The
all-new, high-tech Small Block 6.2L V8 powering the 2014 Corvette
Stingray and the 2.0L turbo diesel for the 2014 Chevrolet Cruze are
among Ward’s 10 Best Engines.
WardsAuto reviewed 44 engines from 16 automakers in this year’s
competition, which looked at power, fuel efficiency, new technology,
refinement and compared it with data for similar engines.
“At GM – our goal is to design, build and sell the world’s best
powertrains – this recognition from the experts at WardsAuto provides
two additional proof points that we are on the right track,” said Steve
Kiefer, vice president, Global Powertrain.
“The fifth generation Small Block V-8 in the new Stingray, is an
iconic brand in itself, and our new 2.0L Turbo Diesel engine in the
Chevy Cruze is redefining the market with outstanding performance,
strong low end torque, low emissions and segment-leading highway fuel
economy – a real winner.”
LT1 6.2L V8 Small Block technology, power, efficiency
“The arrival of a completely re-engineered Small Block engine family is truly momentous,” says Tom Murphy, executive editor of WardsAuto World
magazine. “The critics can say what they want about the relevance of
pushrod engines, but how can more than a hundred million buyers of
small-block engines since 1955 be wrong? The new Corvette couldn’t exist
without this magnificent V-8.”
The all-new LT1 Small
Block
technologies contribute to making the new Corvette the quickest, most
powerful and most fuel-efficient standard Corvette ever. The engine
delivers an SAE-certified 460 horsepower helping propel the car to a
0-60 time in 3.8 seconds while offering 29 EPA estimated mpg highway.
The all-new engine is the most significant redesign in the Small
Block’s nearly 60-year history. The LT1, part of the new Gen 5 family of
Small Block engines, combines several advanced technologies – direct
injection, Active Fuel Management, or cylinder deactivation, and
continuously variable valve timing – to support an advanced combustion
system.
Direct injection is new to the engine architecture and is a primary
contributor to greater combustion efficiency by ensuring a more complete
burn of the fuel in the air-fuel mixture. This is achieved by precisely
controlling the mixture motion and fuel injection spray pattern. Direct
injection also keeps the combustion chamber cooler, which allows for a
higher compression ratio.
Increased power and efficiency result from more than 10 million hours
of computational analysis including computational fluid dynamics, to
make the most of the combustion system, the direct injection fuel
system, active fuel management and variable valve timing systems that
support it. The combustion system itself benefited from 6 million hours
of dedicated CPU analysis time.
Other variants of the Gen 5 Small Block include the 4.3L V6, 5.3L and 6.2L V8
truck engines offered in the all-new Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra
pickups. The LT1 is manufactured in Tonawanda, N.Y., which is also home
to last year’s WardsAuto 10 Best engine winner – the 2.0L turbocharged
four-cylinder engine used in the Cadillac ATS.
2.0L Turbo Diesel winning design, global expertise
“The Chevy Cruze diesel is everything you want it to be:
astonishingly efficient, whisper-quiet on the highway and shockingly fun
to drive,” says Drew Winter, editor-in-chief of WardsAuto World magazine.
The 2.0L turbo-diesel delivers an SAE-certified 151 horsepower (113
kW) and 264 lb-ft of torque (358 Nm). Notable is the engine’s high
torque level of 250 lb-ft (339Nm) from 1750 - 3000 rpm. The rich torque
provides for a sustained feeling of power on demand at almost all speeds
– particularly when passing or entering a freeway onramp.
The 2014 Cruze Turbo Diesel engine delivers a segment leading
EPA-estimated 46 MPG on the highway and range of 717 highway miles on
one tank of fuel, based on fuel tank capacity and EPA estimates – your
range may be less. That is better than any non-hybrid passenger car in
America. The engine has an overboost feature capable of increasing
torque to an estimated 280 lb-ft (380 Nm), for stronger acceleration
periods of about 10 seconds.
Cruze’s 2.0L turbo-diesel
is based on a proven architecture used in European models.
Collaborating with Italian and German engineering groups, GM’s diesel
experts
in the United States adapted the engine to accommodate more stringent
diesel emission standards, diagnostics and a wider range of driving
conditions – including colder and hotter climates and higher altitudes –
for the United States and Canada. The engine is manufactured in
Kaiserslautern, Germany and also used in the Opel Astra, Cascada,
Insignia and Zafira Tourer.
Come
test drive a Corvette or a Cruze at Connell Chevrolet and
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updates.
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