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So anyway I was wanting to know ls1tech members thoughts on this...Would it be benificial to say destroke an LS2 6.0L so that you could have a bigger bore for making more hp up top with heads with bigger valves, but have a shorter stroke to conserve gas mileage while puting around town in lower rpm's? Obviously it would be best to have high compression since this would be an N/A build, and since E85 is available in my area, would it be better to use E85 vs pumpgas for this build? Hard part would be trying to match up a good intake to do it all (lowend torque and high end hp). using an LS3's VVT would also be a big help, and has anyone done any testing on rhoads V-max lifters? Has anyone tried doing anything like this with great results? Thanks in advance
LS3 or LS7s are going to be pretty hard to beat. Especially for the money.
i wouldn't go to the bigger engine if i was trying to maximize fuel economy
and to answer your question. no, we bought the cars for power, not gas mileage
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I show this a lot to people, I plan on having VVT for myself one day! This is a VVT 6.2L, they test it on the dyno in stock form with headers. THen they swap in a small cam(222/236 .566/.578 114, 918 beehive valve springs, and phaser limiter. They dont loose any torque, because of the VVT, and gain 70hp!
To me that is "having your cake and eating it too!" You couldnt do that without the benifit of VVT. No cam swap, on our engines, will gain 70hp and not give up a ton of torque.
The 2010 4.8L, 5.3L, 6.0L, and 6.2L now come with VVT acording to GMs website. JUST watch out for AFM, because you cant do a cam swap when you have that without retrofitting it back to non AFM, which is about $1200+ . You can tell if an engine has AFM or not by looking at the valley pan under the intake. If its very bumpy it has AFM. If its smooth, it does not!
Last edited by SweetS10V8; Oct 26, 2009 at 06:56 AM.
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That aside, E85 is also directly against what you are looking for. Ethanol, despite the propaganda to the contrary is less efficient. It is precisely this reason that racers preferred it, it offered greater cooling because there was more liquid going through the motor. Additionally, though E85 costs less at the pump it is VERY heavily subsidized and in the end costs more than traditional gasoline.
I'm not trying to got on a soap box here, just trying to educate you on what you likely have NOT heard.




