when Chief Engineer Ed Cole transferred from
Cadillac to Chevrolet in 1952, he soon dismissed the original
design and challenged his engineers to develop a more compact
engine that would be easier to manufacture. The overhead valve
design had been a staple of the Stovebolt engine and, to some at
GM, one of the Chevrolet cars' selling points. Retaining that
trait was agreeable with Cole, whose previous assignment was the
design of Cadillac's OHV V-8.
When completed, the new V-8
engine had a minimalist design to take advantage of streamlined
production techniques. Innovations like green-sand casting,
which allowed the block to be cast upside down and dramatically
reduce the number of cores, as well as lightweight stamped-steel
rocker arms that allowed a much higher rpm range, were
state-of-the-art.
The new small-block's cylinder
heads were another important step forward. Their cross-flow port
design and wedge-shape combustion chambers were very efficient
and, when combined with the high rpm capability of the
valvetrain, gave the new V-8 a broad performance band. Also, the
engine's quintet of head bolts around each cylinder provided
superior cylinder head location. Other innovations included:
- Hollow pushrods to transfer
lubricating oil to the cylinder heads
- A single-piece intake manifold
combined the water outlet, exhaust heat riser, distributor
mounting and lifter valley cover in a single component
- Internal lubrication
eliminated the need for external oil lines, greatly reducing
the chance for leaks
- Compact size required less
iron to produce the engine and less water to cool it during
operation.
The internal oiling system was a
breakthrough not found on many other automotive engines at the
time, especially in Chevrolet's low-price field.
And though a seemingly
inconsequential specification at the time, the new small-block
engine also was designed with 4.4-inch bore centers - the
distance from the center of one cylinder to the next. The design
contributed to the engine's compact size, but the dimension has
come to symbolize the balanced harmony of the small block. It
was the dimension around which the all-new Gen III small block
was designed in 1997.
"The long history of the
small-block is one of the reasons the new generation of engines
is so powerful and efficient," said Nicholson. "GM has almost 50
years of experience with its valve-in-head design, and that has
provided immeasurable detail for keeping the small-block a
viable, relevant engine for today and the future."
A legacy of power and
adaptability
With 3.75-inch bores and a 3.00-inch stroke, the first
small-block displaced just 265 cubic inches (4.35 liters).
Drawing its breath through a two-barrel carburetor, the base
version produced 162 horsepower (gross); with a four-barrel, the
engine was rated at 195 (gross) in the Corvette. Better still,
it weighed nearly 50 pounds less than the old Stovebolt Six.
From that auspicious beginning,
the small-block was at the forefront of technology. A
fuel-injected version of the engine was available from 1957
through the mid-‘60s, and as the horsepower wars of the late
Sixties raged, the small-block proved to be powerful ammunition
for Chevrolet.
The small-block would grow to a
maximum of 400 cubic inches and, with the 2004 Corvette Z06's
LS6 engine, produce 405 horsepower. In less glamorous, but
perhaps more important roles, small-blocks reliably powered
millions of family cars and work trucks.
When marketplace demands required
more efficiency, the small-block was downsized to accommodate.
But as engineers found new and better ways to extract power from
the venerable engine, the small-block's displacement and power
increased while meeting - or exceeding - federal requirements
for fuel efficiency and lowered emissions.
In 1978 engineers developed a V-6
from the original small-block architecture. Called the
"three-quarters small-block" at the time, the engine lives on
today in many GM trucks as the Vortec 4300 V-6.
In the early ‘90s, the Gen II
small-block was introduced in high-performance cars including
the Corvette and Pontiac Firebird Trans Am. Known as the LT1
and, later, the LT4, the Gen II featured new, low-friction
internal components and reverse-flow cooling to enable the most
powerful small-blocks since the heyday of the muscle car era.
Some Gen II features, including the low-profile, high-flow,
intake manifold previewed technology that would be incorporated
into the all-new Gen III.
The Gen III was introduced as the
LS1 5.7-liter engine in the 1997 Corvette, while Vortec versions
of the Gen III for trucks were introduced in 1999, with
displacements ranging from 4.8 liters to 6.0 liters. The Gen III
engine benefited from new technology and production methods, but
its design drew upon more than 40 years of research and
continuous improvements from the Gen I and Gen II small-blocks.
Continual improvements also drove
the development of new efficiencies and power increases in the
Gen IV small-block.
Milestones
The legacy of the small-block has left an indelible mark on the
global auto industry and American automotive culture. Some of
its many noteworthy milestones include:
1955: Small-block V-8 introduced in 1955 Chevrolets.
1957: Larger bore increased displacement to 283 cubic
inches (4.6 liters); Ramjet mechanical fuel injection was
introduced, bringing horsepower to 283 - one horsepower for
every cubic inch.
1962: Displacement increased to 327 cubic inches (5.4
liters), with Ramjet fuel injected version rated at 360
horsepower.
1964: Cylinder head improvements bump the 327's highest
horsepower rating to 375 with fuel injection.
1967: Little-known option Z28 released for the Camaro,
which includes a high-revving 302-cubic-inch (4.9-liter)
small-block for competition in SCCA Trans Am road racing.
1968: A Camaro Z28 wins the Trans Am championship; a
350-cubic-inch (5.7 liters) version of the small-block debuts
and would become the quintessential small-block variant.
1970: 350-cubic-inch LT1 debuts in Camaro and Corvette
and is rated at 370 horsepower; 400-cubic-inch (6.6-liter)
small-block is offered - the largest-displacement small-block
built.
1975: With fuel economy prevalent in consumers' minds, a
more efficient 262-cubic-inch (4.3-liter) small-block is
introduced.
1978: V-6 engine based on small-block design introduced;
it would become the Vortec V-6 truck engine more than a decade
later.
1980: Last year for the 400 small block.
1982: Fuel injection reintroduced with the Cross-Fire
injection system on Corvette and the redesigned Camaro Z28.
1985: Tuned port fuel injection replaces Cross-Fire
Injection, ushering in the modern era of electronically
controlled, port-injected engines.
1986: Aluminum cylinder heads debut as standard equipment
on Corvette; block changed to accept new single-piece rear main
seal.
1987: Hydraulic roller lifters introduced.
1989: The H.O. 350 "crate engine" is developed, offering
a ready-built performance engine from the factory. It would
change the way hot rodders approach engine building in the next
decade.
1992: LT1 engine in the Corvette introduces Gen II small
block design, which features reverse-flow cooling, revised
cylinder head design, and crank-triggered optical distributor.
1996: Vortec V-8 engines introduced in trucks, featuring
cylinder heads with swirl-inducing combustion chamber design to
increase power and torque.
1997: Gen III 5.7-liter LS1 small-block introduced with
all-new Corvette, featuring all-new deep-skirt block casting
with six-bolt mains; redesigned cylinder heads with symmetrical
ports and combustion chambers; and coil-near-plug ignition
system.
1999: Gen III-based Vortec V-8 engines introduced in GM
trucks; displacements include 4.8 liters, 5.3 liters and 6.0
liters.
2005: Gen IV small-block introduced 50 years after the
original.
More than power or displacement,
the significance of the small-block has been its adaptability as
market demands and technology evolved during the past five
decades. Engineers have met every challenge and kept the
small-block on the leading edge of performance.
The introduction of the Gen IV
engine signals the small-block's legacy will extend for decades
to come.