News

Does the new 1250-horsepower, 233-mph Corvette ZR1X get your pulse revving toward redline? In spring 1970, you’d likely have ...
E85 is definitely more affordable than speciality race gas. However, you may not want to fill up your Chevy 350 with it just yet. Here's why.
Chevrolet has been known for producing some solid, powerful engines. Two fairly recent ones are similar enough that you might mistake them for being the same.
Chevy Corvette LT-1 production totaled 1,741 copies for 1972. This Classic White example will soon cross the Mecum Auctions block at their Glendale, Arizona sale.
The Generation V Small Block V8, LT1 to its friends and admirers, debuted in 2014 as the engine powering the new C7 Corvette. The third generation of Chevy V8s to bear the LT name—the first ...
While the first-generation small-block continued in various forms, Chevrolet introduced a thoroughly revised second-generation (Gen II) version in the 1992 Corvette. Codenamed LT1 350, but ...
The L99 small-block V8 of 1994 came close to being the smallest V8 ever dropped into a Chevrolet, but it was a tad bigger ...
LT1 is, as mentioned above, an RPO code. The engine it came with is commonly—though not always—referred to as the LT-1 (dash included), not to be confused with the 5.7-liter LT1 (no dash) that powered ...
Chevrolet's long history in the auto manufacturing business means it has had decades to build some of the most reliable engines in car history.
The sixth-generation Camaro is driving off into the sunset and Chevrolet is celebrating its retirement with an all-new Collector’s Edition. Available on LT/RS, LT1, SS and ZL1 trims, the ...
For owners of older trucks, vans, and SUVs, General Motors announced some good news today: an all-new 350 small-block engine. Just a few days ago, we said that GM's 5.7-liter V8 is one of the best ...
1992 Though Gen I V-8s persisted as Vortec truck engines through 2003, Chevrolet revived the LT1 (below) small-block code in a new small-block design for the 1992 C4 Corvette.