-- The twin screw 2.3L Eaton R2300 blower is a new generation supercharger optimized to significantly reduce noise and parasitic drivetrain loss compared to older blowers. -- The belt system and accessories such as the water pump are optimized to work with the supercharger-- GM specifically chose a milder cam with less lift for the LS9 in order to have a smoother idle and more refinement compared to a Z06 LS7 engine-- The LS9 uses forged aluminum pistons, cast-in sleeves, titanium rods, special high-swirl heads and reinforced headgaskets-- Exhaust manifolds are stainless steel short tube 4-1 headers optimized for cold start emissions-- The oiling system has piston cooling jets. It is dry sump like the Z06 LS7 but with increased capacity.-- The LSA engine in the Cadillac CTS-V (and rumored to be in an upcoming ZL1 Camaro) is based on the same design but further emphasis was placed on noise reduction. The exhaust manifold, pistons, and crank were all optimized for decreased noise compared to the LS9 ZR1 engine.It just shows that there is no substitute for an engine that was actually engineered for its power output. An LS3 + aftermarket supercharger kit does not have all the little reinforcements and refinements of an actual LS9.GM has a bunch of this info buried in their website here: http://archives.media.gm.com/us/powertrain/en/product_services/2010/gmna/10car_us.htm .
3/22/2011 7:11:16 PM
that twin scroll is old tech though just new to eaton... its about time they dropped the old school roots type.piston squirters rock but the rest i don't find that special... i think the coyote is a more unique engine... but that's me... and you didn't mention it has a variable timing pushrod cam...
3/22/2011 8:05:31 PM
3/22/2011 9:01:24 PM
Cool I was going to ask if the 9 had the variable timing cam. But I hot hurries by the lady. The heads are pretty sweet too passing emissions on what I assume is a new rendition of a wedge head?How much boost does it run ?
3/22/2011 9:06:27 PM
By the way, Eaton's twin screw blower is not a traditional Roots design (which is indeed horribly inefficient)...it is actually a compressor of sorts, moving the charge from front to back, I believe, instead of simply passing from top inlet to bottom discharge in typical Roots blower fashion.Sodium cooled valves have been around since WWII, and were primarily developed for use in radial aircooled aircraft engines, especially ones with multiple rows of cylinders. Sodium conducts heat assloads better than steel or titanium...but at the cost of valve strength. Of course, you get a valve hot enough, it's gonna fail.
3/22/2011 9:37:56 PM
its also now now a 557 hp outboard...http://www.seven-marine.com/motors/
3/22/2011 10:29:34 PM
3/22/2011 10:32:47 PM
3/22/2011 11:39:56 PM
Just to keep things in perspective, this is what we're talking about here:
3/23/2011 12:07:04 AM
3/23/2011 5:38:41 AM
hah i was going to say something about 240s having piston oil squirters since at least the '91 and up models
3/23/2011 6:45:38 AM
3/23/2011 6:46:06 AM
LINEAR HORSEPOWERSFLAT TORQUESarghx bringing the cool back to the garage, +1 would read again.
3/23/2011 8:09:11 AM
^ I agree i would also like to note that i argue to learn sometimes lol. Its a bad habit but a good way to learn something. I've been wondering that if you were to remove a bunch of functions from a can bus ecu (monitoring the status of the window switch for instance) if it would have a higher resolution for monitoring the engine? I'm not talking making fuel timing etc. tables larger, i mean actually making sure the engine is where it needs to be more often.
3/23/2011 8:32:42 AM
3/23/2011 9:09:06 AM
Cool, for some reason i thought everything was talking the ECU.. I didn't know everything was controled independently and spoke to each other as needed.
3/23/2011 3:07:34 PM
it varies a little bit with the manufacturer's design in terms of the number of control modules and the role each module has.
3/23/2011 3:25:00 PM