GM Woke Up
#1
GM Woke Up
GM for 2006, as far as Z71 vehicles go will be giving their trucks and SUVs a high, LEVEL stance(Thank God). The fullsize truck will be geared towards outdoorsmen. Some Z71s sit level from the factory now, but a majority don't, I guess so many people complained they changed. Otherwise you had tighten the torsion bars, or use some kind of Ford Key in the torsion bars to make them sit level.
#4
The only 350 thats in production is an alum block and that motors doesnt belong in a truck, the 5.3 and 6.0 are plenty, no reason to bring the 350 back, the block is the same as a 350 with a different bore and stroke.........we are pulling 16-18 mpg with 4 speed autos 300 hp 6.0's at the shop thats and 250hp 350 gas mileage all day, and mayhaps many a 180hp 302 owner on this board would like to get 16-18 with their rides
The General isnt sleeping their trucks sell well
The General isnt sleeping their trucks sell well
#7
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#8
I agree with otto, I see no reason to bring back the 350 in GM pickups. It was a very versatile engine which was adaptable to many applications - but the current 6.0L will do everything (in a truck) that any 350 would do and then some fella's.
The 6.0L is one of my favorite modern day engines - it's in a class by itself really. It will have equal performance with a Triton V10 towing up to 8000lbs, afterwhich the V10 should have progressively better performance as the weight adds up. It will stay with a V10 with loads on and will leave it empty. A 2500HD with 6.0 is rated at 10,600Lbs towing, and though I would opt for a V10 SD-350 if I were pulling 5 tons around all the time, I would have fewer reservations about pushing a 6.0L 2500hd to it's 10,600lb limit , than I would pushing an 04' F150 to it's very inflated 9,900lb limit for sure.
No 350 could match the V10 in any kind of performance except empty acceleration.
In honesty the 6.0 can't be compared to a V10 for downright pulling power, and it can't be compared to a 5.4L either - it's right in between both. I tend to compare it with the 5.4L myself since both the 5.4L and 6.0 are the base engines used in GM and Ford heavy duty trucks, and unlike the less powerful 5.4L which powers a truck about 400lbs heavier, the 6.0L is an actually useable base powerplant to work with without having to ante up for a larger engine just to have some get up and go.
The only mark the 6.0 had going against it was CSK (which the GM 5.7L also had ), but this has (finally) been eliminated and is no longer an issue.
The 6.0L is one of my favorite modern day engines - it's in a class by itself really. It will have equal performance with a Triton V10 towing up to 8000lbs, afterwhich the V10 should have progressively better performance as the weight adds up. It will stay with a V10 with loads on and will leave it empty. A 2500HD with 6.0 is rated at 10,600Lbs towing, and though I would opt for a V10 SD-350 if I were pulling 5 tons around all the time, I would have fewer reservations about pushing a 6.0L 2500hd to it's 10,600lb limit , than I would pushing an 04' F150 to it's very inflated 9,900lb limit for sure.
No 350 could match the V10 in any kind of performance except empty acceleration.
In honesty the 6.0 can't be compared to a V10 for downright pulling power, and it can't be compared to a 5.4L either - it's right in between both. I tend to compare it with the 5.4L myself since both the 5.4L and 6.0 are the base engines used in GM and Ford heavy duty trucks, and unlike the less powerful 5.4L which powers a truck about 400lbs heavier, the 6.0L is an actually useable base powerplant to work with without having to ante up for a larger engine just to have some get up and go.
The only mark the 6.0 had going against it was CSK (which the GM 5.7L also had ), but this has (finally) been eliminated and is no longer an issue.
#9
#10
I have heard that the real reason that the 350 Chevy was discontinued was because it was too easy to find parts for them in junk yards and such, and GM wanted more money selling parts. I can find no reason not to believe this, because the 350 could have easily been built to do what the 366 does now. I am not sure if the same block design was used for the 366 or not. I do know that a 496 BB is just a stroked out 454.
#12
#14
I've seen SBC engines all my life, and I have never seen one do anything that a 351w can't do. If judge how good an engine is by how easy it is to get parts for it and fix it, then you can tell that you are a fan of Chevy engines. I can see where having a million in each junkyard is good for Chevy fans, because they're always needing something replaced.
#15
Originally posted by FordLariat
I've seen SBC engines all my life, and I have never seen one do anything that a 351w can't do. If judge how good an engine is by how easy it is to get parts for it and fix it, then you can tell that you are a fan of Chevy engines. I can see where having a million in each junkyard is good for Chevy fans, because they're always needing something replaced.
I've seen SBC engines all my life, and I have never seen one do anything that a 351w can't do. If judge how good an engine is by how easy it is to get parts for it and fix it, then you can tell that you are a fan of Chevy engines. I can see where having a million in each junkyard is good for Chevy fans, because they're always needing something replaced.
ps: my wife had the tahoe before we got married.