It's often been said that when you have something that works, you leave it alone. But what happens when that something is getting a little long in the tooth? Chevrolet had done a good job of evolving the traditional small-block engine from its humble beginnings as a 265-cube V-8 alternative to the Stovebolt Six to an emissions-compliant powerhouse in Tuned-Port 5.7 Corvette form by the late '80s. The engine had always maintained excellent reliability and interchangeability throughout its run, but the horsepower wars were on, and the government wasn't making it any easier for carmakers to maintain compliance with steadily tightening emissions regulations.
These factors seemed to spawn the Gen II V-8, the first major departure from the original small-block's architecture. Introduced in the '92 Corvette, the first Gen II crested the then-magical 300hp benchmark. The engine was dubbed LT1, in obvious homage to the original LT-1 of 1970. That engine had been considered the ultimate factory small-block, leaving the Gen II with some big shoes to fill. The folks at Chevy were as aware of this as anyone, and the new LT1 quickly proved its mettle, dodging any of the stones purists were poised to hurl.
Although it was considered the next generation of small-block, the Gen II actually shared quite a bit with previous designs. In fact, the entire rotating assembly-including crank, pistons, and rods-was interchangeable with prior one-piece main-seal Chevys. However, while the Gen II appeared to be a Tuned-Port engine with a short-runner intake and an unusual timing cover/water pump arrangement, the block and heads were actually unique. That water pump was the only external hint of the new engine's reverse-flow cooling system. The strategy of this system was to cool the most heat-intensive area of the engine first-the combustion chambers-allowing the engine to better cope with higher combustion temps without detonating. This in turn allowed the engineers to bump the LT1's compression ratio all the way to 10.4:1, a level not seen since the peak of the musclecar era. Higher compression contributed to more efficient combustion and more power.
A new water pump and housing had to be developed to feed the new cooling system, and while the engineers were at it, they designed the pump to be geardriven off of the timing set, rather than the traditional beltdrive arrangement. Another new development was the LT1's Opti-Spark ignition system, which uses a front-mounted distributor sandwiched between the timing cover and water pump, driven directly by the camshaft. Inside, an optical sensor reads from a wafer-thin wheel containing 360 "windows" to determine crankshaft position.
After the Gen II's debut in the '92 Vette, the LT1 made an encore appearance as part of the new-for-'93 Camaro/Firebird twins. Although it carried the same LT1 engine code, the F-car version used two-bolt mains and was rated at 275 hp; most of the power difference was blamed on the F-car's more restrictive exhaust. The following year, the Caprice was powered exclusively by Gen II engines, receiving the LT1 as an option, although it wore iron heads and a more torque-oriented cam, producing 260 hp and 330 lb-ft. A new addition was the 4.3L version of the Gen II, coded L99 which was unique to the Caprice and rated at 200 hp.
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