The 94 and 95's were different that the previous and the following years. The year ranges are up to 93, then the 94 and 95, and then 96-99. I believe the main difference is the fuel injection system. I cant say as far as if a person were to change the intakes.
A 1995 Chevrolet Tahoe has a 5.7L 350 TBI V8 for a engine, not a vortec.
The 1995 350 or 5.7L has a T.B.I. and standard heads. 1996 its a C.P.I. and Vortec heads.
Is a 1995 Nissian 240SX Engine compatible to 1992 Nissian 240SX?
The big difference with a vortec vs normal gm motors is vortec has different head design and the intake manifold have bigger runners. In 1995 vortec heads still used T.B.I injection with the top end of the engine being vortec head and intake mainfold.
If you attempt to put a vortec engine into a vehicle with a NON-vortec computer, you'll have more problems than you care to deal with.
If it's a V6 it is a 4.3 litre vortec engine. If it is a four cylinder engine it is a 2.2 litre engine.
First of all Chevy did not make a vortec engine in 1987 or 1995, those engines are TBI / Throttle body injection engines. And yes they will interchange with no problems.
Apparently, there is none. They started using them in 1996.
Oil Pressure is not a
The firing order for the 4.3L engine is 165432
Yes.
For most vehicles, the type of engine within the vehicle can be found listed in the owner's manual under specifications. However, if this is missing, do not fear. If the vehicle is older than 1995 and has a stock engine, the chances of it being a vortec 4.3L are nearly 100%.