List of GM engines explained

This list of GM engines encompasses all engines manufactured by General Motors and used in its cars.

Divisions

When General Motors was created in 1908, it started out with Buick and soon after acquired Oldsmobile, Cadillac and Oakland. There were dozens of other smaller companies that William Durant acquired during his first employment term until he was let go due to financially overextending his purchases. He regained control when he brought on Chevrolet in 1917 which was short lived until he was let go for the second time. This meant that the different core brands designed and manufactured their own engines with few interchangeable parts between brands, while sharing chassis, suspension and transmissions.

One of the companies Durant bought in 1909 was the Northway Motor and Manufacturing Company founded by Ralph Northway who had previously supplied engines to Buick, Oakland, Cartercar and other 1900s manufacturers, including V8 engines to Oldsmobile, Oakland and Cadillac when they were independent companies.[1] When Durant bought companies that became part of GM, Northway continued to supply engines to his former clients and added Cadillac, GMC and Oldsmobile to the list, then Northway Motors became the Northway Motor and Manufacturing Division in 1925 and became part of the GM Intercompany Parts Group.[2]

When Fisher Body was bought in 1925, coachwork was shared and with the introduction of the Art and Color Section also in the late 1920, GM products shared appearances. The core items that made each brand unique were the engines. Buick and Chevrolet used overhead valves while Cadillac, Oldsmobile, Oakland used side valve or flathead engines and the divisions no longer outsourced their engines and manufactured them according to particular brand requirements. The original factory location was located at Maybury Grand Avenue, Buchanan Street and the Grand Trunk Railway in Detroit then later became GM truck Plant No. 7 in 1926 to manufacture front and rear axles and parts for past model Chevrolets. Starting around 1925 engine blocks and cylinder heads were now developed at each brand but were cast at Saginaw Metal Casting Operations.[3] In the mid-1960s, there were 8 separate families of GM V8 engines on sale in the USA.[4] [1]

By the 1970s, GM began to see problems with their approach. For instance, four different North American divisions (Chevrolet, Pontiac, Oldsmobile and Buick) offered four completely different versions of a 350 cu in V8 engine - very few parts would interchange between the four designs despite their visual similarities, resulting in confusion for owners who naturally assumed that replacement parts would be usable across brands. In addition to these issues and the obvious overlap in production costs, the cost of certifying so many different engines for tightening worldwide emissions regulations threatened to become very costly.

Thus, by the early 1980s, GM had consolidated its powertrain engineering efforts into a few distinct lines. Generally, North American and European engineering units remained separate, with Australia's Holden and other global divisions borrowing designs from one or the other as needed. GM also worked out sharing agreements with other manufacturers such as Isuzu and Nissan to fill certain gaps in engineering. Similarly, the company also purchased other automotive firms (including Saab and Daewoo), eventually folding their engine designs into the corporate portfolio as well. GM later reorganized its Powertrain Division into GM Global Propulsion Systems, located at 800 N Glenwood Avenue in Pontiac, Michigan,[5] which became the GM Global Product Group in March 2020 and is in close proximity to the old location of Pontiac Assembly.[6]

GM's German subsidiary, Opel, relies on a range of three-, four- and six-cylinder gasoline and diesel engines. A survey of their range shows a reliance on petrol and diesel four-cylinders, and in 2014, there was only one 3-cylinder engine and one 6 cylinder engine in service in Opel's passenger car range.

In addition to automobile and truck engines, GM produced industrial engines, which were sold by brands such as Detroit Diesel, Allison, and Electro-Motive. Most of these engine designs are unrelated to GM's automotive engines.

Automotive gasoline engines

Two-cylinder

Three-cylinder

Inline-3

Four-cylinder

Inline-4

Flat-4

Five-cylinder

Six-cylinder

Inline-6

Flat-6

V6

Eight-cylinder

From the 1950s through the 1970s, each GM division had its own V8 engine family. Today, there are only two families of V8 engines in production for road vehicles: the Generation IV small-block and its Generation V small-block derivative.

Inline-8

V8

Twelve-cylinder

Sixteen-cylinder

Gasoline-electric hybrid

Automotive diesel engines

Three-cylinder

Four-cylinder

Six-cylinder

Eight-cylinder

Other diesel engines

GM entered the diesel field with its acquisition of the Cleveland-based Winton Engine Company in 1930. Winton's main client was the Electro Motive Company, a producer of internal combustion-electric rail motorcars. GM acquired Electro Motive at roughly the same time as Winton.

