You can make it fit with plenty of money and fabrication but it is not a plug and play.
Before 2000, yes. After, no.
285.
Yes it will fit right in there. A small block Chevy is a small block Chevy. The only thing that is different is the fuel system. All small block Chevy engines are the same it does not matter. Chevy did not redesign the engine blocks until late 2000. But in your case the 2 ingines are the same. Put it in there.
Even though GM still claims this is a "Small Block" the last of the real small blocks was built in the 2000's
There are 8 freeze plugs in all small and big block Chevy engines up to the year 2000
yes.....and thats a perfect match.. it actually boosted the apperance and increased gas consumption and made the head lights brighter.
45 LBS. at 2000 RPMs. At an idle it should have at least 15 LBS. or more.
From the year 2000 and below all Chevy transmission bolt patterens are the same. It does not matter if it is a V6, small block V8, Big block V8 they are all the same. The only thing that is different is the fly-wheel.
If it is a gas engine, then no. If its not gas then yes.
Any small block or big block Chevy from the late 60s through the end of that block style around 2000. A 4.3 V6 should bolt up in there too, and maybe the 2.8 and maybe even the 3.8.
The Chevy small block is exactly that: one block... with many different piston sizes: 305, 350, 400, 502, etc... None of which will drop into a 95 and later Monte which is designed to hold a 60 degree V6. Lots of modification will need to be done.
Inside the bottom of the engine block.