painted rf fender today
In reply to Woody (Forum Supportum) :
All LSs are aluminum.
/pedant
That intake manifold design is fascinating to me.
In reply to Woody (Forum Supportum) :
Ah, but truck engines (aside from Trailblazer SS) are not LSs. LS1/6/2/3/7/A are all aluminum.
Ultra pedant mode: The LSX block IS iron, but it is not a production engine, just a block.
In reply to Woody (Forum Supportum) :
If i had more ambition i would toss an iron block in and post pics back and forth between it and the aluminum block just to make you think you're losing it
In reply to Patrick :
Iron spray paint cleans off very easily if you prep it wrong and use decent carb cleaner...
In reply to Woody (Forum Supportum) :
The truck engines (4.8/5.3) are iron blocks, but they're not LS designation, they're the LR4 and LM7. Engines with LS tags are the car engines and are aluminum blocks (LS4,LS1,LS2,LS3,LS6,LS7). To further confuse things there are truck motors with aluminum blocks. The LM4 that I'm using in my Challenge Corolla is a 5.3 aluminum block truck unit. It's the same spec as an LM7 but with the aluminum block. The L33 from the Trailblazer SS is also an aluminum block. LEGO motors, so lots of hybrid possibilities.
In reply to DeadSkunk (Warren) :
The TBSS had the 6 liter engine, and IIRC its RPO code was indeed LS2. Regular V8 TrailBlazers had 5.3s.
In reply to Pete. (l33t FS) :
Oops....my mistake. The L33 was another 5.3 aluminum block pickup truck motor and the TBSS had the LS2 6.0 liter. It's like trying to remember all my passwords........
In reply to DeadSkunk (Warren) :
What happened to the good old days when it was a 327, 350, 400, 454, etc.?
Recon1342 said:In reply to DeadSkunk (Warren) :
What happened to the good old days when it was a 327, 350, 400, 454, etc.?
293, 323, 348, 366, 378, 427 and any displacement in between that you can create by sticking the 293 crank in the other blocks..........feel better now?
Edit: The LS has been around for about 24 years now, since you were a teenager.....they are the engine from the good old days.
Warming back up, painting the inner fenders so the car can go on the lift soon for plumbing and driveline finishing. Today must be a 50's kinda day since I'm working on the 57 chevy and 58 wartburg
in the interest of durability and that cans of dusk pearl metallic cost a fortune, i went with rustoleum spray bedliner on the backside and hammered copper on the engine bay side.
Recon1342 said:In reply to DeadSkunk (Warren) :
What happened to the good old days when it was a 327, 350, 400, 454, etc.?
LT-1(the 350ci version of the DZ302), LS-6 (high po 454 in 1970), L88 (top dog 427), ZL1 (super rare all aluminum 427 put in 69 1969 Camaros for drag racing homologation..)
Today I removed a broken bolt from the lower mount on passenger fender as well as the original that was rusted in place with the remnants of the old fender and got the fenders, apron, core support, and inner fenders mounted and aligned for real. Some ratchet strapping was needed off one of the garage wall posts to pull the slightly twisted passenger fender into place. Splash apron is not in good shape, but it's on. Battery tray is installed. Have to align the hood next.
I have, the aesthetics of the modern engine absolutely do not bother me in the least though. If anything this car is a middle finger to the old guard. The same can be said about how i live my whole life though
As seen at Summit Racing:
remote coils with long wires, dummy distributor at back of intake, cool but pricey kit that wouldn't be too hard to duplicate with some half-decent tools and skills.
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