A partnership of GM's Research and Development Division and their Winton Engine Corporation delivered their first diesel engines suitable for mobile use starting in 1934. The engines were also sold for marine and stationary applications. In a 1938 reorganization, Winton Engine Corporation became the GM Cleveland Diesel Engine Division, and GM's Detroit Diesel Engine Division began production of smaller (NaN1NaN1 per cylinder) diesel engines. Locomotive engines were moved under the GM Electro Motive Division (EMD) in 1941, while Cleveland Diesel retained development and production of large marine and stationary engines.

Cleveland Diesel was dissolved in 1962 and their remaining production moved to EMD. In 1988, the Detroit Diesel Engine Division was incorporated as an independent company, later acquired by DaimlerChrysler in 2005. EMD was sold off by GM in 2005 and is now a subsidiary of Progress Rail.

Locomotive engines

Marine/stationary diesel engines

Heavy and off-road diesel engines

Turboshaft engines for land

GM Whirlfire engine, including:

Aircraft engines

Piston

Propfan

Turboprop

Turboshaft

Turbojet

References

42.6624°N -83.2856°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Northway Motor (Detroit, Michigan) . Wikimapia . 6 April 2021.
  2. Web site: 100 years GMC History . GM Heritage Center . General Motors . 8 April 2021.
  3. Web site: Olds FAQ - Engines . 442.com . 2014-02-16.
  4. Web site: Class of 1965: When GM Had Eight V8 Engine Families . The Truth About Cars . 2010-12-18 . 2014-02-16.
  5. http://media.gm.com/media/us/en/gm/news.detail.html/content/Pages/news/us/en/2016/feb/0216-powertrain.html GM Global Propulsion Systems
  6. Web site: Murphy . Tom . GM Motors On Without Powertrain Division . Wards Auto . 13 March 2020 . Informa USA . 14 October 2022.
  7. Web site: e . HowStuffWorks "How Buick Works" . Auto.howstuffworks.com . 2007-06-05 . 2014-02-16.
  8. Web site: Pontiac Buggy Company | Pontiac Spring & Wagon Works | Oakland Motor Car | Pontiac | . My1955.com . 1941-03-01 . 2014-02-16.
  9. http://www.oaklandowners.com/pages/History_McCargar.html
  10. Web site: 1906, Buick Goes Four-Cylinder - Generations of GM . History.gmheritagecenter.com . 2014-02-16.
  11. Web site: Buick Pre 1930 General Specs.
  12. Web site: Buick Pre 1930 General Specs.
  13. Web site: 1922 Buick 22-35 specifications, information, data, photos 44759 . Carfolio.com . 2014-02-16.
  14. Web site: 1909 Oakland Model 40 . Conceptcarz.com . 2014-02-16.
  15. Web site: customs-n-classics.dk . customs-n-classics.dk . 2014-02-16 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130529173528/http://www.customs-n-classics.dk/Artikler/CIHHistorieUK.html . 2013-05-29 .
  16. Web site: Site Maintenance . 23 May 2014 .
  17. Web site: Holden stops Family II engine Production. ZerCustoms. 23 May 2014.
  18. Web site: history.gmheritagecenter.com . http://history.gmheritagecenter.com/wiki/index.php/GM_do_Brasil_Milestones:_1980_-_1989.
  19. Web site: Werk Aspern Plant. Facts and Figures. 18 July 2014.
  20. Web site: 1988 Opel Omega A 2.3 TD Specs . media.opel.de . 2011-10-15. 2014-02-05.
  21. Web site: New Diesels Power Chevy's Global Midsize Trucks . media.opel.de . October 5, 2011 . 2014-02-05.
  22. Web site: New 1.6-liter diesel engine continues powertrain renewal at Opel . media.opel.de . 2013-01-16. 2014-02-05.
  23. Web site: All-new Opel 2.0 CDTI: New Generation Large Diesel Debuts in Paris . media.opel.de . 2014-09-10. 2014-12-14.
  24. Web site: Blattenberg . Adam . 2016-04-06 . Diesel History Retrospective: Oldsmobile's Other Diesel . 2022-11-14 . Diesel World . en-US.