Newsflash: GM's excellent Gen III and Gen IV (often lumped together as "LS") small-blocks are great for engine transplants. They make great power, don't weigh a ton, and are so compact it's hard to ...
A big reason that the small-block Chevy was so popular with the Bow Tie crowd was because for decades it changed very little, making upgrades and interchangeability easy. The same can be said for the ...
In the hot rod world engine swaps are a big part of what we do. It can be a small-block V-8 to replace a straight six-banger, a big-block in place of a small-block, or any number of "this for that" ...
The venerable LS engine swap is a meme for one very good reason – the LS V8 is a great engine. With its relatively low weight, compact size, big power potential, and a seemingly endless supply of ...
Over and over again we've heard people ask about swapping from an LT1 to an LS1 in their Camaro. How hard could it be? The LT1 and LS1 fourth-gen Camaro is essentially the same car. While there is ...
View post: Amazon Has a Bolt Extractor Kit on Sale for Just $20 The company announced on Facebook that it would soon start selling a Tesla crate motor kit. And the important part is that it is fitted ...
Engine mounts are among the components that nobody talks about until they break. Just like their name explains, engine mounts have the role of keeping the power plant in place inside the engine bay.
Fast Lane Only on MSN
The LS engine that became the most swapped powerplant in history
The LS engine, originally designed for General Motors’ vehicles in the late 1990s, has transcended its initial purpose to become the most popular swapped powerplant in automotive history. Its ...
GM's LS engine is a gem. Wether it's factory-fitted to your production car, dropped in as a crate engine, or swapped from a junkyard wreck, the General's small-block V8 is nearly limitless. But what ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results