The current V6 is a chevy/Ilmor joint designed 2.2L turboed engine. The last supposed "Chevy production based engine" was the 4L Aurora V8. The only true race motor found in a production chevy was the ZL-1 in the 1969 vette/Camaro- it was designed for Can-am racing.
Not an 'improvement" here. A recognition of an excellent, accurate fully and correctly detailed answer by somebody that obviously knows what they are talking about
The cars used in the Indianapolis 500 are called "Indy cars."
Indy cars do not use camshafts. They use electric solenids to open and close the valves.
Chevrolet funny cars use V8 engines mostly. These engines are designed for high performance cars like the Chevrolet, Ford, and the Chrysler. A lot of the funny cars used the 426 cubic inch Hemi produced by Chrysler.
Most cars today use the internal combustion engine.
the answer would be a Chevrolet Silverado
Most cars today use the internal combustion engine.
Indycars and F1 cars use alcohol-based fuels. NASCAR uses high-octane gasolines.
yes you can use a 1996 lt4 engine into a 1989 Caprice Classic, and its easy. you can mail me at:
chevrolet and other GM use the HR100T AC compressor
The "Iron Duke" 1.9l I4 in the Vegas had an iron block and aluminum heads. Iron blocks, generally, in passenger cars do not use a cylinder liner.
Indy cars do not have speedometer. Instead they measure speed by the Revolutions Per Minute (RPM) of the engine through the use of a tachometer. By using tire diameter, gear ratio's and engine RPM the true speed of the car can be calculated.
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