I was browsing through a list of GM engines, looking for a potential new candidate for my El Camino, when I stumbled across this interesting commodity. Ideal for cars with A LOT of front end room, in fact, I'd recommend bolting it directly to your driveshaft. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allison_V-3420 Awesome, yes?
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Originally posted by atlantian View PostActually, I have always wanted to ask, from what I heard from people's reviews and exclamations, The LS1 is a classic choice for motor transplants out there.
Is it really that legendary of an engine?
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Originally posted by atlantian View PostActually, I have always wanted to ask, from what I heard from people's reviews and exclamations, The LS1 is a classic choice for motor transplants out there.
Is it really that legendary of an engine?
As Akuma said, the thing about is LS-1's is that they make lots of power, even in a "factory warranty" configuration, have a ton of aftermarket performance options and give you all of the benefits of a fuel-injected motor for relatively cheap. I've seen LS-1's in Muscle cars, third gen Camaro's, sand-cars, trucks, S13's, S14's, RX-7's . . .
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Originally posted by akuma S14 View PostI dunno about all that. Todd Ho has a FC3S with an LS1 and it kicks a$$. Gobbs of torque, great power, cheap mods, and about the same weight as a KA24/13b/whatever other japanese engine you want to throw into the mix.
I was considering this engine because there is a kit out there to fit the LS-1 into the car I want.
Soldat, is the LS-1 mechanically fuel injected or electronically fuel injected?
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Haha The allison's are awsome. I've had the fortune to see one on a drag vehicle. One of the loudest things I've ever heard too. Absolutely exilerating.
^ Dude, If it's FI it CAN'T be 'mechanically' fuel injected. Machanical fuel pumps are for carburetors. They only produce about 4psi. Mechanical Fuel Injection just doesn't make sence. It's either carbed or Electronic Fuel Injection or EFI.
That's why daron is laughing.Last edited by eomund240; 06-17-2008, 01:21 PM.
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Originally posted by 77ElCaminoDrift View PostI was browsing through a list of GM engines, looking for a potential new candidate for my El Camino, when I stumbled across this interesting commodity. Ideal for cars with A LOT of front end room, in fact, I'd recommend bolting it directly to your driveshaft. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allison_V-3420 Awesome, yes?
Then there's those guys putting Suzuki GSX-R motors in Smart's . . .
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Originally posted by eomund240 View PostHaha The allison's are awsome. I've had the fortune to see one on a drag vehicle. One of the loudest things I've ever heard too. Absolutely exilerating.
^ Dude, If it's FI it CAN'T be 'mechanically' fuel injected. Machanical fuel pumps are for carburetors. They only produce about 4psi. Mechanical Fuel Injection just doesn't make sence. It's either carbed or Electronic Fuel Injection or EFI.
That's why daron is laughing.
Actually, first generation Corvettes had a mechanical fuel injection system on them. My dad put one on his El Camino when he was a kid.
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I am not looking to intall a turbocharger or a supercharger on it so the issue of forced induction is not prevailant.
And by the way, I think you have it wrong, since carburetors are just fuel input device that lets passing air draw petrol out of the carburetor by differential pressure. They have nothing to do with a syringe that squirts fuel into the engine.
Mechanical fuel injection that I am thinking about is the same thing as electronic fuel injectors, but the valves of the fuel injectors are controlled by cranks that are in time with the valve opening and closing. I just like mechanics over electronics.
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Mechanical fuel injection was used with engines made by the likes of 1950s GM and Mopar high performance vehicles, 1960s Corvettes, Audi and Mercedes-Benz, but fell out of favor with perfection of electronic fuel injection. A lot of the old American systems were unreliable, and many owners switched them out for carburetors.
Back on topic,
People will do anything.Last edited by eomund240; 06-17-2008, 02:20 PM.
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I personally would not place such a large engine in a front engined cars, particularly a front engined front wheel drive. There was a trend back not long ago where people placed the H series engine from the Honda Prelude into Honda Civics. They ended up with cars with "overload" understeer.
But I like rear wheel drive and I like midship formats better anyways.
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