Bookmark This Page | Recommend This Page
 

Industry Partners
Art
Brakes
Dealers
Baystate Motorsports
Corvette Mike New England

E-mail: Chris Warren
E-mail: Kevin Will


E-mail: Ron Ignelzi
Driving Schools
General
Carseek
Parts & Accessories
Corvette Guys
Custom Corvette Accessories
Ecklers
Zip Products

Go Back   Corvette Action Center > News and Introductions > News and Announcements Forum


News and Announcements Forum For Corvette related press releases and general site announcements only.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 11-11-06, 09:01 AM   #1 (permalink)
Rob
Site Administrator
Rob is offline
 
Rob's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: CAC
Posts: 18,428
My Corvette(s):
The mythical 1990 ZR-1
Default Corvette Racing's Small-Block V-8 Wins Global Race Engine of the Year Award

Corvette Racing's Small-Block V-8 Wins Global Race Engine of the Year Award

Panel of Experts Selects Le Mans-Winning LS7.R as Global Motorsport Engine of the Year

COLOGNE, Germany - GM's small-block V-8 added another accolade to a long list of honors when Corvette Racing's LS7.R was named the Global Motorsport Engine of the Year at the inaugural Professional Motorsport World Expo in Cologne, Germany, on November 9. The race-prepared LS7.R engine, which shares its architecture with the production LS7 small-block V-8, propelled Corvette Racing to its fifth GT1 class victory in the 24 Hours of Le Mans on June 18, 2006. The 7.0-liter engine also powered the Compuware Corvette C6.R race cars to the 2006 American Le Mans Series manufacturers, drivers and team championships with a perfect reliability record.

"Winning this award is another milestone in the history of the legendary GM small-block V-8," said GM Racing director Mark Kent. "The championship-winning LS7.R has evolved to a very high level of development, yet it retains the longstanding virtues of compact size, simplicity, reliability and high specific output that have made the GM small-block V-8 the world's most successful production-based racing engine."

The 2006 Race Engine of the Year Awards were organized by Race Engine Technology magazine. The editors made three nominations in each of four categories: Grand Prix Engine of the Year, Global Motorsport Engine of the Year, North American Race Engine of the Year, and Alternative Power Race Engine of the Year. The magazine then invited votes from 50 key race engine engineers representing the spectrum of motorsports.

"It is doubtful if ever have so many experts voted for a competition engine award," said Race Engine Technology editor Ian Bamsey. "Each of the category winners was a genuine selection by an impressive jury of peers."
The Global Motorsport Engine of the Year award was given to GM engineer Roger Allen, engine manager for Corvette Racing. Herb Fishel, former director of GM Racing, accepted the award on behalf of Allen and GM Racing at the ceremony. The Corvette Racing program was conceived in 1996 under Fishel's guidance.

"Winning this prestigious award spotlights the technical expertise of GM Racing and the world-class team of partners and suppliers who have contributed so much to the success of the LS7.R engine," said Allen. "Winning at Le Mans, winning the ALMS championships, and winning this award are all tributes to the teamwork of Pratt & Miller Engineering, Katech Engine Development, and all of the LS7.R component suppliers. On a personal level, it's an honor for me as an engineer to have designed engines that have won the Daytona 500, Indianapolis 500, Daytona 24-hour, and the 24 Hours of Le Mans."

The LS7.R is the heir to the GM small-block V-8's winning tradition that began in 1955. The small-block V-8 is the foundation of the hot rod and high-performance industries and the cornerstone of racing series around the world. GM has produced approximately 90 million small-block V-8 engines with a combined output of 27 billion horsepower.

GM Powertrain developed the production 505-horsepower LS7 small-block V-8 that powers the Corvette Z06 supercar using many competition-derived components and design features. The LS7 bristles with race-inspired technology from Corvette Racing, including titanium connecting rods and inlet valves, a dry-sump lubrication system, CNC-ported cylinder heads, a forged steel crankshaft, and a big-bore aluminum block with plate-honed cylinders.

-credit: gm racing/cr
__________________
Rob Loszewski, Site Administrator
Corvette Action Center
NCRS Member #27792
"Let your plans be dark and impenetrable as night, and when you move, fall like a thunderbolt." - Sun Tzu

Corvette Action Center Spotlight - We have teamed up with Zip Products to create the finest purchase experience for our members:




Industry Partners - Supporting Membership - Advertising Information
  Reply w/ Quote |
Old 12-01-06, 02:49 PM   #2 (permalink)
Administrator
Tom Bryant is offline
 
Tom Bryant's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Edgerton, OH USA
Posts: 7,962
My Corvette(s):
1959 black 270hp (9/2/69) 1981 Beige L81(10/20/80)
Default

When you consider what the technology of the competition was and that the small block is still a push rod V8 this is amazing. For all of those that say GM is behind the times hanging on to push rods just look at the record; it speaks for itself. This engine out-performs those ultra expensive to buy and maintain multi- cammed wonders and does so in a bullitt-proof, never fail manner that the others can only dream about.

Way to go Chevy.
__________________
NCRS 1360.............SACC 2082.............1959 Registry..............L81 Registry
  Reply w/ Quote |
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
March 2002 - Grinding the Corvette Axe Rob Wheelspin 45 04-21-07 12:32 AM
April 2002: C5 Owners Speak Out! Rob Wheelspin 11 11-23-06 03:07 PM
LT1,LT4,LS1,LS6.... Whats the difference? sscam69 LT4 Forum 28 04-29-06 04:06 PM
May 2002: 50th Anniversary Corvette Unveiled Rob Wheelspin 4 06-29-02 08:47 AM
81 Engine codes 81Coupe C3 Technical and Performance 1 08-18-01 05:03 AM



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:02 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.0 Beta 4
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.2.0